Showing posts with label TikTok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TikTok. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Assam Elections: The 27 vs 72 Guwahati Central Gamble




















Is Kunki Chowdhury Doing A Zohran Mamdani?



A 27-year-old University College London (UCL) postgrad with no political pedigree is taking on a 72-year-old BJP stalwart in Assam's most closely watched urban seat. The parallels with New York's viral new mayor are striking.


In one of the most watched contests of the 2026 Assam Assembly polls, 27-year-old Kunki Chowdhury has officially entered the electoral ring, bringing a high-academic pedigree and a fresh "inclusive regionalism" vision to Guwahati Central. She is an Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP) first-timer with no political family behind her, “knocking on every door”, playing carrom to break the ice and speaking to young voters about drains, parking and skill centres — the unglamorous but urgent business of a city long ignored by those who govern it.

The optics are impossible to miss. Less than a year ago, Zohran Mamdani — a 33-year-old assemblyman from Queens — went from one per cent in the polls to becoming New York City's mayor, powered almost entirely by a ferociously smart, platform-native social-media campaign and genuine grassroots conviction. The question now being asked in political circles in Guwahati, as polling day on April 9 approaches, is whether Kunki is scripting her own version of that story.

A postgraduate in Education Leadership from UCL and a BBA graduate from NMIMS Mumbai, Kunki told the Assam Tribune: "I did my masters in London and then joined my family business. The opportunity to join politics came only last month when the AJP approached me — I decided to come to politics to bridge the gap between the government and society." 

That gap — between Guwahati's lived reality and the rhetoric of those who represent it — is exactly what her campaign is organised around. Her five concrete promises address drainage, skill hubs, parking, garbage disposal and the gas pipeline scheme — the neglected basics of a city that has heard grand promises for decades.

Across the constituency, her opponent is a vivid contrast. Vijay Kumar Gupta, 72, the BJP's long-time party worker, reacted to his Gen Z opponent by declaring there are "no challenges" for him in this election. He brings the full machinery of India's ruling party — buses, organised rallies and a well-funded social media operation — along with decades of institutional heft. 


His reported promise to transform Guwahati into something resembling "Switzerland, Shimla and Shillong" has, according to local reports, attracted satirical treatment online — terrain on which Kunki is rather more comfortable.

The Mamdani parallel is not merely cosmetic. Mamdani weaponised youthfulness and educational credibility, turning establishment outsider status into an asset. His team used Instagram, TikTok and YouTube in ways that prioritised authenticity over polish — running into the Atlantic to advertise rent freezes, referencing Bollywood films to explain wealth inequality. 


He captured 78 per cent of voters aged 18 to 29. Kunki's instincts appear similar: her door-to-door campaign, documented through shareable video clips and images circulated via her own social media handles, including carrom and cricket on doorsteps, follows the same grammar of unscripted, tactile, eminently viral political content.

The demographic arithmetic is hospitable to exactly this kind of appeal. Assam has 72.83 lakh youth voters aged 18 to 29 — a rise from 69.35 lakh in 2021. In Guwahati Central, with its approximately 1.91 lakh urban electors, young voters frustrated by waterlogging and joblessness represent a formidable base if consolidated.

Where the parallel strains is in resources and runway. Mamdani had over a year of sustained campaigning and access to 70-plus content creators boasting a combined following of 77 million. Kunki was asked to contest barely a month before polling. She is running a digital insurgency against a party with state-level resources and a Chief Minister whose own social media presence is nationally formidable.

But what distinguishes her candidacy from mere youth tokenism is that her educational background is substantive, not decorative. She has not shied away from critiquing the BJP's flagship Orunodoi welfare scheme as "superficial," arguing that cash transfers are no substitute for sustainable livelihoods and advocating instead for skill-building integrated with employment. This is not the language of political apprenticeship. It is the language of someone who has thought carefully about systems and is applying that thinking to a political context for the first time.

Young voters in the constituency echo mixed views — some praising welfare schemes, others demanding jobs, better college infrastructure and reduced textbook prices. It is precisely this constituency — educated, restless, unpersuaded by freebies — that Kunki is betting on. Whether Assam's political terrain will reward that bet is the question that May 4 will answer.

