Disney firms up plans to launch its three channels
CANNES: Walt Disney Television International president David Hulbert is quite gung-ho about India.
The divorce rumours have been buzzing like bees for some time now. That Star India and news content provider the Prannoy Roy-headed New Delhi Television Ltd (NDTV) are parting ways is clear and all that remains is for this week‘s official announcement of the same. Firming up the news of this breakup is the confirmation of gossip that Star India has zoomed in on a head honcho for Star News, an operation that will be run inhouse, with assistance from other news providers. She is none other than former Sony Entertainment programming boss and Channel Nine CEO Ravina Raj Kohli. Talks between the Kohli and the Star India management have been on for some time now. Kohli has also been involved in setting up her own company Sundial Communications, a company she is keen on developing into a media powerhouse. How and where Kohli takes the Star news channel only time will tell, but there is no denying the lady has chutzpah. It is more than a coincidence that hardballed Australian media tycoons of the likes of Kerry Packer (in her Channel Nine Gold days) and now Rupert Murdoch are more than convinced of her credentials. |
The 61st annual Peabody Awards announced recently saw HBO and Nickelodeon reap a rich harvest of awards.
The awards will be given away on 20 May by the University of Georgia‘s Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.
HBO has received multiple awards for original programmes like Band of Brothers, the 10-part World War II miniseries created by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, and Wit, with Emma Thompson as an English teacher dying of cancer. HBO films Conspiracy and Boycott have also bagged awards.
Nickelodeon has scored with its shows Little Bill and Blue‘s Clues, the latter an animated series for pre-schoolers. CNN and Channel 4 International received an award for two documentaries, Beneath the Veil and Unholy War, produced by Saira Shah. These works chronicle the terror and violence in the lives of Afghan women. America: A Tribute to Heroes, which aired on Star World shortly after 11 September has also bagged a Peabody. The show was produced by Joel Gallen and simulcast by more than thirty broadcast and cable networks.
A Peabody has also gone to the ABC movie Anne Frank. The films stars Ben Kinglsey and goes beyond previous accounts of the familiar tragic story. The Showtime network was cited for Things Behind the Sun, a harrowing depiction of rape and its lingering personal effects.
Peabody winners include several international productions. WTO Challenge, produced by Television Broadcast Limited in Hong Kong examines the personal, social and economic implications of China‘s growing involvement in world affairs.
Awards were also presented to National Public Radio for its more than 180 hours of programming related to September 11.
These channel agreements, combined with MGM Networks‘ launch in the Middle East earlier this year, nearly doubles the number of countries in which MGM has established a channel presence to date. MGM now has equity interests in foreign channels that reach more than 40 countries around the world, according to an official release. In India, the network has a joint venture with broadcaster Zee for its English movie channel Zee MGM.
In Europe, an MGM Movie Channel is planned to launch in May in Portugal. MGM commenced its Europe footprint by launching the MGM Movie Channel in Malta on 1 February and in Russia on 1 March this year. The MGM Movie Channel was launched in Malta on Melita Cable, the release states. In Russia, MGM Networks inked a deal with Metromedia International, which introduced the MGM Movie Channel into the market of the former U.S.S.R. on 1 March, initially launching on the Kosmos MMDS system in Moscow. In Portugal the MGM Movie Channel will commence on cable systems owned by Cabovisao, S.A.
The MGM Movie Channels in Russia and Malta are owned 100 per cent by MGM Networks. The Portuguese service will be provided by MGM Networks Latin America LLC, which operates the MGM Networks Latin America business. In South Korea, MGM has announced an alliance with the country‘s leading DVD distributor, Spectrum DVD, to launch a customised Korean language service later this month. The MGM Movie Channel - Korea will be carried on the new Skylife DBS platform. MGM Networks will own 33 per cent of this channel, the maximum permitted under Korean law.
All the channels offer round-the-clock offerings from MGM‘s celebrated 4,000-title library, the largest modern film library in the world, claims the company. Films include the pyschological thriller Hannibal, the Reese Witherspoon comedy Legally Blonde, and Heartbreakers which is about a pair of mother-daughter con artists.
The library also includes 19 Woody Allen films, and the popular James Bond, Rocky and Pink Panther franchises.
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