Campaigns
DDB MudraMax and Zee News create a’Misunderstood Scoreboard’
The scoreboard which were supposed to display match scores, started displaying the numbers of lives lost by soldiers since 1947 during the battles fought between both the countries. The campaign got overwhelming response as the passers-by, who started lighting candles at the site.

While spectators felt that these were normal run-of-the-mill scoreboards which kept on-lookers updated with the status of the match, they were caught off- guard as the numbers didn’t tally. As India started to bat and the first wicket fell, the Indian wickets column displayed’1′. Within minutes, the wickets column read 2. Our country neighbours standing in front of the billboards in Lahore and Karachi celebrated. The Indians on the other hand checked the score on their mobile phones and realised the second wicket hadn’t fallen. A few minutes later, the wickets column said 3. Before long, onlookers on either side of the border decided that the scoreboard had gone faulty.

After India won the match, the copy on the scoreboard changed. It read “WHEN LIVES ARE LOST, NO ONE WINS. The numbers kept increasing and stopped at 547290 for India and 546228 for Pakistan and those were the numbers of lives lost by soldiers since 1947 during the battles fought between both the countries. Thus depicting that neither country won anything by losing her soldiers.
The message was loud, clear and was well addressed by the passers-by who started lighting candles at the site, in memory of the fallen. Thus, a powerful statement on the futility of war was well-conveyed through the’Misunderstood Scoreboard’.
-
Creative Concepts
Nexus Malls introduces India’s first parking lot naming rights with Mia by Tanishq
-
Campaigns
Zepto’s OOH campaign to amplify SuperSaver proposition across 62 towns
-
Talks OOH
Shalini Sankar, National Head-Business Development, Laqshya Media Group, to speak at South India Talks OOH 2025
-
Talks OOH
Mayank Gupta, Founder & CEO, Vertex Lightco Industries, to present at South India Talks OOH 2025