But Mallya is thinking multimedia, though few—including some of his drinking buddies—are optimistic that he will make a go of it. Says one: "Each unrelated diversification of Mallya—telecom, aviation, petrochemicals, fertilisers, engineering—has boomeranged. When that happens, he goes back to core consolidation which is liquor, makes some money, and starts afresh. He's a sport."
Sport is probably where Mallya's sights are set for the moment. He loves horse and motor racing, plays squash regularly on a court in his residence, runs Asia's biggest stud farm at Kunigal, is president of the Indian Automotive Federation, is a government nominee on the Bangalore Turf Club, and wants to take over the government-owned Kanteerava Stadium in his hometown.
With the World Cup round the corner, talking to Mascarenhas, who like him is a Mangalorean brought up in Bangalore, might help. "Look what he has done for horseracing," says a Mallya confidant. "That's what he will do for cricket with television. He will be good for the sport."
The sceptics—and there are dozens—may ask: "'What is this morbid fascination of big industrialists to get into the media?" Mallya is probably looking at it long term. The UB group has a huge adspend ("enough to sustain a TV channel," says a UB source, meaning upwards of Rs 10 crore a year) but advertising alcohol is banned in India. Which means a lot of the money earmarked for brand promotion goes unspent. Surrogate advertising is the only avenue open—UB sponsors the West Indies cricket team and sailing rallies. Owning a TV channel and a newspaper, howsoever small and insignificant, might make sense although immediate returns are impossible. "We can not only utilise our adspend usefully but have something against our name in the end," says a senior UB executive.
It will also probably help boost the chairman's ego. "When a man has three days of parties when he turns 40, he obviously loves to project himself," says a source. Will it work? Wait and watch.