Category: Event Coverage

  • Indian OTTs to be in focus on day 2 of ATF

    Indian OTTs to be in focus on day 2 of ATF

    MUMBAI: Singapore-based Reed Exhibitions’ Asia TV Forum (ATF) will commence today with 60 countries taking part. The first day will see sessions based on content, advertising and the evolution of storytelling and digital traditions and innovation Ninety thought leaders will deliver fresh insights in over 24 sessions from 28 November to 1 December 2017, discussing present-day issues such as big data, movement in the over-the-top (OTT) scene, new monetisation strategies, unscripted entertainment formats and kids’ content.

    The Indian sessions will start from the second day. The first one will be ‘Bollywood & Beyond: Fresh content from India’. The speakers present for the session will be Epic TV network head content syndication Adita Jain, Greengold Animation VP content sales Bharath Laxmipati, One Life Studios founder Siddharth Kumar Tewary, Rajshri Entertainment MD Neha Barjatya, and Toonz Animation India senior manager- content syndication and distribution Viju Thomas. The session will be moderated by Indiantelevision.com group founder, CEO and editor-in-chief Anil Wanvari.

    Wanvari has been working on developing opportunities for India’s animation and live action sector – whether for TV or OTT – over the past three years at ATF as its representative for India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

    India’s OTT ecosystem has been exploding with newer apps popping up ever so quickly. At last count, close to 42 OTT services were operational in India. The second Indian session will be about the needs and wants of Indian OTT buyers. The panellists for the discussion will be Pittie Group/Epic TV CEO and MD Aditya Pittie, Viacom18 Digital ventures COO Gaurav Gandhi, producer, entrepreneur and storyteller Sidharth Jain, Spuul founder and global CEO Subin Subaiah, and GoQuest Media Ventures MD Vivek Lath. This panel discussion will also be moderated by Wanvari.

    ATF will also focus on virtual reality (VR) sessions, which will delve into the discourse that takes place among ecosystem partners, from content concept, creation and circulation. Real Vision VR filmmaker, speaker and published author Clyde Desouza will moderate the panel. Desouza is working with Times Now for its VR immersive journalism.

    On day three, listen to GreenGold Animation founder and CEO Rajiv Chilaka talk about how to provide 360-degree experience to kids. Chilaka has created and built one of the India’s largest animation brands Chhota Bheem, which currently has a viewership of over 40 million across platforms. He will also talk about nurturing localised IPs and stories and priming them to go global.

    The major Indian satellite TV networks Sony Pictures Networks India, Star India, Indiacast-Viacom18, and Zee Telefilms have their syndication and licensing teams exhibiting at the Marina Bay Sands venue. Other noteworthy exhibitors include: format and content syndication company GoQuest, Swastik Productions’ One Life Studios that is hawking its mega-budget Porus and homegrown formats, One Take Media, which is selling its kids animation and cookery shows, film and digital content creator and distributor Rajshri Entertainment, infotainment channel Epic TV, and kids’ content pioneer GreenGold.

  • ‘It is criminal for TV not to think of social change’ – PMC’s Kriss Barker

    ‘It is criminal for TV not to think of social change’ – PMC’s Kriss Barker

    For most programming executives and management in TV companies today, television is all about running on a treadmill chasing ratings, viewership, and the concomitant revenues, followed by the next bonus and promotion. Every trick in the creative book and outside it is resorted to, to keep the ratings of a show on a high.

    Hence, it comes as a breath of fresh air when one comes across a senior media professional who does not care much about ratings or twisted elongated plots, rather focuses on helping the creation of TV and radio content with meaning, which has an impact on society and sparks off social change. US-born Population Media Centre vice-president international Kriss Barker has been behind creative initiatives on TV and radio in 56 countries over her 20-year career.

