India Today marks its 50th anniversary with a historic double issue, The Remaking of India: 1975–2025, spanning over 600 English pages and more than 360 in Hindi, with record advertiser participation. The collector’s edition chronicles five decades of India’s political, economic, and cultural evolution, reinforcing the magazine’s role as a national chronicle.
India Today has unveiled a landmark publishing moment with the release of its 50th anniversary special, The Remaking of India: 1975–2025, a monumental collector’s edition that chronicles half a century of transformation in the world’s largest democracy. Designed as a definitive national record, the issue reflects the magazine’s ongoing mandate to observe India as it evolves—documenting its politics, economy, culture and society in real time, now compiled with the benefit of hindsight.
Billed as a once-in-a-generation publication, the anniversary edition has broken multiple records within Indian magazine publishing. Produced as an unprecedented double issue, it aggregates more than 800 curated photographs and 256 pages of original editorial content. The scale expands further in the market response-oriented editions: the English version exceeds 600 pages, while the Hindi edition spans more than 360. The compilation moves across five turbulent decades, tracing shifts in political power, economic restructurings, cultural reinvention, social upheaval, and the emergence of a globalising India. The magazine’s editorial team frames the special as a national chronicle, not merely commemorative but interpretive—seeking to contextualise the forces that shaped modern India and continue to define its trajectory.
The commercial response has been equally significant. The English edition features participation from over 190 advertisers, amounting to more than 400 pages of advertising. The Hindi edition carries more than 55 advertisers across upwards of 150 pages, underscoring the platform’s continued influence in the print ecosystem. Notably, the publication integrates extensive advertising innovations, reflecting the appetite for premium association among brands in an era where attention is fragmented and trust is scarce.
“Advertising delivers its strongest impact when it is carried by trust, depth, and intent,” said Manoj Sharma, chief executive officer for publishing at the India Today Group. In a media environment increasingly defined by ephemeral consumption and algorithmic feeds, Sharma asserted that print continues to offer credibility, sustained engagement, and durable brand alignment—factors that advertisers have rewarded with record participation in the anniversary edition.
Founded in 1975, India Today has published 2,006 issues and remains one of the country’s most influential editorial institutions, shaping public discourse across generations. Its coverage has spanned political transitions, economic liberalisation, geopolitical realignments, demographic shifts and the ongoing negotiation between tradition and modernity. The 50th anniversary special positions the brand not merely as a witness to history but as a curator of its meaning—capturing the lived chronology of the nation and synthesising it for both contemporary readers and future historians.
With this milestone publication, India Today reinforces its role as a chronicler of consequence. For readers, it offers a sweeping narrative of India’s past five decades; for institutions, it provides a cultural artefact; for advertisers, it signals the enduring value of premium print. Most of all, it marks a moment of reflection at the midpoint of a century—inviting audiences to consider how far the country has come and the forces that may define what comes next.
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