Imagine this, you’re sitting with your family, watching a beautiful Malayalam movie on JioHotstar.
The room is quiet, everyone’s immersed in the story, and suddenly… a Durex ad pops up on screen. No warning, no skip button, nothing. Just a painfully awkward 30 seconds that feels like an eternity.
This isn’t just about discomfort. It’s about responsibility. Viewers have every right to expect that a family-friendly movie platform will filter the ads that appear during such moments. Instead, JioHotstar’s ad algorithm seems blind to context, throwing brand partnerships ahead of basic viewer decency.
The problem here isn’t the product being advertised, it’s the platform’s insensitivity to the setting in which it’s shown. OTT platforms like JioHotstar hold immense influence over what enters our living rooms.
A careless placement like this can instantly shatter a comfortable family moment, leaving viewers embarrassed and frustrated.
The bigger concern is that users have no control. You can’t skip the ad, you can’t report it immediately, and you can’t stop it without exiting the app altogether. For a platform that boasts about user experience, this feels like a glaring oversight.
In the race for monetization, JioHotstar seems to have forgotten a simple truth: digital entertainment isn’t just about screens, it’s about people. And when you enter people’s homes, you owe them a little more respect than this.