IBF, TAM and Intam come to an agreement on ratings
It was a meeting that was most talked about - one that would help smoothen, ease and clear some of the issues relatin
Southern Spice, a South Indian languages-based film and pop music channel, was officially launched in Mumbai today. The channel has been "on air" for the last three months and plays the music of all the four regional languages in the south. |
Southern Spice is headquartered in Chennai and beams a mix of Tamil (40 per cent), Telugu (30 per cent), Kannada (10 per cent), Malayalam (10 per cent) and English (10 per cent) - in a random mix. Anil Shetty of ARMD Media (the firm managing all aspects of the channel - including programming and promotion) explains the reasoning thus: "Music channels are not about about appointment television. It‘s all about frequency of viewing."
‘As to why the channel is packaged in English, Shetty says that is the only way to bridge all four languages.
On the programming front there are nine daily shows currently running ans two weeklies. This number will eventually go up to seven, according to Shetty.
Among the shows on air are Phone-Tastic, Say To Play, Reach Out (all three interactive), FIR, I-Me-Myself, Time-Out, Hot Hotter Hottest, South Full, Reach Out, Loaded and Fast Forward.
Southern Spice is promoted by Fortune Media Private Limited, a company floated by the Martin Lottery Agencies Ltd, one of the largest bulk distributors of lotteries in the country. Santiago Martin is chairman and managing director of the company. Martin Lottery is associated with the state lotteries of Bhutan, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra.
The lottery link is very evident in the channel‘s decision to to have a daily live relay of the Bhutan lottery from 3 - 4 pm.
With an initial capital expenditure of Rs 50 million, and running costs of just under Rs 10 million a month, the money sunk into the project so far is roughly Rs 90 million.
When queried as to when they expected to break even, Shetty says the channel is looking at a 30-month gestation period.
On the distribution front, Shetty says 95 per cent of the cable & satellite universe in the southern states have been covered, 80 per cent of Mumbai, 75 per cent of Delhi and 100 per cent of Calcutta. So far 3,000 set top boxes have been distributed across the country, he adds.
Simply Spice is beaming off NSS -703 as a free-to-air service. The channel is being uplinked from Singapore.
Technical Specifications:
Satellite : NSS - 703 57? E
Downlink Frequency : 3888 MHz
FEC : 3/4
Downlink Polarisation : Horizontal
Symbol rate : 09766 Kg Symbol/sec
Free-To-Air
It was a meeting that was most talked about - one that would help smoothen, ease and clear some of the issues relating to viewership ratings. The Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF) - the representative body of the satellite television industry - the research agencies were supposed to attend and come to some resolution.After all you can‘t continually keep badmouthing a system which measures how viewers are responding to your programmes.
The meeting happened today. Among those who attended included the research agencies‘ representatives, Sony Entertainment Television CEO Kunal Dasgupta, SABe TV vice-chairman and MD Markand Adhikari, ESPN India MD Manu Sawhney, Star TV CEO Peter Mukerjea, Zee TV broadcasting CEO Sandeep Goyal, Discovery chief Deepak Shourie, Eenadu TV‘s I. Venkat, BBC‘s Vinod Bakshi, and Sun TV‘s Sharad Kumar.
And a decision was taken that nobody amongst the attendees would sing to the media. Communications around the TRP issue would be centralised with one source, the IBF.
According to sources, however, the research agencies took great pains in presenting how they planned to restore confidence in the ratings, what measures they were taking to prevent security leaks, and ensuring better representation of viewers on the sample.
Sources reveal that broadcasters and the research agencies agreed on a few issues. Thirty per cent of the panel in each city would be renewed annually - so that within three years one will have a totally new panel. This apart, the research agencies have agreed to totally revamp their panels.
Hear out IBF executive director Bhuvan Lall for the official line: "Tam and Intam presented their findings around the TRP affair. Genuine concern was expressed about the leakages which have to be investigated. They have agreed to revamp the panels in four to six weeks in conjunction with the other stakeholders. The systems will be strengthened."
Stay tuned for further updates.
Chotimaa Ek Anokha Bandhan |
There?s a glut of daily soaps. Here?s another joining that rash. Choti Maa Ek Anokha Bandhan, a remake of the super successful Tamil soap Chithi (it is running in its 440 episode), is slated to become a five-day-a-week affair (from the current thrice a week telecast now) come 17 September. Choti Maa is touted as the big driver in Zee TV?s struggle to charge ahead in the programming and viewership sweepstakes.
Choti Maa, portrays the life of a woman of strength and extraordinary substance who seldom uses tears as a crutch, who decides a future for which she can write her own script , which she does with amazing success.
It is a co-production between Chithi producer Radaan Mediaworks India (chaired by Radikaa & M.R.Mohan Ratha) which is looking after the creative and production aspects, and United Television (promoted by Ronnie Screwvala, Zarina Mehta and Deven Khote), which is handling the marketing, communication and promotion of the show. Schedules for shooting take the cast to Bangalore, Pandharpur,and Satara .
Chithi has achieved phenomenal viewership and consistently makes its appearance in the top three shows in all India ratings across channels C& S homes.Zee is hoping to get the same results with Choti Maa. in the Hindi version. The channel will need all of Choti Maa?s blessings to get the results that are envisaged.
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