Fiction
MIP London set to welcome over 2,000 delegates
MUMBAI: MIP London is on track to welcome more than 2,000 delegates from 75 countries for its inaugural edition, with strong representation from Europe, North America, Turkey, MENA, Latin America and Asia, said RX France entertainment division director Lucy Smith in an interview to World Screen News.
The event has confirmed country pavilions from Belgium, China, France, Korea and Spain, alongside more than 30 Canadian companies supported by Telefilm Canada and SODEC. Major companies including Boat Rocker, DLT Entertainment, Electric Entertainment, Global Agency, Moonbug Entertainment, Movistar Plus+ and Raw Cut have joined previously announced participants A+E Networks, Al Jazeera, Beta Film and others.
“More than 900 buyers are registered across all genres, with approximately one-third being first-time visitors to London,” said Lucy. “The event has attracted significant interest from digital-first players, FAST channels, AVoD platforms and CTV operators.”
The conference programme features over 50 speakers from major media companies including BBC, TF1, ZDF, Prime Video, Netflix, YouTube and TikTok. Highlights include Talpa Studios’ launch of new talent format The Headliner, showcases of Asian formats, and a world premiere screening of crypto-currency drama Paper Empire.
A special fireside chat with David Beckham and Netflix’s Bela Bajaria will take place on the main stage, while the opening cocktail event will feature performances from West End shows including Hamilton and The Lion King.
The five-day event, priced at £500 for registration, aims to complement existing industry gatherings in London and create additional business opportunities for the content industry.
Fiction
Scriptwriter Satyam Tripathi passes on
MUMBAI: On Christmas morning, whilst most of Mumbai slept off festive cheer, Satyam Tripathi’s heart gave out. 25 December proved cruelly ironic for a man who’d spent his career crafting drama—this time, there would be no second take. He was only 57.
Tripathi was a scriptwriter’s scriptwriter. Within India’s chaotic television industry, where writers are treated rather like spare parts, he’d carved out something rare: respect. For years, he sat on the executive committee of the Screen Writers Association, helping transform along with other leaders, what was once a talking shop into an organisation with teeth. When writers’ rights were little more than punchlines, Tripathi helped pen a different ending.
His credits read like a greatest hits of Indian telly: Hitler Didi, 12/24 Karol Bagh, Ek Mutthi Aasman, Parvarrish Kuchh Khattee Kuchh Meethi. Millions laughed, cried and switched channels to his work. He also championed the association’s Screen Writing Awards, ensuring that good writing didn’t go unnoticed in an industry obsessed with ratings and revenue.
Those who knew him speak of an affable soul, generous with time and advice. In a cut-throat business, Tripathi was that rarest of creatures: genuinely helpful.
His remains were cremated the same evening in the presence of industry associates and friends. The credits rolled quickly. But his final script—a better deal for India’s writers—continues to play out. That’s the sort of ending he’d have appreciated.
(Scriptwriters, producers and friends will be getting together to honour Satyam Kumud Tripathi’s memory and to hold a prayer meeting on 29 December. The location: Shri Guru Singh Sabha Gurudwara, 4 Bungalows, Andheri West, Mumbai. The time: between 3:30 PM and 5:00 PM.)
Fiction
Japanese drama about child abuse finds new home in Greece
ATHENS: Greece has become the latest country to embrace one of Japan’s most emotionally charged television dramas. Mother, a series that tackles the harrowing subject of child abuse through the story of a teacher who kidnaps her student to save her from domestic violence, premiered on Alpha TV on September 25th.
The Greek adaptation, titled Na me les mama (Call me mom), marks the 11th international remake of the Nippon TV original—making it the most globally adapted Asian scripted format on record. Filmiki, the Greek production company behind the series, worked closely with Nippon TV to maintain the show’s emotional core whilst adapting it for local audiences.
“Mother is a story that has transcended cultures,” said Nippon TV scripted format sales and licensing executive Sally Yamamoto. The series has already conquered markets across Asia, Europe and the Middle East, with versions airing in South Korea, Turkey, Ukraine, Thailand, China, France, Spain, Saudi Arabia, Mongolia and the Philippines.
The original Japanese drama follows a woman in her mid-thirties who lives an apathetic existence until she discovers one of her pupils is being abused at home. Unable to understand her own impulses, she kidnaps the child and attempts to raise her as her own daughter whilst on the run from authorities.
Alpha TV programme director Christos Kompos described the series as “one of these stories that we feel really honoured to share with our audience.” The adaptation will stream simultaneously on Alpha TV’s HbbTV platform.
The show’s unflinching examination of society’s tendency to ignore child abuse has struck a chord with international audiences, proving that some stories need no translation to resonate across cultural boundaries.
Fiction
Global television triumphs at Venice TV Awards 2025
VENICE: Television’s finest have been crowned at the Venice TV Awards 2025, with productions from 32 countries proving that quality programming knows no boundaries. The ceremony, backed by the Association of Commercial Television and Video on Demand Services in Europe, the International Music + Media Centre, and the European Group of Television Advertising, celebrated another bumper year for the box.
Britain emerged as a standout performer, claiming four categories including the coveted documentary prize for The Man Who Definitely Didn’t Steal Hollywood from Wonderhood Studios and the BBC. The corporation also triumphed in comedy with Ludwig, starring David Mitchell, whilst securing wins in performing arts and children’s programming.
Japan flexed its creative muscles with three victories, including the television film award for Driving into the Storm and animation honours for Luka and the Flower of the Sun. The country’s technical prowess shone through in the cinematography category with Deep Ocean: Kingdom of the Coelacanth.
Canada’s Empathy from Trio Orange took the series crown, whilst South Korea’s Couple Palace dominated light entertainment. France claimed both sport and technology categories, with Canal+’s Giroud and TF1’s innovative 8 May 1945 respectively.
The awards spanned 18 categories, from traditional documentary and news coverage to cutting-edge cross-platform content and branded entertainment. America’s CBS News won recognition for its Red Sea reporting, whilst NBCUniversal’s Peacock platform scored with its Paris Olympics coverage.
Smaller television markets also punched above their weight. Finland’s Queen of Fucking Everything earned the direction prize, whilst Germany’s film school production If I could fly claimed the new talent award.
The ceremony underscored television’s resilience and creativity in an increasingly fragmented media landscape. As streaming platforms continue to reshape viewing habits, traditional broadcasters and digital natives alike demonstrated that compelling storytelling remains the industry’s beating heart.
With productions ranging from hard-hitting documentaries to frothy entertainment, the winners reflected television’s remarkable breadth and ambition in 2025.
-
e-commerce3 weeks agoSwiggy Instamart’s GOV surges 103 per cent year on year to Rs 7,938 crore
-
News Broadcasting2 weeks agoMukesh Ambani, Larry Fink come together for CNBC-TV18 exclusive
-
News Headline1 month agoFrom selfies to big bucks, India’s influencer economy explodes in 2025
-
iWorld5 months agoBillions still offline despite mobile internet surge: GSMA
-
News Headline2 months ago2025: The year Indian sports saw chaos, comebacks, and breakthroughs
-
Applications2 months ago28 per cent of divorced daters in India are open to remarriage: Rebounce
-
News Headline1 week agoJioStar announces biggest ever talent line-up for an ICC event
-
MAM2 years agoCosta Coffee becomes official coffee partner of Olympic Games Paris 2024


