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Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?Dairy Minister Telangana with Chairman Vijaya visit NDDB AnandScale up India’s dairy cooperative model: Sunita NarainHyderabad Raid Busts ₹18.26 Lakh Fake Ghee UnitNZ Seeks Opposition Support to Advance India Free Trade Agreement

Indian Dairy News

Bitter Milk: Lessons from Rajamahendravaram Case
Mar 10, 2026

Bitter Milk: Lessons from Rajamahendravaram Case

The milk adulteration tragedy in Rajamahendravaram in Andhra Pradesh’s East Godavari district has raised serious concerns about food safety, regulatory oversight and the vulnerability of consumers to...Read More

Sangam Dairy Chief Slams ‘Fake Propaganda’ Claims
Mar 10, 2026

Sangam Dairy Chief Slams ‘Fake Propaganda’ Claims

Dhulipalla Narendra Kumar, who is also a **Sangam Dairy chairman and MLA from Ponnur, strongly criticised leaders of the YSR Congress Party (YSRCP), accusing them of spreading false propaganda and bas...Read More

Nandini Demand Boosts Profits for Dairy Farmers
Mar 10, 2026

Nandini Demand Boosts Profits for Dairy Farmers

Rising demand for Nandini dairy products has significantly increased revenues for the Chikkaballapur District Milk Producers Cooperative Union (CHIMUL) in Karnataka, enabling the cooperative to share...Read More

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Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?
Mar 10, 2026

Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?

The recent editorial “Bitter Milk” published by The Hindu raises important concerns about food safety in India. The editorial deserves appreciation for attempting to broaden the conversation and under...Read More

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?
Mar 05, 2026

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?

The recent round of retail milk price increases across South India and Maharashtra is no longer an episodic adjustment but a clear signal of structural stress building up in India’s milk economy. Over...Read More

India’s Dairy Climate Paradox: Production Triumph Meets Methane Time-Bomb
Mar 02, 2026

India’s Dairy Climate Paradox: Production Triumph Meets Methane Time-Bomb

India’s rise to the top of the global dairy league board has been one of the most remarkable agricultural success stories of the 21st century. With milk production surpassing 247 million tonnes per ye...Read More

India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura
Feb 16, 2026

India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura

India’s first national “Cow Culture Museum” is set to be established in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, on the campus of Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya Veterinary Science University, announced the Uttar Pradesh B...Read More

Global Dairy News

Data Replaces Handshakes in Dairy Lending
Mar 10, 2026

Data Replaces Handshakes in Dairy Lending

The dairy financing landscape is undergoing a major transformation as traditional relationship-based lending gives way to data-driven credit evaluation, according to industry insights. Historically, d...Read More

Rabobank Sees Cautious Dairy Price Recovery
Mar 10, 2026

Rabobank Sees Cautious Dairy Price Recovery

Global dairy commodity prices are showing early signs of recovery in 2026, but the rebound is expected to remain cautious due to abundant global milk supply, according to Rabobank’s Global Dairy Quart...Read More

US-Iran Tensions Raise Indirect Risks for Dairy
Mar 10, 2026

US-Iran Tensions Raise Indirect Risks for Dairy

Escalating tensions between the United States and Iran are creating indirect challenges for the global dairy sector, mainly through higher energy, freight and packaging costs, according to market anal...Read More

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Shobha and Smita sister of Shashi Tharoor were the first of Amul babies

By DairyNews7x7•Published on October 11, 2022

Shobha and Smita sister of Shashi Tharoor were the first of Amul babies
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Did you know this?

Tharoor Family Amul Babies.

by Shashi Tharoor.

My family’s association with the Amul brand is intensely personal. Way back in 1961, Amul’s advertising agency, ASP (Advertising &Sales Promotion Ltd), was looking for a baby to front their milk powder in a first-of-its-kind ad campaign. They went through hundreds of pictures of babies – 712, to be exact – until ASP’s creative head, Sylvester da Cunha, asked my father, his friend at (and Secretary of) the Advertising Club of Bombay: “you have a baby too, don’t you? Mind if you show me a picture?” My father did, and the rest is history: my sister Shobha became the first ever Amul baby. ASP recorded her selection in an ad in the trade press:

After 712 babies were photographed, Shobha Tharoor became the first Amul baby. History was to repeat itself a year later when Amul and ASP decided they needed a colour picture for their next ad campaign – by which time Shobha, of course, was too old to pose for one. But her sister Smita had been born, and this time, after a more perfunctory search, my younger sister became the first-ever colour Amul baby.

The youngest Tharoor, Smita, was the first-ever colour Amul baby. In their quickness, their sharpness, and their topicality, they put Amul in the forefront of the reader’s mind. They literally bring the product home to the hearts and minds, not just the stomachs, of Indians. All this may sound trivial today, but it meant a great deal to the family, though the recompense for my sisters’ initial modelling stints was negligible. The Amul ads were not just published in newspapers (which themselves had much more reach and impact in those pre-television days), but printed as posters and displayed in groceries and kirana stores across the country where Amul baby powder was stocked. More than thirty years later, Smita was startled to discover a picture of her baby self still displayed on the wall of a rural provision shop in some dusty forgotten corner of the country.

While my sisters (and by association, all of us) basked in their Amul-derived glory, I grew up as a skinny, scrawny, asthmatic boy quite unsuitable to serve as an advertisement for any health-enhancing product, Amul or otherwise. But when, after serving the United Nations around the world, I finally returned to India and entered politics, I found myself in Amul ads as well. Except these were not glowing pictures of my chubby cheeks, but cartoons lampooning me, as Amul so inimitably does to those of our nation’s public figures who might be tempted to take themselves too seriously.

The cartoon ads take up a topical subject from the news, draw them brilliantly, and accompany them with a tongue-in-cheek caption, usually involving a pun. I’ve now featured in four or five of these, and enjoyed them hugely. They have appeared in hoardings in prominent sites across our major cities, and in newspaper ads, often on the front pages, everywhere. Each captures the essence of the space Amul has carved for itself in our public imagination. The cartoon ads take up a topical subject from the news, draw them brilliantly, and accompany them with a tongue-in-cheek caption, usually involving a pun. And the ad slogan reminds the reader of Amul’s “utterly butterly” indispensability to their enjoyment of life.

The campaigns are inspired, clever, increasingly bilingual, and totally relevant to what Indians are talking about that week. Over the decades they have chronicled social change in our country, commented on politics and taken the sting out of media controversies. In their quickness, their sharpness, and their topicality, they put Amul in the forefront of the reader’s mind. They literally bring the product home to the hearts and minds, not just the stomachs, of Indians.

And in every Tharoor home, therefore, the Amul brand retains pride of place. My late father would have loved to see his son having gentle fun poked at him in a prominent hoarding on his favourite Marine Drive. He would have been happy that I had finally caught up with my sisters.

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