New Delhi: In a media landscape driven by symbolism as much as substance, even the smallest visual shift can carry weighty implications. Such is the case with Aaj Tak’s recent branding tweak to its flagship primetime show, Black & White. The stark, monochrome aesthetic that viewers have come to associate with the show now carries a bold new detail: a striking red accent.
The change comes in the wake of anchor Sudhir Chaudhary’s departure from the channel. His final appearance on Black & White aired on April 4, 2025, marking the end of a nearly three-year tenure that saw the show ascend to the top of the Hindi news circuit. As Chaudhary transitions to DD News, questions loom large over the direction Black & White will take—both in content and in character.
But amid the speculation about successors and format shifts, the most immediate and visual change is the addition of red to the show’s title design. What does it mean?
The Color of Shift, Power, and Provocation
Traditionally, the black-and-white motif in media connotes clarity, contrast, and decisiveness—fitting for a show that built its brand on sharp editorial lines and clear-cut narratives. The injection of red—a color often associated with urgency, energy, and passion—signals a new phase.
“The red accent is not just an aesthetic flourish. It’s a message,” says a media analyst tracking the transition. “It symbolizes a charged evolution. Aaj Tak is suggesting that Black & White is entering a more dynamic, perhaps more confrontational phase.”
From Monologue to Multi-Voice?
Supporting that theory is the launch of a new weekly debate show, Bahas Baazigar, led by senior anchor Anjana Om Kashyap. Known for her incisive and combative debate style, her new role could be a hint at what Black & White might become—a space less defined by a single anchor’s voice, and more by a plurality of perspectives.
If Anjana or Sweta Singh—another heavyweight in Aaj Tak’s anchor lineup—steps into the primetime slot, the show could pivot from a personality-driven monologue to a dialogue-driven format. The red accent may foreshadow this change in tone—from black-and-white certainty to a flash of red that invites passion, conflict, and audience engagement.
A Transition, Not a Termination
Aaj Tak has a long history of staying ahead of the curve through reinvention. When a powerful presence like Chaudhary exits, it doesn’t signify an end—it often marks the start of a reinvention arc. And in this case, the branding change is not just visual; it is psychological.
The red is a provocation. It challenges viewers to reassess the nature of truth, bias, and perspective. It suggests that in an era of competing narratives, Black & White may still aim for clarity—but now with a pulse, a heartbeat, and perhaps, more heat.
As the nation waits for an official announcement on the show’s next anchor, one thing is certain: Black & White is no longer just about contrast. It’s about intensity. And red is the color of what’s next.