    She is in India at the invitation of a Hong Kong-based financing and production house and Indiantelevision.com’s founder Anil Wanvari to train Indian TV writers to produce entertainment education, which is based on the PMC Methodology. The latter itself is based on the Sabido scriptwriting methodology, which has been used to write television shows in about 80 languages and more than a 100 countries. The workshop is underway in Mumbai currently and ends on 3 December. Indiantelevision.com ‘s Kirti Chauhan got into a conversation with Barker – who is a PhD in public health  and has made Cape Town South Africa as her home , but travels 300 days each year, preaching the gospel of television with purpose – on the importance of TV as a medium to spark social change and how it can be done in India. Excerpts:

    What are the factors behind your shift from being a health practitioner to a media practitioner and scriptwriter trainer?

    My background is in public health and I have spent a lot of time working on public health inventions. And you find that you are spending so much time treating illness and diseases which are preventable. Public health has avoided doing it for years. We are treating conditions at the very end of the situation, rather than at the beginning. We do not focus so much on prevention, rather we have our eyes on treatment.

    When I found this powerful communication tool, which we call the Sabido or PMC methodology, it really helps to motivate change that can lead to prevention using media.

    Miguel Sabido – a TV researcher from Televisa in Mexico in the sixties and seventies – created this methodology, which focuses not on the story – but the social issue or problem. The story comes last. First, I first need to get ‘what’ is the real problem, and ‘why’ does that problem exist. And then look at ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ values that people in society hold around that. We need to honour these values and we need to integrate those people holding those into the TV show’s script and let those voices be heard.  Sabido or PMC methodology believes there are three characters every story or TV show has: positive, negative, and transitional. The transitional character is the one who has the journey – it is the one, the audience has to identify with. That is the doubting character, who does not know what to do. The positive and negative role models are almost like archetypes – they are too bad and too good to relate to me, but the one in the middle is exactly like me. He or she is the one I relate to.

    In Toilet Ek Prem Katha, the father is the negative character, the daughter is the positive one, and Akshay Kumar is the transitional. You love him.  All three are needed to help tell a story that in turn helps influence and bring about the desired social change.

    There are socially relevant shows being made on TV? What’s so special about a Sabido methodology show?

    A lot of people think they are doing social shows but this is not done effectively. I think it because only some (not all of them) of a whole gamut of theories and golden rules have been captured and used in these shows. You feel you have mastered the techniques but the fact is that you have not mastered the refinements. And you know that a lot of these programmes fail because of this. People have made music videos, short films around responsible parenting etc. Over the years, what we have learnt is that it needs to be a long running TV series, it needs to be a serial drama. You can’t do this in film or documentary, music video or a short number of episodes. You can’t cut short this; everybody is looking at a shortcut. But like in life, you get what you put in and hence, they have failed.

    When we go into a country we do a lot of formative research which helps creative people, the writers, to understand the realities of the situation of the social issues. But we have to be very careful all along the way. For example, we design a show about women inequality, women’s empowerment, the question is how far do you go before women say: no, no, that’s not me! So you have to take it a little bit aspirational, but you can’t take it too far or it is no longer believable.  And it is no longer even desirable.

    How important is it for TV channels and OTT platforms in the modern world to engage in social change shows? Why should they do it?

    It is criminal not to. Media is such an important powerful tool, and it has been misused a lot. We just play with it. And then we get things like the Columbine shooting or people going and shooting a cinema because they saw it in a movie or in a TV show.

    If you want to make a powerful product even more popular, make it more relatable. That’s the big disconnect. That is why the biggies are losing to Netflix and Hulu in the US because the former decide what they want people to see and they forgot that people really want to see themselves.

    What are the challenges you have faced?

    Funding is the big challenge. For example, a radio programme running at least twice a week over a year needs at least 104 episodes. In television, it is at least for a season. However, to get an investor or donor to commit to that is challenging. A radio show of that duration in Africa takes around $1.5-2 million. This is a lot of money for even a donor or investor, or a bucket of investors. They would rather do billboards or a comic book is what we hear sometimes.  The biggest challenge is to convince the investors that if they really want mass change on a big scale, this approach is cost effective as you can reach out to millions of people.

