Bengaluru's 'Recycle Resolutions' Campaign Features Vasu Dixit & Aiyyo Shraddha

Invaluables Bengaluru has launched the 'Recycle Resolutions' campaign, using short musical reels created by comedian Shraddha Jain and musician Vasu Dixit. The campaign aims to encourage simple waste-handling practices that improve recyclability and uphold the dignity of the city's informal waste pickers. It builds on previous successful initiatives that have demonstrated measurable public adoption and impact. The campaign is being promoted across digital and outdoor platforms in Bengaluru as part of a broader collective impact effort.

Key Points: Vasu Dixit & Shraddha Jain Lead Bengaluru Recycling Drive

  • Uses rap & music reels for messaging
  • Highlights dignity of waste pickers
  • Builds on past successful initiatives
  • Promoted via digital & outdoor media
  • Part of broader Saamuhika Shakti effort
3 min read

Bengaluru strikes a chord for recycling with Vasu Dixit and Shraddha Jain

Invaluables Bengaluru launches 'Recycle Resolutions' with musical reels by Vasu Dixit and Shraddha Jain to promote waste habits & dignity for waste pickers.

"Real change doesn't need grand gestures; it's in the small, daily acts. - Vasu Dixit"

Bengaluru, Jan 21

Invaluables Bengaluru has launched 'Recycle Resolutions', a culture-led campaign featuring musical reels by comedian-creator Shraddha Jain, popularly known as Aiyyo Shraddha, and musician Vasu Dixit, aimed at encouraging citizens to follow simple waste practices that improve recyclability and uphold the dignity of the city's waste pickers.

Designed as short-form digital reels, the campaign uses rap and music as a storytelling format to deliver clear, relatable messages on responsible waste handling.

Invaluables Bengaluru said the reels are seeing growing organic traction on social media, driven by their simplicity and cultural relevance.

Through individual musical reels, Jain and Dixit highlight how these actions directly affect the safety, efficiency and dignity of informal waste pickers, also referred to as Invaluable Recyclers.

The campaign builds on earlier Invaluables initiatives with measurable outcomes. 'Wash the Dabba' saw 60 per cent adoption among exposed audiences, 'Got Old Clothes?' led to the collection of 1.8 tonnes of garments across 16 Dry Waste Collection Centres in a month, and 'Mark It Red' prompted 41 per cent of exposed audiences to safely wrap and mark sanitary and hazardous waste.

Musician Vasu Dixit, a long-term supporter of #Invaluables, said, "Real change doesn't need grand gestures; it's in the small, daily acts. When we handle our waste responsibly, we make the work of our waste pickers safer and more dignified. 'Recycle Resolutions' is a reminder that these simple habits already work and that's reason enough to keep them going."

Comedian Aiyyo Shraddha, who has been associated with the campaign since 2021, added, "Most resolutions fizzle out by February. But these? They're simple. Wash your dabba, send old clothes to dry waste centres, and help make waste pickers' jobs safer and dignified. 'Recycle Resolutions' is a kind of promise to our environmental stewards. We must actually keep these promises!"

Speaking about the launch, Soma Katiyar, Executive Creative Director, India, BBC Media Action, said, "The New Year gives us a powerful behavioural nudge to 'recycle' these actions as resolutions -- so they don't fade as campaign noise but embed as everyday practice. Our creative insight was clear: people don't need brand-new habits; just familiar ones amplified at the right cultural moment. That's where real behaviour change happens -- through simple, dignifying routines that quietly make the city safer for our Invaluable Recyclers."

Highlighting the broader significance, Varinder Kaur Gambhir, Country Director, India, BBC Media Action, said, "Invaluables has always been about helping citizens see the people behind our waste system and act with care. This final phase brings together everything we have learned so far, backed by evidence and impact, and invites Bengalureans to carry these behaviours forward as a shared responsibility towards our waste pickers."

Invaluables is an initiative of BBC Media Action under Saamuhika Shakti, a collective impact effort where 12 partners have joined forces to enable waste pickers to lead secure and dignified lives with greater agency. The campaign is being promoted through digital platforms as well as outdoor media across Bengaluru, including select bus shelters and Namma Metro.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Saw the reel by Vasu Dixit on Instagram. Catchy tune and a clear message. It's high time we in Bengaluru, known for our tech, also become known for our civic sense. Segregation at source is not rocket science.
D
David E
As an expat living here, I appreciate this initiative. The 'Mark It Red' point is crucial. Proper disposal of sanitary waste is a basic hygiene issue that protects the workers. More cities need campaigns like this.
A
Aman W
Good effort, but I hope this is not just another flashy campaign. We've seen many start with fanfare and die out. The 60% adoption rate for 'Wash the Dabba' is promising, but sustaining it is the real challenge. BBMP needs to support this on ground.
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Shreya B
Aiyyo Shraddha is perfect for this! Her comedy always has a message. My society has started a dedicated bin for old clothes after seeing the 'Got Old Clothes?' poster. Small steps, but they add up. Let's keep our garden city clean!
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Varun X
Respect for the waste pickers is long overdue. They are the invisible heroes keeping our city running. If a simple act like rinsing a yogurt cup can make their job safer and more dignified, we have no excuse not to do it. Jai Hind!

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