Akula Sharma joins NZME

By Neeraja Gopalakrishnan in Media News on

To continue reading this article...

Log in or create an Influencing account

More Media News

Yep, it’s been a “shitty week”

By Staff Writers in Media News on
The stream of redundancies impacting media houses continued this week with numerous exits at Junkee and Pedestrian. According to Mediaweek, Junkee’s decision to adopt a “creator-led model” meant the team had been reduced to just two. Including head of editorial Sophie Hanson. Meanwhile, the Pedestrian team acquired by Vinyl has been halved with the 35 full-time staff to be reduced to 17, according to a Mumbrella report last month. Yesterday, Pedestrian news writer Tom Disalvo announced the restructure had seen his role made redundant. “I consider myself extremely lucky to have worked in that newsroom, and I'm going to miss this job with all my heart,” Disalvo wrote on LinkedIn. “I had the privilege of flexing new muscles in my journalism coverage, interviewing my celebrity idols, and writing about the kind of exceedingly silly things that first got me into this line of work.” Disalvo also posted to his Substack his feelings on getting

Upfront: ICAC engulfs opposition, Big Build leak fallout, WA face-scan blitz

By Staff Writers in Media News on
ICAC shockwave hits Liberals as Elliott urges Taylor to quit A widening NSW ICAC public inquiry into alleged illegal donations and corruption links involving Liberal figures, councils and Catholic schools has spilled into federal politics, with former NSW police minister David Elliott calling for Opposition Leader Angus Taylor to resign over his connections to a key figure in the probe (which Taylor denies). The story matters because it threatens to destabilise the Coalition’s leadership narrative and keep integrity and political fundraising front-of-mind nationally. Covered by: Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph. Big Build corruption pressure: leak probe, apology — and royal commission talk Victoria is facing a fresh integrity crisis as police investigate an alleged CFMEU-related leak to the criminal underworld, while Premier Jacinta Allan issues an apology over Big Build issues. In parallel, Labor MPs are reportedly warming to a royal commission into Big Build corr

Tripura pension hike welcomed, but many journalists remain outside welfare net

By Staff Writer in Media News on
The Tripura government has expanded support for journalists by increasing the monthly pension under the Tripura Journalist Honour Pension Scheme from Rs 1,000 to Rs 10,000 and introducing a Rs 5,000 family pension for the eligible kin of deceased journalists. The guidelines for both schemes were revised in 2025 to improve their implementation. Five more retired journalists have recently been added to the scheme, taking the total number of beneficiaries to 13. Two additional families have also been brought under the family pension scheme, raising the total number of beneficiaries to seven. The government has also provided financial assistance for medical treatment to four journalists through the Journalist Welfare Fund. Welcoming the initiative, Agartala Press Club Vice President Chitra Roy said, "The increase in the welfare pension is a positive and helpful step. However, it should not be limited to only a few senior or well-recognised journalists. Many small and local journa

Meet Dr Anubha Jain, the journalist bringing science down to earth

By Meena R. Prashant in Media News on
"Science and space are shaping the future, and I find it rewarding to make these subjects understandable and meaningful for everyone." For journalist Dr Anubha Jain, that philosophy has guided more than two decades of reporting across science, technology, health and space. At a time when artificial intelligence, climate change, biotechnology and space exploration are increasingly shaping everyday life, she believes journalism has a responsibility not just to report scientific breakthroughs, but to explain why they matter. In an episode of Influencing Insider, Dr Jain reflected on her career, the evolution of journalism and the growing responsibility of reporters in an era shaped by rapid technological change and misinformation. Among the defining moments of her career was covering India's landmark space missions, Chandrayaan-3 and Aditya-L1, experiences that brought her face-to-face with the scientists behind the country's achievements. "It was a goosebumps moment," she said. "N

Senior journalist Chandrashekhar Kulkarni passes away at 61

By Staff Writer in Media News on
Chandrashekhar “Chandu” Kulkarni, one of Marathi journalism’s most respected editors and investigative reporters, passed away on Tuesday at the age of 61. Kulkarni began his career with Navshakti in 1985 before serving in editorial roles at Sakal, Maharashtra Times, Loksatta, and the Lokmat Group. He was widely known for his pioneering food column “Chatakdar”, considered among the first dedicated restaurant and food columns in Marathi journalism. He also earned acclaim for his investigative reports exposing corruption in private engineering colleges and irregularities in prisons, work that won him the Yamunabai Khadilkar Investigative Journalism Award. Beyond journalism, Kulkarni authored, translated, and edited several books, remained closely associated with science and education, and presided over the Science Literature Conference in 2017, ABPLive reported. Mourning his passing, actress Ashvini Bhave wrote: “It is hard to accept that you are no longer with us, Chand

BARC halts weekly TV ratings following MIB directive

By Staff Writer in Media News on
BARC India has suspended the publication of weekly television ratings after being directed by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) to withhold data until it receives approval under the new TV Ratings Policy 2026.  In an advisory to subscribers, BARC said no ratings data would be released with immediate effect, including the scheduled 11 am publication on Thursday.  The move comes despite BARC applying within the revised compliance timeline and preparing to implement the policy's landing-page exclusion framework. However, the rollout was stalled after the Kerala High Court stayed the relevant provision in May.  Industry executives have raised concerns that the suspension could push the television sector into another data-dark phase, affecting advertising, media planning.  

TODAY’S TEN: West Bengal voter backlog stretches 25 years, TVK-DMK poaching row erupts and more

By Staff Writer in Media News on
Thursday, 2 July 2026 #1  ·  Times Nation  ·  In-depth feature 100 days on, less than 1% of Bengal SIR cases have been disposed By Debashis Konar, Srishti Lakhotia   ·   The Times of India, New Delhi  ·  Page 6 West Bengal's 19 Special Investigation of Rolls (SIR) tribunals have disposed of only around 30,000 of 33 lakh pending appeals in 100 days since becoming operational — less than 1%. At the current pace, clearing the backlog would take over 25 years. The report also details resignations by senior judges, the absence of online tracking infrastructure, and the cascading human consequences including a young Agniveer aspirant temporarily denied police clearance due to SIR deletions. The story combines hard data, institutional accountability, and a concrete human-impact case (the Agniveer aspirant) to illustrate systemic failure across judiciary, state administration and Election Commission — a

Media news latest

Yep, it’s been a “shitty week”
The stream of redundancies impacting media houses continued this week with numerous exits at Junkee and Pedestrian. ... Show more

Upfront: ICAC engulfs opposition, Big Build leak fallout, WA face-scan blitz
In Front Page News Today: ICAC inquiry rattles Liberals; Big Build corruption probe escalates; WA facial recognition sparks backlash. ... Show more

Upfront: ICAC drags Liberals, Housing slide shock, Energy policy backlash.
In Front Page News Today: ICAC widens donations inquiry; Housing prices fall, loans slide; Labor energy tax, gas row. ... Show more

Marcoms news latest

IN PR: Perera's new gig after a year break; Butcher leads marketing at Smokeball
IN PR: Perera's new gig after a year break; Butcher leads marketing at Smokeball ... Show more

IN PR: GWPR annual index survey open; Gevert joins Bronwyn Tasker
IN PR: GWPR annual index survey open; Gevert joins Bronwyn Tasker

Primary Comms Group acquires Hardman Communications to expand agriculture, industrial expertise
Primary Comms Group has expanded its sector expertise by bringing Hardman Communications into the growing agency. ... Show more