    How receptive have television stations and research been to using television as a tool for changing society?

    They are getting more so now because they have started realising that by not doing this, they would lose the market. For example, we are currently negotiating with Televisa Mexican, they are struggling (especially younger market) to find a way to get back into the market because of Netflix. We come in, and we say that the way to get back that market is to make a show about them.

    We had a hit show in LA, East Los High and the reason behind its popularity was that it was the only show ever produced in LA by Latinos and for Latinos. The whole production and acting cast and crew were Latinos. That’s the first this had ever happened. It seems nuts to me because this was in East LA where the majority of the population is Latino. People will watch shows of a lower production quality as long as they see themselves in the characters and the story. Like in Nollywood where the production quality is not great, but some of them connect so well.

    You have had a legacy relationship with India? Can you elaborate?

    Our predecessor organisation worked here many years ago and helped produce Hum Log, Humrahi on Doordarshan. Since about 2003, we have been wanting to get into India and just haven’t managed to get any inroads. Right now, we have been engaged by south-east Asian investment organisation One Talk Media and then they partnered with Indiantelevision.com. We are training some of the writers in our methodology and we hope to carry something to fruition with the two partners. India is a sophisticated market like Mexico and the US, and this is a model we will follow here. 

     Tell us about your reason to enter India.

    We have been trying to get into India for a long time – it’s a huge-huge market. The reason behind PMC is to try and create a sustainable population for the world. Whether you like it or not, India has a huge demographic impact on world sustainability. So, to be here and looking at societal behaviour change and looking at family planning and population dynamics, looking at women’s empowerment, children’s health – these are exactly the kind of things we need to be doing in a huge powerhouse like India.

    Have you ever cast big stars or are you planning to cast in your social issues related shows?

    We tend not to. And one of the reasons is cost. Our shows are trying to be a slice of life. We want you to believe that these are real people and if you get a big star or a known person, whether for the radio voice over or for a TV show, our viewers are not going to believe that the character is real no matter how good the actor is. So, we tend to take younger, less known voices and faces because we can make him who you want him to be.

    How effective has the Sabido method been in attaining its objective of social change?

    50 of the 55 shows that have been made using the Sabido or PMC methodology have achieved the desired social change objective. So the method works. The four or five that did not work was because we deviated from the methodology or put them in the wrong time slot.

    We lowered the fertility rate in Ethiopia by over a child and a half in a period of two and a half year period.  So it works.

    What is the relevance of societal change in a world of so much audio-video content? What role can it really play?

    A couple of things. Identification is big, these shows are built around that. So it’s entertainment that has a purpose and I feel most of us, I believe, like to be entertained. We want to go in that space where we can just relax, not want to think, but at the same time most of us like learning something. There is no preaching. These are ‘educational’ shows, social change content shows but we are not doing a good job if anybody recognises it to be that. For instance, a viewer in Africa should not tell me that the show is about female genital mutilation. Rather she should tell me it is about Fatima (a character) who had a rough time in her life. Just the educational content should be a part of the entertaining story. If you can build a story about someone who is like ‘me,’ then you have me in. 

  • ATF 2017 attracts Indian  content studios, both big and small

    ATF 2017 attracts Indian content studios, both big and small

    MUMBAI: Singapore-based Reed Exhibitions’ Asia TV Forum (ATF) is round the corner and the buzz around the event only seems to be ramping up. This year, the forum will see around 60 countries from all over the globe. From 28 November to 1 December 2017, more than 90 thought leaders will deliver fresh insights at over 24 ATF conference sessions, discussing present-day issues such as big data, movement in the over-the-top (OTT) scene, new monetisation strategies, unscripted entertainment formats and kids content.

