• Indians score at Television Asia Awards

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 09, 2000

    Karan Thapar, Indian chat show host and head of production company UTV‘s current affairs division, has won the Asian Television Award 2000 for Best News/Current Affairs Special for his controversial interview with Pakistan‘s Chief Executive Pervez Musharraf. He won the coveted award at a glittering ceremony in Singapore on Thursday night which was broadcast by Singapore Television.

    Thapar‘s one-hour interview with Musharraf was aired on Doordarshan in February and became a subject of controversy with critics questioning whether the state broadcaster should have given a platform for Pakistan‘s military ruler.

    Thapar had bagged the Best Current Affairs or Magazine Programme Presenter along with CNBC Asia‘s Bettina Chua Abdullah at the 1999 Awards ceremony.

    Another winner from India was in the Best Magazine Programme Category. Wheels (Episode 6 - SeriesIV) produced by Miditech (P) Ltd for Star TV took home the award.

    In the Best Game Show or Quiz Programme category, Zee Network‘s Bournvita Quiz Contest took the runner-up slot. And in the best Infotainment Programme category too, We The People produced by United Television for Star Plus was runner-up.

    Other Indian programmes and presenters were highly commended. They include: *Hard Talk India featuring Kapil Dev (Best Current Affairs Programme; UTV for BBC World) *MTV Gai Bab Gao (Bast Game or Quiz Programme; MTV India) *Niret Alva (Best Current Affairs or Magazine Programme Presenter for Miditech Ltd). Alva is getting a high commendation for the second year running.

  • ETV Kannada Launching, Urdu Channel Next

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 08, 2000

    Competition in the Kannada TV firmament is all set to heat up with the launch of a new Kannada Channel from Ramoji Rao?s Eenadu TV (ETV) stable on 10 December.

    Its launch comes just about a year after news of such a channel first surfaced in December 1999. The new general entertainment Kannada channel faces a stiff test from the well settled Udaya of Sun TV, as also the comparatively more recent Ushe and Suprabhat. Udaya at present hogs a whopping 70% share of the Rs850 million worth of ad spending in Karnataka.

    The channel will be a 24 hours free to air channel with the programming pattern on the same lines as other ETV regional channels like ETV Marathi. Transmission is through Intelsat 704 at 66?E. The trial run started on 3 December. On Launch day two Blockbuster movies will be shown, one starring Kannada matinee idol Raj Kumar.

    Speaking exclusively to Indiantelevision.com, an executive of ETV?s Mumbai office said: "The Kannada audience is very discerning on the quality front. This IT savvy, educated audience will not accept just anything that is dumped to them. But our experience in successfully running Marathi and Bengali channels will definitely help us to deliver the best to our Kannada audience."

    For Ramoji Rao, after ETV Kannada, the next on the list is an Urdu channel which will be launched sometime in March 2001. The programme compilation has been going on for the last few months. Other regional channels are also in the pipeline.

     

  • Star TV brings back old hand for DTH & broadband

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 08, 2000

    Star TV India is bringing in television industry veteran Altaf Ali Mohammed to look after its digital platform - DTH and broadband - in India. Mohammed was earlier looking after the network?s distribution operations in India, west Asia, and south Asia before the job was handed over to Arun Mohan, current cable TV distribution head in India. Star TV has recently taken a 26 per cent equity stake in one of the three largest cable TV MSOs in the country, Hathway Cable & Datacom. According to Star TV CEO Peter Mukerjea, Mohan will continue in his present position increasing penetration for Star?s channel bouquet, while Mohammed will be responsible for Hathway and broadband properties. In DTH, Mohammed will be replacing Urmilla Gupta, who recently quit the company.

     

  • Prasar Bharati tries to get DTH plan in place

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 08, 2000

    The Prasar Bharati board yesterday gave the corporation the go-ahead to explore a DTH service in partnership with non-broadcasters.The corporation is believed to be exploring alliances with government run outfits such as MTNL, VSNL, among others. Of course, it could also make an offer to private firms such as HFCL or Reliance, thought the latter says that DTH is a non-starter as government clearance for Ku-band DTH has come too late, and other technically attractive options are available currently.

  • BBC emerges tops in decisionmakers' survey

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 07, 2000

    BBC World has emerged as the most-watched channel in a decision makers‘ survey conducted by market research firm ORG-Marg for the news and information channel. The research sample covered 1,030 executives designated as general managers and above in private companies, public sector organisations and financial firms.
    51.7 per cent of those surveyed said that they had watched BBC World yesterday, 73 per cent said that they had tuned into it the past week and 79.3 per cent said that they switched it on in the past month. As compared to this Star News was watched by 71 per cent in the previous week, Star Plus by 65 per cent and CNN by 52 per cent. Discovery, Sony, Zee TV, DD1 were watched by less than 50 per cent of them in the previous week.

    BBC World had commissioned a similar survey in 1997 and it has retained its audience since then among decision makers even in 2000. Star Plus has lost two points dropping from 67 per cent to 65 per cent, DD I from 62 per cent to 42 per cent, Zee TV from 58 per cent to 45 per cent.

    Additionally, the survey revealed that nine out of every 10 CEOs said that they prefer BBC World to any other channel. Almost a similar number of CEOs said that they preferred Star News.

    With convincing research like this, BBC World should have no problems finding sponsors and advertisers for its India specific programming. Or should it? Watch this space.


  • Convergence draft goes back for redrafting

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 07, 2000

    It?s quite a quaint dance. One step forward, two step back. That?s the path the government has decided to take for Convergence draft. The group of ministers (GoM) which met on Wednesday decided to send it back to jurist Fali Nariman who headed the sub-group which wrote the draft in the first place.
    Apparently, the GoM appears to be in broad agreement on the bill, but would like some minor changes to be made. It would like certain issues to be clarified and words used in the draft to be changed. The sub-group will apparently have to look closer at Issues such as the post of the spectrum manager, the bill?s name, who should have the right of way, the role of the regulator (content and carriage) etc and submit the redrafted draft to the GoM within a week.

    The GoM is slated to meet once again on 21 December and send the redrafted draft to the Cabinet.

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