Tuesday, April 08, 2025

If journalism doesn’t work on social media, it might not work at all

Let’s face it - most of us aren’t typing “that news site we used to visit” into our browsers anymore. We’re on Instagram Reels while waiting for our chai, scrolling through X during lunch breaks, or watching YouTube in bed. That’s just how we consume information now. And journalism? It’s adapting - fast... to stay relevant in the game. For years, newsrooms used social media as a marketing tool or appetiser - just a little taste to drive you to the main course: the website. We’ve all seen it. A slick Instagram reel, a tweet thread with a hook, or a “Read more on our site” link dropped into a Facebook post. The goal? Funnel the traffic back “home.” Social media was just the bait. But here’s the thing - audiences aren’t following that funnel like they used to. Many don’t click through at all. And frankly, why would they? They're already swimming in an ocean of content on the platform itself. That’s where the shift comes in. These days, smart newsrooms and savvy journalists aren’t just using social to tease the story - they’re telling the story right there. On YouTube, Instagram, X, Facebook, TikTok and others. And they’re doing it in formats native to those platforms -  punchy videos, carousels, threads, lives, even memes. That’s why more and more newsrooms (and individual journalists), both international and Indian, are skipping the funnel and serving up journalism right where people are: in the feed. Take The Quint, for example. They’ve nailed the short-form video format on Instagram and YouTube. Their explainers, on-ground reports and “In-Depth” stories are designed for social-first consumption - whether you click a link or not. The Print and Scroll.in regularly publishes crisp carousels and X threads that summarise complex issues without requiring you to leave the app. You're not just teased with a headline - you’re informed right there. Meanwhile, Mojo Story (led by Barkha Dutt) shows what a journalist-led, social-first outlet looks like. Her YouTube Lives and Instagram interviews are often the primary source of news and analysis for thousands, especially during major events like elections, floods, or social movements. Then there’s @nowthisnews, which was practically born on social media. Their bite-sized news videos are designed only for feeds - no redirection, no “read more here.” The full story is right in front of you, tailored for someone who only has 30 seconds before switching apps. Even legacy outlets are adapting. BBC News runs tailored Instagram Stories with polling features and Q&As. NPR publishes explainer threads on X that work as standalone stories. They’ve realized if people won’t come to the site, the site needs to come to them. It’s not just media houses that are adapting - individual journalists are building powerful personal brands, too. Look at Faye D’Souza. Her Instagram is basically a one-woman news channel. She breaks down complex issues like policy decisions, legal verdicts, or election updates in simple, engaging formats - with none of the noise and sensationalism of primetime. Samdish Bhatia, formerly with ScoopWhoop and now doing his own thing on YouTube, mixes humor with sharp interviews. His content feels like a conversation, not a lecture - and that makes it shareable, even among people who usually “don’t follow the news.” Then there’s The Deshbhakt, run by Akash Banerjee—a satirical news and commentary platform that’s grown into a full-fledged alternative media brand. With YouTube explainers, meme-driven takes on current affairs and live Q&As, The Deshbhakt uses humor and relatability to cut through political jargon and engage younger, digital-first audiences. It’s political commentary made entertaining—without compromising on substance. And of course, Ravish Kumar - a name long associated with serious, fearless journalism. After stepping away from mainstream TV news, he now runs his own YouTube channel where he continues to do what he’s best at - in-depth, no-frills reporting that prioritizes people over power. His digital presence is proof that legacy journalists can evolve without losing their voice, authority, or audience - if anything, his community is stronger and more engaged than ever. So what’s the lesson here? News consumption has gone from appointment viewing to snackable content. We can’t expect people to come searching for our websites anymore - we have to show up where they already are. That means asking:

  • Can this story be explained in a 60-second reel?

  • Does it work as a carousel with context and quotes?

  • Should I answer questions in the comments or go Live with an expert?

It’s storytelling, adapted. It’s not about "dumbing down" the news - it’s about reformatting it and making it easier to consume, in the places where people actually are. Because in today’s world, if we don’t go to them - they’re not coming to us. Simple.