• Nickelodeon does a double take with 'Jimmy Neutron'

    Nickelode

  • American Beauty to air on Star Movies

    "I'm 42 years old, and in less than a year I'll be dead. Of course, I didn't know that yet.

  • Zee English ties up with contests2win.com

    'Laughter is the best medicine' or so the popular saying goes. Zee English is focussing on the comedy band.

  • Maharishi first in India to jump onto Ku bandwagon

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 17, 2001

    Maharishi Channel Cable Network (MCCN) has notched up a first by becoming the only channel to adopt the Ku-band platform in India.

    The channel has reportedly moved over to Ku-band digital transmission effective 15 December. The channel has shifted to the new platform on EuropeStar satellite. It will continue to be available as a free to air channel and will remain on PanAmSat until the end of February 2002 to enable cable operators to shift to the new mode.

    Reports indicate that MCCN will offer the entire equipment package for Ku-band transmission to broadcasters at a special price reduction of 25 per cent. With the change over to the more sophisticated Ku band, MCCN is likely to offer additional channels. Maharishi Satellite Network, which owns MCCN, will probably offer a bouquet of channels instead of the solitary Maharishi Channel being beamed currently. The Network airs vedic wisdom in 19 languages in over 200 countries.

    Maharishi Channel also broadcasts four hours a day to the entire world via a global network of eight satellites. These broadcasts via the Maharishi Open University satellite system are in addition to the 24 hours broadcast in India and South Asia. Most of the Maharishi Channel programmes are in Hindi, and are specially designed to reach the 30 million NRIs living all around the world. So far, the channel was being beamed off PanAmSat4 in India, China, South Asia and South East Asia, off Palapa C2 in East Asia, off Thaicom3 and OptusB3 in Africa, Central Asia, Australia and New Zealand, off HotBird3 in Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia and off Telstar, SatMex5 and Echostar3 in The Americas, including the Caribbean.

     

  • Maharishi first in India to jump onto Ku bandwagon

    Maharishi Channel Cable Network (MCCN) has notched up a first by becoming the only channel to adopt the Ku-band platf

  • Sabe TV sticks to its guns on 'Zimmedar Kaun?'

    Submitted by ITV Production on Dec 15, 2001
    indiantelevision.com

    Controversy notwithstanding, Sabe TV will go ahead with the scheduled telecast of the Zimmedar Kaun? episode featuring the hawkers-Bombay Municipal Corporation fracas tomorrow at noon.

    Sabe TV vice-chairman and managing director Markand Adhikari says there will be no rethinking on the telecast of ?Feriwale?, as demanded by deputy municipal commissioner Chandrashekhar Rokde. The chat show had degenerated into mud slinging and even physical abuse as host Priya Tendulkar allegedly sided with some of the panelists during the debate on whether hawking should be restricted in Mumbai. Tendulkar herself claimed that she had been also hit during the show. Rokde allegedly walked out of the episode in disgust after he was heckled by hawkers? union leader Suresh Kapile and a section of the audience. Citizen?s forums? representatives who participated in the show also spoke about Tendulkar?s bias.

    Adhikari says the channel does not interfere with the editorial aspects of its programmes. Zimmedar Kaun? is produced by host Tendulkar herself. The programme was launched at the time of the Sabe TV channel launch in 2000, and won the RAPA award for the best talk show in June this year. It was also nominated for the Screen Videocon awards this year.

    Meanwhile, the Hind Mazdoor Kisan Panchayat, which is spearheading the hawkers? agitation against the municipal corporation, seems to have got its facts a little mixed up. In a press release, it has demanded that Zee TV go ahead and telecast the controversial episode, failing which the union will hold demonstrations in front of Rokde?s office. Rokde had earlier said that, in all fairness, the channel should refrain from airing this episode.

    So what can we expect now? A demonstration outside Zee?s offices for "their having bowed to BMC pressure in not airing the show?"

    The programme is aired on Sabe TV on Sundays at noon, with a repeat telecast at 8 PM.

    Image
Subscribe to