calender_icon.png 13 January, 2026 | 7:48 PM

Young talent from AP-TG bring the world home

15-11-2025 12:00:00 AM

Metro India News | Hyderabad 

In the bustling corridors of university campuses abroad, in the humming open-plan offices of global tech firms, and in the shared apartments of young expatriates, a subtle shift has been quietly taking shape. For decades, the story for ambitious youth from Andhra Pradesh and Telangana was straightforward: study hard, secure international opportunities, join a multinational company, and carve out a comfortable life abroad. The message was clear—go out, compete, and win.

But recently, cracks have begun to appear in that narrative. More and more young people are pausing at the milestone of ‘going abroad’ and asking themselves: Why leave if the world outside doesn’t feel like home? And if I return, what will I build there?

The outward journey remains vibrant. Engineers, designers, analysts, and students continue to thrive in global hubs, productive and connected. What is changing, however, is the direction of ambition. A growing number of young people are returning—not reluctantly, but with intention—eager to channel global exposure into local impact.

Among those making this choice are Meghana Reddy Marella and Samaya Reddy Marella, sisters whose journeys abroad could not have been more different, yet whose vision converges. Meghana studied Global Communications in Bangkok, immersed in media theories, international classrooms, and the art of storytelling across cultures. She discovered how conversations shape people, how narratives can influence communities, and how effective communication can calm even the noisiest world.

Samaya, on the other hand, pursued Fashion Styling and Communication in Madrid. Surrounded by editorial shoots, design studios, and creatives expressing themselves through color, mood, and visual storytelling, she honed an instinct for aesthetics, style, and the subtle power of beauty in communication.

Two cities. Two worlds. Two distinct learning paths. Yet both sisters kept returning to the same thought: “Maybe we can do something with all this. Maybe back home.” And so BNS—Bharat News Spectrum—was born. Not with fanfare or a grand announcement, but with a simple, determined idea: Telugu youth deserve a platform that speaks with them, not at them.

BNS is not traditional news. It’s quieter, more visual, and rooted in the way today’s young people consume information. Meghana shapes the voice, the clarity, and the perspective; Samaya brings the visuals, the soul, and the emotion. Together, they have built a platform that feels modern while still carrying the comfort of home.

Their second initiative, Scholoria, follows the same ethos. NEET coaching can feel overwhelming, but Scholoria makes learning lighter, cleaner, and more personal. Meghana’s communication expertise shapes the guidance; Samaya’s creative instinct shapes the experience. The app feels almost like a hand held gently through the pressures of exams—a combination of warmth, simplicity, and reassurance.