    Indiantelevision.com founder Anil Wanvari has been working on developing opportunities for India’s animation and live action sector – whether for TV or OTT – over the past three years at ATF as its representative for the regions of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

    “We have seen the presence from south Asia grow from a small 20-30 to around 140 this year since I was given the task of working closely with the region’s content creators, buyers and distributors,” says Wanvari. “I and the team which works with me have been happy to help catalyse their presence on Asian and global stages. ATF has a strong presence of smaller buyers, producers, distributors from the region apart from the big name players from Europe and the US. It has become a must visit event for the content executive.”

    The major Indian satellite TV networks Sony Pictures Networks India, Star India, Indiacast-Viacom18, and Zee Telefilms have their syndication and licensing teams exhibiting in the Marina Bay Sands venue. Other noteworthy exhibitors include: format and content syndication company GoQuest, Swastik Productions’ One Life Studios which is hawking its mega budget Porus and homegrown formats, One Take Media which is selling its kids animation and cookery shows, film and digital content creator and distributor Rajshri Entertainment, infotainment channel EPIC TV, kids content pioneer Green Gold.

    “This is probably the highest exhibitor strength India has managed at ATF ever,” says Wanvari. “The country’s content selling industry has come a long way despite the oft repeated statement that our TV shows are not good enough to cut the international grade.”

    Among the initiatives that Wanvari and Reed Exhibitions have supported is the building up of delegations from India and south Asia. The first of these has been the one which has been growing under the umbrella of the Media & Entertainment Association of India (MEAI). The association’s secretary Ankur Bhasin has cobbled together a delegation of 11 small and medium enterprises (SMEs) consisting of 13 delegates in the content creation and distribution spaces.

    Says Bhasin, “Fueled by improved connectivity and mobile explosion, Asia-Pacific is experiencing the fastest growth worldwide in terms of growth of time spent consuming media online – about 6.7 per cent consistently year on year compared to global average of 2.9 per cent. Although the average consumption of three plus hours per day for the Indian audience and about six hours per day for Chinese viewers is still relatively low compared to western countries, with over 60 per cent of the world population concentrated here, that is a substantial change on how media is being consumed. It is no surprise that this explosion is resulting in a growing demand for content in the APAC market.”

    Wanvari points out there are many commonalities in culture that India shares with east Asian countries like Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Japan, south Korea, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh. “We all share Asian sensibilities and values,” he says. “Hence, we can relate to each other’s content.”

    Bhasin believes ATF is a very important market to target Asian buyers as well as to look for co-production opportunities. “Increasingly, there has been demand from MEAI members to focus on markets in the east and this has resulted in a growing delegation to ATF from MEAI. MEAI hopes this will materialize into a pavilion next year to give a fixed presence to the delegation being put together by the association with the support of Anil and his team,” Bhasin adds.

  • Singapore’s ATF 2017 promises more than ever

    Singapore’s ATF 2017 promises more than ever

    MUMBAI: Reed Exhibitions’ Asia Television Forum (ATF) is back. And Asia’s leading content market cum conference which brings together Asia’s broadcasters, digital platforms, distributors, studios, content creators to strike deals amongst each other and other international buyers and sellers from — countries, is buzzing like never before.

    Says Reed Exhibitions senior project director Yeow Hui Leng: “It is  the ultimate destination for infinite deals and partnerships and to discover the vibrant future of entertainment content. And we are happy to have a stellar line up of speakers and some of the leading cross platform content buyers, sellers and distributors  coming in a big way this year.”

    The four day ATF starts on 28 November and ends on 1 December 2017. The first day features a high end executive ATF leader’s summit.The market, conferences and networking events kick off on 29 November.And what’s noteworthy about the confab is the fact that it is the only Asian audiovisual content market where we can see all Hollywood studios and major brands under a single roof.

    Says Hui Leng: “ATF last year saw deals worth US$244 million with 5,383 executives, 923 content buyers, 738 seller companies, 92 speakers, 54 countries and 21 official pavilions. This year approximately 60 countries are expected for the event.”

