FOURTH RIGHT: When cartoons become contraband
By Pragadish Kirubakaran in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 3:39pm
Image edited by Dinesh Raj M
Political satire in India has always thrived on exaggeration. What it cannot survive is invisibility.
A recent investigation by Newslaundry reports that political cartoonists across cities — from Pune to Kolkata — are seeing their work quietly restricted on Instagram following opaque “legal requests,” often traced back to Haryana law enforcement (Newslaundry, Feb 24, 2026). The platforms cite compliance with “local law.” The law itself is rarely named.
Let’s start with the Kolkata twins.
Bob and Bobby, 32-year-old filmmakers and illustrators with roughly 2.4–2.5 lakh followers, built a reputation on stylised reels mocking blind hero worship and political spectacle. On January 28, seven of their reels...
To continue reading this article...
More Influencing|Tech
WPP and Adobe strengthen global tie-up to bring AI-powered marketing solutions to brands
By Staff Writer in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 3:34pm
LinkedIn for Journalists: How the platform is shaping personal brands and audience engagement
By Suganthi Marimuthu in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 3:15pm
Journos on the decision to make Bunnings turn off facial recognition tech
By Will McLennan in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 12:58pmThrough the lens: Inside the high-stakes world of photojournalism
By Meena R. Prashant in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 12:35pm
India restricts access to journalist Azad Essa’s X account
By Staff Writer in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 12:34pm
THE BRIEF: The machines are coming
By Tony Bosworth in Media News on Thursday, 26th February 2026 at 6:02am
Prasar Bharati announces 8th annual e-auction of MPEG-4 slots on DD Free Dish
By Staff Writer in Media News on Wednesday, 25th February 2026 at 10:11pm
Media news latest
Marcoms news latest