Pakistani entrepreneur sees ‘Meet the Drapers’ as boost for local startups as four firms compete

The screengrab taken from a video shows four Pakistani entrepreneurs participate during the eighth and latest episode of the TV show ‘Meet the Drapers’ featuring Karachi, aired on February 28, 2025. (Screengrab/myco/Meet The Drapers Karachi)
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Updated 01 March 2025
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Pakistani entrepreneur sees ‘Meet the Drapers’ as boost for local startups as four firms compete

  • The reality TV show allows businesses to compete for $1 million by pitching ideas to a panel of investors
  • This is the first time Pakistani firms are featuring on the global show that also allows audiences to invest

KARACHI: The founder of a Pakistani startup participating in a leading international reality TV show, which allows businesses to pitch innovative ideas to prominent investors, said Friday the appearance of early-stage companies from her country on such global platforms can strengthen the local startup ecosystem.
Her remarks came after the latest episode of “Meet The Drapers” featuring Pakistani entrepreneurs, marking the first time in seven seasons that the country was represented in the competition hosted by venture capital icon Tim Draper. The show offers contestants the opportunity to compete for funding and exposure, with the audience also able to invest in promising startups.
Among the four Pakistani entrepreneurs featured this season is Maha Shahzad, the Karachi-born founder of BusCaro, a tech-based mobility startup offering transport solutions in Pakistan.
“We did our pitches in the [San Francisco] Bay Area, and then the Meet The Drapers team came down to Karachi where we picked iconic locations for the shoot,” she told Arab News, adding that she appeared on the program against the backdrop of Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s mausoleum, as she felt it symbolized Karachi.




The screengrab taken from a video shows the founder of a Pakistani startup BusCaro, Maha Shahzad presents her pitch on the eighth episode of ‘Meet the Drapers’ featuring Karachi, aired on February 28, 2025. (Screengrab/myco/Meet The Drapers Karachi)

“For the overall ecosystem, it is important for Pakistani startups to be shown on international platforms,” she continued. “The media portrayal globally of Pakistan and its businesses versus our reality is very different. So that exposure is very important.”
Pakistani startups gained significant traction in recent years, attracting record investments in 2021 and early 2022, particularly in e-commerce, fintech and mobility solutions. The surge generated optimism about the country’s emerging tech ecosystem, prompting the government to invest in the sector, introduce tax incentives and push for higher IT exports to mitigate economic challenges.
Shahzad, a Pakistani-American, has been running BusCaro for two and a half years, offering a bus-hailing service across Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad. Her company partners with businesses to facilitate employee commutes while also allowing individual users to access its services.
She and the other three Pakistani entrepreneurs joined “Meet The Drapers” through Paklaunch, a Pakistani community platform that connects investors, professionals and startups globally. Paklaunch facilitated the show’s entry into the country, leading 100 local startups to compete. After several rounds of shortlisting, four Pakistani companies reached the pitching stage, with the episode filmed during a conference in San Francisco last October.
“A show like this is obviously helpful for potential fundraising and adds a lot of value to any business,” Shahzad said. “For me, it’s been an honor to meet Tim Draper and be a part of the show more than anything else.”




The screengrab taken from a video shows four Pakistani entrepreneurs pose during the eighth and latest episode of the TV show ‘Meet the Drapers’ featuring Karachi, aired on February 28, 2025. (Screengrab/myco/Meet The Drapers Karachi)

Unlike other reality shows, “Meet The Drapers” primarily focuses on tech-based startups with mass-scale potential. Entrepreneurs from around the world participate, with season seven featuring 44 contestants from Abu Dhabi, Paris, London, New York and Pakistan, among others.
Participants pitch live to a panel of celebrity guest judges for a $1 million grand prize, with the second and third-place winners receiving $500,000 and $250,000, respectively.
Another Pakistani startup, a streaming platform called Myco, is also competing this season. Founded by Islamabad-born Umair Masoom Usmani, who moved to Dubai and launched the business there in 2021, Myco operates out of the UAE but considers Pakistan its largest market in terms of users, revenue and consumer base.
Myco also secured the exclusive rights to stream “Meet The Drapers” in Pakistan, with the first episode airing on January 17, 2025.
“When I presented my pitch on the show, Tim Draper expressed his support for Myco and asked us to stream ‘Meet The Drapers’ in Pakistan,” Usmani told Arab News over the phone on Friday.




Myco’s founder Umair Masoom Usmani in a behind-the-scenes still during the Meet The Drapers shoot in Karachi, Pakistan, in November 2024. (Photo courtesy: myco)

The startup enhances entertainment through live streaming, integrating a reward system for both consumers and advertisers.
“It was a big win for us to get the rights to stream the show,” he continued. “The opportunity to meet Tim Draper was huge, as was the connection built with the ‘Meet The Drapers’ team. It will hopefully be a long-term relationship.”
Usmani hopes to make it to the finale based on consumer votes. The six finalists, to be featured in the April 18 episode, will include three chosen by judges and three selected through public voting.




The screengrab taken from a video shows the founder of a Pakistani startup Laam, Arif Iqbal presents her pitch on the eighth episode of ‘Meet the Drapers’ featuring Karachi, aired on February 28, 2025. (Screengrab/myco/Meet The Drapers Karachi)

The other two Pakistani startups featured in the “Meet The Drapers” episode include Laam, a fashion platform connecting consumers with brands and designers, and Reup Cycle, an app promoting sustainability by converting used plastics into industrial materials.


Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

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Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

  • Basant to be celebrated in Lahore from Feb. 6-8 for first time since 2007, officials say
  • Section 144 enforced to bar religious and political imagery on kites amid security concerns

ISLAMABAD: Punjab authorities have enforced Section 144 and imposed strict limits on kite materials and imagery ahead of the Basant kite-flying festival, which is set to return in Lahore next month for the first time since 2007 under tight safety and public-order conditions.

The move comes as the three-day Basant celebration — a traditional spring cultural festival marked by kite flying — is scheduled from Feb. 6 to 8 under the Punjab Kite Flying Act 2025, ending an 18-year hiatus after years of ban amid deadly accidents and safety concerns.

Basant, once a vibrant tradition signaling the arrival of spring with colorful kites and rooftop festivities, was outlawed in the mid-2000s after authorities linked metal-coated kite strings and celebratory gunfire to multiple deaths and injuries.

“A 30-day ban has been imposed under Section 144 on the manufacture, sale, purchase and use of kites bearing religious or political symbols or imagery,” the Punjab Home Department said in a statement.

“Kites displaying the image of any country’s flag or a political party’s flag will also be prohibited,” it added. “The manufacture, transportation, storage, sale and use of kites in violation of these restrictions have been declared punishable offenses.”

Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure allows authorities to impose different kinds of restrictions to maintain public order and safety.

The statement highlighted “concerns that provocative elements could use religious or political symbols during Basant.”

It said that authorities have permitted only plain or multicolored kites during the event.

“The Punjab government has allowed Basant as a recreational festival under a ‘safe Basant’ framework,” the statement added. “No violations of the law will be permitted during Basant.”