ESPN STAR Sports strikes gold at Taiwan Advertising Awards
After winning three medals at Taiwan's 4A Advertising Awards in April, ESPN STAR Sports has gone one better at the pr
After winning three medals at Taiwan‘s 4A Advertising Awards in April, ESPN STAR Sports has gone one better at the prestigious China Times Advertising Awards. Its agency, Batey Ads, collected three gold and two bronze medals for work on behalf of Asia‘s largest sports broadcaster.
The campaign, for ESS‘ NBA Finals 2001 programming, won gold medals in the Best Newspaper Ad, Best Poster and Best Print Ad of the Year categories. In addition, its CGU Asian Bowling Tour campaign won bronze in the Best Newspaper Ad and Best Poster categories, a company release says.
Batey Ads Taiwan, who worked with the ESS Taiwan Marketing team to create these prize-winning ads has been the appointed agency for ESS for the past year.
Maggie Chang, General Manager of ESPN STAR Sports Taiwan office says: "These awards are a strong indicator of the depth of ESS‘ ability to promote and manage not only its own brands, but those of its rights holders, such as the NBA. "
This is the third time ESPN‘s ads have won at Taiwan‘s most prestigious advertising awards. In 1998, ESPN‘s "No Sports, No Life" campaign won the gold medal in the Best Corporate Image Ad in the China Times Advertising Awards. In April this year, ESPN‘s CGU-Asian Bowling Tour campaign was awarded two silver and one bronze medal at Taiwan‘s 4A Advertising Awards.
The 5th Casbaa China Roundtable in Beijing and Shanghai, held between 11 and 13 September, attracted significant support from government officials, mainland operating companies and Casbaa members over two days of briefings and information exchanges. The central thread running through the discussions was how to facilitate dealings with the regulatory authorities in China.
The Casbaa China Roundtable 2001 was organised in association with Casbaa members Claydon Gescher Associates (CGA) and MediaView. The event was sponsored by Casbaa member PricewaterhouseCoopers and endorsed and supported by pay-TV regulator the State Administration for Radio, Film and Television (SARFT).
Some 50 Casbaa member delegates attended each of the two days. One hundred delegates from mainland China-based companies also participated.
The presentations featured a dozen overviews of the China and regional markets both in terms of regulation and commercial conditions, with contributions made by, among others, SARFT, CGA, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Zenith Media, Bank of China International, CITV Progamme Agency, OpenTV, BDA, Paul, Weiss Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, Discovery Communications (China), the Shanghai Media & Entertainment Group and Tom.com
Marcel Fenez, Asia Pacific Leader of Pricewaterhousecoopers‘ Media and Entertainment practice and a Casbaa board member gave the opening address. Four 90-minute panel discussions, led by CGA, expanded on the presentations with a sometimes forthright exchanges of views.
"These two days of conferencing reinforced the strides which Casbaa has been making," said Frank Brown, the president of Casbaa. "This information exchange reflected the excitement that our industry is experiencing in China and the huge opportunities that are gradually opening up. Casbaa was delighted to meet with the officials from SARFT and to hear their concise summary of the regulatory environment." Simon Twiston Davies, the executive director of Casbaa, added: "We are so pleased with the progress made with this roundtable that we have already started the process of planning next year‘s China event with CGA and MediaView."
"We were particularly encouraged by the attendance of related Casbaa member companies such as News Corporation (China) and AOL-Time Warner, as well as by outside groups such as ABN Amro, DVN Holdings, Lehman Brothers and SUNeVision, said Twiston Davies, who pointed out that Casbaa member companies such as Scientific-Atlanta, The History Channel, OpenTV, New Skies Satellites, Walt Disney Television and MTV Asia also contributed hugely to the dialogue.
"Despite a sometimes difficult operating environment for our industries we continue to reach out to regulators and the market as a whole. We see Casbaa playing an ever more active role as a bridge between those who set the regulations and those who must work within the framework." said Twiston Davies.
The China market will be given a central position during the upcoming Casbaa 2001 Convention, 28-30 November 2001 in Hong Kong.
Sony Entertainment Television, which joined Star India and Zee TV as a completely pay-driven bouquet when its flagship channel became fully encrypted on 1 September, expects to reach a subscriber base of 26 million viewing homes within the next 30 days.
According to Shantonu Aditya, senior V-P franchise channels and distribution, Sony has already achieved a subscriber base of 20 million after the rollout of over 4,500 set top boxes in the A and B centres across the country. Distribution was going on across other centres at a fast clip, Aditya said.
Aditya said that due to the improved yield that had been achieved (yield is defined by the average number of subscribers that the cable operator declares per box) SET had significantly reduced estimates on the number of boxes that would be required to reach a subscriber base (26 million) equal to that existing pre-encryption. Aditya said he hoped to achieve his target with the rollout of 6,000 boxes but added that at the end of it all that figure might reach as high as 7,000.
That is still far lower than the original estimate of a 10,000 box requirement for full rollout.
Reports that there was a dispute between Star India and Balaji Telefilms over the Tamil reworking of the hit soap "Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi Balaji" were downplayed by both the channel and the production house today.
Balaji had been commissioned to do the programme for the Tamil language Sun TV network. Star raised objections after it was noticed that the initial episodes were virtually identical to that of ‘KSBKBT‘ being shown on Star Plus.
According to Star corporate communications head Yash Khanna, since Star owns the worldwide rights to the soap it had asked Balaji to change the storyline and the television software production house had agreed to do so.
The Tamil version started this April and 104 episodes have already been shown.
Balaji CEO Sanjay Dosi said the issue had been sorted out and emphasised that Star and Balaji continued to share a most positive relationship.
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