• Alpha Marathi scores in Ganesh festival coverage

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 27, 2001

    In the western Indian state of Maharashtra the Ganesh festival is huge. And this year the Marathi language channels have tried their levellest to outdo each other in scoring with the audience.

    Zee‘s Alpha Marathi seems to have got the edge in the effort as the festival reaches its peak, although national broadcaster Doordarshan‘s Sahyadri channel has also given a good account of itself. The 10-day festival climaxes this Saturday, 1 September and all the three leading Marathi channels (Alpha Marathi, Sahyadri and ETV Marathi) will have live coverage of the proceedings.

    This is the first time that all the regional channels have taken special efforts to capture the spirit of the Ganesh festival with an aim to boost their viewership.

    Alpha Marathi has geared up for the Ganesh Festival in the real sense with morning slots totally devoted to it. At 7 in the morning Alpha is showing Bappa Morya followed by Dewachiye Dwari anchored by veteran Theosophist Jayant Salgaonkar. Both are basically devotional programmes giving more insights about Ganesha as well as the various rituals as well as various other aspects of the festival. Stavan is another programme which gives all details of the Pooja rituals as well as prayers. Bappa Aala Re is another programme which is also shown in the morning, which is basically a discussion on various social issues related to the festival.

    DD Sahyadri kicked off its proceedings with a dance ballet on the first day of the festival, Ganesh Chathurthi. The advantage DD got was on the fourth day when they showed live the the high profile Pune Festival, a yearly feature becoming famous even outside India. Congress party president Sonia Gandhi inaugurated the event.

    From today to 29 August, Sahyadri will be showing features on various Ganesh temples in and around Maharashtra. There are also other programmes which have been put together for the festival.

    ETV Marathi seems to have missed the bus with hardly one programme Rangat Rangala Ganaray which consists of folk songs, slotted at 11 at night. Gani Tumachi Aamachi which is a regular programmes of (recommended) songs has been devoted to the festival as the programming team will be shooting in various Ganesh Pandals in various cities in the state.

    The last day‘s proceedings i.e. Anant Chaturdashi on 1st of September will see all three channels converging at south Mumbai‘s famous Chowpatty Beach with live coverage of immersion activities.

    In the time of falling TRPs let us see whether Ganesha is of any help to these channels in garnering the revenue pie.


  • Alpha Marathi scores in Ganesh festival coverage

    In the western Indian state of Maharashtra the Ganesh festival is huge.

  • Convergence Bill likely to be tabled on Tuesday

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 25, 2001

    The long awaited Communications Convergence Bill 2001, which has far-reaching implications on how the media industry is to be run in India, is expected to be tabled in parliament on Tuesday, industry sources say. According to them, the final version of the bill, which has gone through a number of modifications, has incorporated a number of draconian clauses, putting paid to any hopes industry watchers had that the government might be willing to ease up on its obsession with controlling and regulating all things in the media domain.

    A new element that has been introduced in the final version is that within the ambit of the high-powered super regulator - the Communications Commission of India - there will be two separate bureaux - a carriage bureau and a content bureau.

    According to sources, information and broadcasting minister Sushma Swaraj had been lobbying to get all content, including that relating to the Internet, under the ambit of the content bureau. Swaraj wanted communications regulation to be delinked from the bill, the sources say. The information technology and communications ministries strongly opposed this pointing out that it negated the whole concept of convergence. It was after this that a compromise formula was adopted where there would be two bureaux.

    There is bound to be a great deal of overlap when it comes to issues of jurisdiction and it remains to be seen how the two bureaux are going to operate without constantly stepping on each other‘s toes.

    There are some points to ponder upon though. The content bureau will be responsible for all issues that come under that head, including regulation and laws relating to the Internet. Industry experts also believe that if such strict regulations were put in place wherein companies are forced to obtain a licence to transact electronically, it will have an adverse affect on foreign investments in India. Their reason: why would anyone go through such complex processes and red tape when they can easily invest in countries where no such licences or permits are required.

    Even as far as the print media goes, the picture is not a happy one. Reports say an innocuous sounding clause (Chapter 14, 63) in the bill permits the central government to detain press messages and articles of all those journalists who are NOT accredited with the governments PR set-up, and the Press Information Bureau (PIB).

    The clause empowers anyone - central, state or any authorised officer - to intercept any e-mail, phone conversation or data transmission of non-accredited journalists on any communication network (internet, cellular phones).

    Service providers will have to monitor and intercept messages and failure can lead to a sentence of up to seven years.

    The final judgment on the bill will however, have to wait till its tabling. The bill will be piloted by the communications ministry. If and when the bill does get passed, India will become only the second Asian country, after Malaysia, to have a Convergence Bill.

  • Production and post-production trade show on 1 November in Mumbai

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 25, 2001

    Come 1 November, TV studio owners, editors, animation and graphic artists are going to be headed towards Mumbai‘s World Trade Centre. The reason: the eleventh edition of the Broadcast India trade show, showcasing the latest in post and production equipment, will be flagged off on that day.Organised by Saicom Trade fairs & Exhibitions from 1-3 November, the show will be preceded by a two-day Symposium from 30-31 October 2001 at Y.B. Chavan Centre which is a hop step away from the WTC.


    Ramesh and Kavita Meer

    "The entire exhibition space has been booked," says Saicom promoter Ramesh Meer. "The response has been very enthusiastic."

    JVC, Sony, Panasonic, Silgicon Graphics, Discreet, Matrox, Orad, AVID, Soundscape, Tascam, AKG, Shure, DPS/Leitch, Fairlight, Eela Audio are all expected to unveil their products at the show, some of which have been unfurled at IBC, SIGGraph and Broadcast Asia earlier this year. More than 250 of the worlds leading companies from 30 countries, are expected to show up for the trade show this year.


    The DPSVelocity (providers of post production equipment) stall at last year‘s event.

    "The event is expected to attract more than 21,000 trade visitors," says Saicom CO-promoter Kavita Meer. Senior professionals from the broadcasting and post industry are expected to speak at the symposium and topics will run the gamut of TV, radio, video, audio, film, music, lights, cable, satellite, multimedia, transmission, computer graphics, broadband Internet and all their allied and associated technologies.

    According to a press release issued by Saicom Trade Fairs & Exhibitions, the highlight of this year‘s event is Technical awards Ceremony sponsored by Seagate International where "Seagate Technical Awards for Excellence in Digital technology in the field of Cinema and Television" will be given to the best professionals in this field.

  • Production and post-production trade show on 1 November in Mumbai

    Come 1 November, TV studio owners, editors, animation and graphic artists are going to be headed towards Mumbai's Wor

  • Convergence Bill likely to be tabled on Tuesday

    The long awaited Communications Convergence Bill 2001, which has far-reaching implications on how the media industry

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