    ATF 2017 has several conference tracks running concurrently, among which feature: The Content Connection  and The VR & SMF Ignite Conference on 29 November, Production Day on 30 November and finally the South east Asia Financing Forum on 1 December.

    A quality bunch of speakers – including Amazon’s James Farrell, PCCW’s Janice Lee, Iflix’s Mark Britt, Hooq’s Peter Bithos, MNC Vision’s Hary Tanoesoedibjo, HBO Drama Series Home Box Office Co-Head David Levine, YouTube’s Don Andersen, Viacom18’s Gaurav Gandhi, STUDIO LAMBERT’s Stephen Lambert, Spuul’s Subin Subiah, Green Gold’s Rajiv Chilaka – make the ATF conference, the leading Asian get together of content thought leaders.

    Additionally, a clutch of leading investors, VCs and financiers will also be present to discuss the prospects for content ROIs and perspectives.

    ATF 2017 is also putting its might behind discovering new content ideas through the All3Media’s Formats Pitch and Green Gold’s Animation Pitch, both of which have attracted a plethora of entries.

    It’s not as if the 6,000-plus attendees will only be at the stands striking deals or in conferences downloading wisdom from those on the stage. More than enough networking events and parties will ensure that they also let their hair down and have an informal fun time too.

    More coverage of the Indian presence at ATF 2017 will follow over the next few days on indiantelevision.com as well as live from Singapore during the market. So keep reading!

  • MIPCOM 2017 – Content Really is King!

    MIPCOM 2017 – Content Really is King!

    Eye-opening, international, new content for multi-platform that fully embraced digital and VR were my key takeaways from MIPCOM 2017. The world may be going digital but content will always be king!

    MIPCOM is an education and has the power to reinforce your own strategies as a business as well as support and network you to grow the future. As an individual, I was pleased to see how broadcasters and the industry are defining 360 degrees digital strategies as well as traditional TV protocol. With keynotes and sessions on how to stand out in the over the top (OTT) and mobile space as well as defining strategies for new digital commissions e.g., ViaPlay (Nordics), Vivendi’s STUDIO+ (France) and others, it was great to see how they are attracting new audiences.

    New partnerships are flourishing too as Sky Original programming and Amazon launched their co-production of Britannia, a TV series to rival Game of Thrones. Even Sean Mills, senior director of content programming, Snap INC and NBC Universal announced their JV to produce content for a digital audience. Facebook head of global creative strategy Ricky Van Veen director of video product Daniel Danker announced the launch of their video product, Facebook Watch as well as the launch and remake of a Norwegian teen video drama SKAM.

    The Palais, La Croissette and Riveria were basking in the sun as meetings, conversations and networking were taking place over lunch, crepes, bagettes, champagne and canopes. It was mind blowing to see the number of exhibitors and new content within the Palais from Zee Entertainment, BBC Worldwide, Discovery and new platforms and services like One Life Studios and Jukin Studios. I could be in a queue for lunch and meet Russian content distributors one minute and then sit outside in between sessions and openly chat with African distributors after which they invited us to parties on the Croisette. Every hour there, I gained a new learning or a new contact or a new view on the content marketplace.

    Spanish and Russian content were celebrated magnificently this year. TV Azteca CEO Benjamin Salinas Sada launched ‘Dopamine’ at the 25th anniversary celebrations and confirmed their international and new programming formats (https://www.rapidtvnews.com/2017101849301/mipcom-2017-grupo-salinas-aims-for-international-production.html#axzz4x5WNBzyd). In addition, there truly was a Russian content revolution where the spotlight was on the world premiere of Trotsky, an epic biopic of Marxist revolutionary Leon Trotsky, with his famously complicated romantic life featured as well as his political beliefs. NTV broadcasting and other Russian studios also showcased a wide array of high quality products. (http://pressroom.mipcom.com/press-release-en-2017/russian-content-revolution-set-to-shake-up-mipcom-2017-1004-5793).

