• Zee, Kher square up for further battle after court verdict

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 22, 2000

    The courts have decided for the present but the battle lines are still drawn between peeved actor Anupam Kher and Zee Telefilms over his summary dismissal from the flop game show Sawaal Dus Crore Ka.

    After the Mumbai High Court on Wednesday turned down his petition against Zee, Kher is now exploring options of filing a damage or a defamation suit against Zee. "I have left it all to my lawyers. They will decide whether it will be a damage suit or defamation suit, or to apply for compensation according to the arbitration clause in the letter the court has given us," Kher said at a hurriedly called press meet in New Delhi on Thursday.

    Zee, meanwhile, served a legal notice on Kher on Thursday asking him to apologise within 10 days for allegedly making defamatory statements against the company or face a Rs1,000 million defamation suit. It states that Kher had defamed the company in the press by saying the studio set up for the game show allegedly did not have proper electricity and that the programme was bad.

    He had also allegedly said there was no coordination between the organisers and participants. The contract did not provide for any of the parties to talk to the press regarding the game show, Zee sources added.

    SDCK will air its last episode on Friday with Kher and Manisha Koirala as hosts before taking a break to possibly emerge in a new avatar.

     

  • Kermit goes off the air; Hallmark, Modi Entertainment may launch family channel

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 22, 2000

    Kermit Channel has ceased transmission in India, the only market where the children?s channel was still distributed in Asia.

    Crown Media Holdings, the Los Angeles-based company which transmits Kermit, had been in discussions with Modi Entertainment Network (MEN) for pay TV signals throughout India, about a possible joint venture to leverage Kermit?s subscriber base for additional distribution and advertising revenue.

    Both companies have now taken a mutual decision not to proceed further.

    Following this development, MEN is in active talks with Hallmark Entertainment Network for the possible launch of a new channel targeting family audiences.

    If that doesn?t work out, some sort of an alliance is definitely on the cards, according to sources.

    Crown ceased broadcasting Kermit in all other Asian markets in November. Instead, six hours of dedicated programming for kids was added daily to the Hallmark feed. Three hours midmorning and three in the afternoon. The company now will take the same approach in India.

    The decision to pull out Kermit from India was apparently taken by EM TV of Germany. EM holds the controlling stake in the channel after it bought out Kermit creator Jim Henson?s 50% holding.

  • Heavy demand for entries to Sony's Chappar Phaad Ke

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 22, 2000

    Sony Entertainment Television?s Jeeto Chappar Phaad Ke (JCPK), which is set for launch in January, is generating a tremendous response from the public with over 900,000 entries received in just 12 days.

    Rekha Nigam, senior VP, programming and production, said there would have been an even heavier rush if entries had been allowed through call centres and the Internet rather than only on competition postcards. The cut-off date for sending in the postcards was 25 November.

    Sony looks to have a winner on its hands if the advance buzz around the channel?s riposte to Star TV?s Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC) is anything to go by. Ten second ad spots have been sold at Rs275,000 which is much higher than what Star charged for KBC (Rs80,000) at the time of its launch. KBC rates peaked at Rs450,000 and has now settled at Rs350,000.

     

     

  • Bangalore Court summons Hathway, BESCOM, BMP officials

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 22, 2000

    BANGALORE: The 10th Additional City Civil and Sessions Special Court (electricity act) Bangalore has issued summons against Hathway Cable Network Bangalore, Bangalore Electric Supply Company (BESCOM), junior engineer Ramanjanappa and Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BMP) assistant executive engineer Govindiaih on the death of a young boy Anish who lost his life in July due to electric shock from a loosely hung live cable wire.

    The court has asked the parties to appear before it on 5 February 2005 for a hearing.

     
     
     

    The summons is issued based on a report by electrical inspector KS Anjanappa to the court on the tragic incident. Anjanappa in his report stated the negligence by the above three persons resulted in the unfortunate death of the boy.

     

    The incident lead to a cable cutting spree by BESCOM under directions of the State power minister Revanna who held the cable operators responsbile for the death. Cable operators, in protest, stopped work which resulted in cable blackout across the Bangalore city.

    Three enquiries by three different bodies had held the BESCOM officials and the BMP officials primarily responsible for the mishap.

     
  • High Court rejects Kher's petition against Zee

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 21, 2000

    The Mumbai High Court on Wednesday quashed film actor Anupam Kher‘s hopes of getting back at Zee Telefilms for the summary way in which he was dismissed as host of its flop game show Sawaal Dus Crore Ka (SDCK). In his petition, Kher had challenged his ‘arbitrary‘ termination. He had also sought an injunction from the court to restrain Zee from discontinuing with the programme without him as a host.
    Zee in its defence blamed Kher as the one who breached the contract by speaking to the media and said it was justified in removing him from the show, Press Trust of India reported. After hearing both the parties at length, Justice KK Baam, rejected Kher‘s petition on the ground that such a dispute could only be decided through arbitration. Since nothing survived in the petition, it was disposed of by the court. Kher is now free to refer the matter to arbitration or prefer an appeal against this order.

    "No doubt, Anupam is a good artist. Yet, he cannot compel Zee to retain him as a host," the judge remarked. Kher had challenged the notice of 9 December served on him by Zee informing him of its decision to drop him from SDCK.

    Kher‘s counsel Janak Dwarkadas contended that Zee had no right to terminate his client‘s services without giving him 60 days prior notice as this was one of the conditions of the contract signed between Kher and Zee on 13 October. Zee‘s erratic dealings had publicly humiliated and psychologically traumatised Kher, Dwarkadas claimed. Zee‘s counsel V Tulzapurkar countered that Kher had himself committed breach of contract by his utterances in the media which included his saying he was not interested in the show. Neither Zee nor Kher responded to calls requesting further details on the developments.

    Meanwhile, the Cine TV and Artistes Association (CTVAA) committee, to which Kher had sent a complaint relating to the same case, was yet to meet on the matter. Association Secretary Dharmesh Tiwari had said on 14 December that a meeting would be taking place within a couple of days. Gathering all the committee members from their various commitments is proving a major hurdle.

     

  • FM broadcaster wins licence, allies with Star

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 19, 2000

    Music Broadcast Pvt. Ltd, a company promoted by the Mittal group, has signed a licence agreement for operating FM channels.

    It is one of 16 companies to have signed licence agreements after furnishing bank guarantees amounting to Rs1587.5 million for operating 37 FM channels, according to the United News of India.

    Music Broadcast won its licence after committing Rs413 million as bank guarantee. It will be operating from six centres: Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore, Nagpur, Lucknow and Patna.

    The company looks set to be a major player in the FM wars because of its association with the Star TV Network. Star will handle the service end, essentially ad sales, according to Yash Khanna, Star TV‘s Head of Communications.

    Queried whether Star was also looking at providing content for the channel, Khanna said he could not comment as discussions were still in progress. Details of the contract were being worked out, he said. Once the final agreement had been reached a clear picture would emerge, he added. Though letters of intent were issued to 26 companies for operation of 93 channels, only 16 companies won licences.

    However, nine broadcasting companies, who had been successful in the bidding, had filed five cases in Delhi High Court. "These are being heard simultaneously," Information & Broadcasting Minister Sushma Swaraj said in the Rajya Sabha. The modalities of Star‘s deal with Music Broadcast will be watched with interest as a pointer to how the FM ‘wars‘ may play out.

     

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