Companies now realize that having a celebrity who commands loyalty in the South while still being accepted in the North is a win-win strategy.
'Ram Charan represents a new era of brand ambassadors—confident, cross-regional, and culturally unifying. His Campa Cola deal shows that the soft drink industry is no longer Bollywood-dependent,' says a senior brand strategist at an FMCG agency.
'It's not about Bollywood vs South anymore—it's about who has more connect with India's emerging Bharat and Gen Z,' adds a digital marketing expert from Mumbai.
This isn't necessarily the end of Bollywood's advertising reign, but it does indicate diminishing exclusivity. With rising stars like Allu Arjun, Jr NTR, Vijay Deverakonda, and Yash finding pan-India brand deals, Hindi cinema's monopoly over the Indian consumer psyche is undeniably eroding.
If Bollywood wants to retain relevance in advertising, it will have to reinvent its image, storytelling, and star persona—not just rely on legacy.
Ram Charan's Campa Cola ad isn't just about fizzy drinks—it's a symbolic fizz in India's cultural and brand endorsement dynamics. For the first time, a soft drink company has acknowledged what the box office already proved:
India is no longer Bollywood-only. It's pan-Indian, multilingual, and proudly diverse.
And Ram Charan may just be the first of many South Indian superstars to start appearing in your national commercials—whether it's for phones, clothes, or colas.