    Diversity also was a huge theme this year. Sir Lenny Henry launched Diversify TV and the Diversify TV Excellence Awards evening celebrated those that had achieved brilliance in these groups (https://mipblog.com/2017/10/diversify-tv-excellence-awards-winners-mipcom-report/). The sponsors were A+E Networks, Viacom and Ebony TV and the evening paid tribute to international programming that provides a fair, accurate representation of ethnic groups, LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer) and disabled communities.

    In all of this, my own question as a British-born, international Indian was…where are you India? The traditional studios and broadcasters from Star India, Zee Entertainment, Eros and more were, of course, well represented and as humble as ever and welcomed meetings and future opportunities for content buyers and sellers. However, Baahubali, Dangal…the world was asking me where were you at MIPCOM! I know you very well and your content is beyond outstanding on many levels. I want to see more of the Indian industry there, coming to showcase, use and learn from MIPCOM and to then come back with more and more blockbusters. Although India has been the country of honour before at MIP, I look forward to hearing what you do next especially in the animation space (http://www.animationxpress.com/index.php/mipcom-2017/mipcom-2017-sees-signing-of-big-deals-in-india-and-asian-market) and I also look forward to producing the future with you (http://www.artsforindia.org/areas/cinema/)
    Baaaaaahhhuuuubbbhhhaaaaallllliiiii   !!!

    public://Sonal_Patel.jpgSonal Patel,  Digital Queen by Day; Charity Committee, Arts for India & Producing the Future.The views expressed are personal and Indiantelevision.com need not necessarily subscribe to them. 

     

  • Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

    Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

    CANNES: The studio behind the popular animated show Chhota Bheem, Green Gold Animation has been commissioned by Netflix to make an exclusive 13-episode series on its trademark show. Paradoxically titled Mighty Little Bheem, the series is set to be released in August 2018.

    Each episode of Mighty Bheem will 22 minutes long and feature a baby version of the popular kids character. It could also be broken into 52 episodes of 5 minutes each.

    The announcement was made by Netflix international kids acquisitions and co-production division head Aram Yacoubian at MIPCOM 2017. He said, “Chhota Bheem is iconic in India. We are happy to work with Green Gold to produce a younger baby version of him and bring it to global children.”

    Green Gold will dedicate a separate team of 100 people for the project.

    Green Gold Animation CEO Rajeev Chilaka expressed, “We are very happy to partner with Netflix. We have created this especially for the world’s leader.”

    The budgets for the whole show are expected to be in the range of about $ 3-4 million.

  • India-only Archie comics coming to Comic Con this year

    India-only Archie comics coming to Comic Con this year

    NEW DELHI: Archie and the gang from Riverdale are officially coming to India this year in the Comic Con India Shows 2017 for Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Hyderabad.

    Comic Con India, in collaboration with Archie Publications, has commissioned special #1 editions of popular Archie titles with the exclusive India-only covers. Each pass-holder to Comic Con India Shows this year will receive the exclusive edition comic with a customised city cover.

    Comic Con India founder Jatin Varma said, “One of the first comics I ever read was an Archie and millions of comic book fans in India have a similar story to share. Archie comics are considered as Indian as some of our local comics. Therefore, I am extremely excited to collaborate with Archie Publications to start of this unique collaboration!”

    From visiting the Charminar in Hyderabad, to shooting a Bollywood film at the Gateway of India in Mumbai or playing cricket at the iconic Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru, to touring Delhi — the gang from Riverdale will be everywhere.

    Archie Comics Publisher/CEO Jon Goldwater said: “Archie and his friends are a beloved worldwide, but they’ve always been especially embraced in India. With that in mind, we’re honoured and excited to kick off this relationship with Comic Con India, which we hope to see continue for years to come.”

    Such a collaboration has never been done before and each visitor to the show this year will get the once in a lifetime opportunity to own their city’s exclusive collectible edition comic.

    The Comic Con shows for this year are — Hyderabad Comic Con 14-15 October; Mumbai Comic Con 11 -12 November; Bengaluru Comic Con 2 -3 December & Delhi Comic Con 15 – 17 December.

    Comic Con India is part of the Reedpop family of events, which is dedicated to producing world-class celebrations of popular culture around the world.

  • Broadcast India show to take place from 12-14 Oct

    Broadcast India show to take place from 12-14 Oct

    MUMBAI: The 27th edition of the annual B2B Broadcast India Show will be held from 12-14 October 2017 at Bombay Exhibition and Convention Centre, Goregaon, Mumbai. The three-day trade fair will witness the leading participants from across the globe present a wide array of products and technologies for the broadcast, television, film, audio and radio industry. For over the last two and a half decades, the Broadcast India Show has positioned itself as the single most interactive platform that showcases on one hand, the paradigm shifts in infotainment technology across the globe and on the other, allows technology seekers to connect with the innovators and experience the marvels first-hand. Below are some companies and the products they will be displaying at Broadcast India Show 2017.

    Aaton Digital and Transvideo

    Aaton-Digital will demonstrate the new CantarMini location sound recorder and the new Cantaress mixing surface, while Transvideo will present its new Stargate high specification monitor and the new CineMonitorHD. Also on show, the StarliteRF-a monitor and the new StarliteHD-e monitor. Transvideo’s Starlite family of 5” HD OLED touchscreen monitor products are designed to be intuitive to the professional. The Starlite family hosts a high-resolution monitor, with built-in tools including waveform monitor, vectorscope, and histogram. The menu is customizable with Smart Corner shortcuts. The legendary CineMonitorHD family has been enhanced with added features and HDR functionalities. New matrices for the CineMonitoHD 8”, 10” and 12” give an improved viewing angle as well an extended color gamut. A new CineMonitorHD8 XSBL for body-rig applications will be demonstrated on the booth. The CineMonitorHD-XSBL is the flagship of Transvideo for Steadicam™ type applications; available in 6” and
    8” sizes.

    Accord Equips

    Accord Equips is India’s leading camera equipment rental and production services company. The company houses the largest range of cameras, DSLRs, lenses and accessories. They have their offices in Mumbai, Pune & Ahmedabad. The clienteles include companies like BBC, Yashraj Films, Aamir Khan Productions, Network18, Star TV, Grey worldwide and more. The brand has recently introduced production support for
    360 VR videos and production and web streaming of videos.

    Blackmagic Design

    Visitors to the Blackmagic Design BI Booth D-401 will be the first in India to try out Ultimatte 12, Fairlight, and the collaboration workflow for DaVinci Resolve 14. With a dedicated green screen scene setup, visitors will be able to understand how Ultimatte 12 works and the requirements needed for it to work for them. Another first for India is the Fairlight 3.3 bay audio panels. Visitors will have the chance to get a feel for the Fairlight panels and explore this powerful audio engineering option. To cater to the fanfare around DaVinci Resolve 14’s release, two DaVinci demo booths will be available for production teams to research preferences and workflow optimization tricks. Blackmagic Design staff will be on-site to answer any questions visitors might have.

    Canon

    Canon, the leader in global imaging industry will showcase its latest in-line imaging technologies and preview of mainstream Cinema Camera EOS C700, Cinema EOS C200 and Professional Video Camera XA 11 at Broadcast India Show 2017. Canon Cinema EOS C700 can shoot up to 4.5K resolution along with 120 fps in 4K and 24 fps in 2K. The camera also comes in EF, PL and PL GS mount with global shutter technology. The dynamic range of camera holds up to 14 stops and 15 stops in two different models of EOS C700. The Cinema EOS C200 is revolutionary camera with inbuilt 4K Raw and high frame rate capabilities. The 8.85 megapixel super 35 mm CMOS sensor, 13 stops of dynamic range, Dual pixel CMOS AF, full compatibility with Canon EF-mount lenses and HDR capability help make the camera ideal for wide range of shooters. The other cameras which will be displayed will be the newly launched XA11 along with prevailing models XA35, XC 10 and XC 15 in professional video camera range and Cinema EOS C300 Mark II in the Cinema EOS range.

    Digital Navigation

    Digital Navigation is a leading software solution provider for the mainstream media houses across all platforms -broadcast, print and digital. They develop a wide range of software for efficient newsroom automation. The products are user-friendly and cater to the entire editorial chain of command. Digital Navigation also offers consultancy, customized services and support for media houses. The product-line includes: NewsGlobe- NewsRoom Automation System, RAPID- Playout Solution, OCRIPT- MOS based Teleprompting Solution, FLUiJO- Playout Automation System, CAPIO- Advanced Ingestion Module, E- ASSEST 365 – MAMS Solution, NewsBuzz – Mobile App for Newsroom and CURATOR- Content Management System

    DVEO

    DVEO®, a well-respected supplier to leading Telco, TV/OTT, and WISP operators around the world, provides Telco-quality video encoding/streaming products, playout servers, and advertising solutions. Their patented “DOZER™” automated error-correction protocol delivers video reliably over public or private internet. At Stand F-605, DVEO will demonstrate the Ad Serter™ IP/ASI/SDI — a Telco-quality multichannel advertising server with scheduled or triggered advertising.  It inserts video clips, ads, graphics, text, and logos into live or stored content. The AD SPOTTER serves targeted ads to mobile and non-mobile users.   All DVEO advertising solutions can be integrated with DVEO’s powerful Atlas™ Live/VOD media distribution servers.

    Empress Media Asset Management (eMAM)

    Empress Media Asset Management, LLC (Empress) will showcase the upcoming release of its flagship eMAM™ platform featuring integrations with Adobe® Premiere® Pro CC, Adobe InDesign® CC, and Adobe After Effects ® CC as part of Adobe Creative Cloud ® at Broadcast India in booth D-450. eMAM also extends the power of Adobe Team Projects with support for non-technical users, for remote users, for media management and sharing, and for any type of cloud system. eMAM is a Media Asset Management system offering customers a feature-rich online digital library with best-of-breed integrations for a complete workflow process solution. eMAM unites different on-premise and cloud storage and archive systems, in different locations into a unified workflow with a single web or tablet-accessible interface. The integrated panel architecture allows different creative staffs to share and collaborate through a complete unified system to maximize the value of their digital assets. The proxy editing and localization features for video editing allow organizations to increase workflow efficiency while saving on infrastructure costs.

    Great Britain & Northern Ireland Pavillion

    A group of seven leading British media technology companies are exhibiting at Broadcast India on the GREAT Britain Pavilion – supported by Department for International Trade, sponsored by techUK and managed by Tradefair. The British broadcast industry has a long history in innovation, and the group taking part at Broadcast India 2017 clearly demonstrate this. Each brings highly specialised products developed for targeted yet practical applications in the rapidly changing world of broadcast. The British exhibitors are showing a wide range of products and services at Broadcast India including digital post production, media asset management, robotic camera systems and technology for archiving.

    I DO IT

    I Do It will be displaying their Auto Skew On-The-Move antenna which can get Broadcast from any satellite at any place on the Trail, bus, car and costal ship. I DO It will also have Spider Web Air on display which helps in live broadcasting system, wireless stream of valuable contents to unlimited audience. This product is for live streaming to over 200 laptops and smart devices.

    Panther

    Panther will showcase the most successful Classic PLUS dolly with the new Hi-Lo-turnstile together with the famous Twister dolly together with useful accessories. The Classic Plus dolly comes with the patented crab & steer mode, with its perfect steering geometry that no one else can offer. The Vario Jib shown together with the Twister dolly is loved for its versatility and the many options in application.

    Promise Technology

    At the Broadcast India Show, leading rich media storage technology provider Promise Technology will introduce a new NAS solution designed for small groups of users editing 4k video- the Vess A3340 Pro. Promise will also be showcasing its Pegasus3, SANLink3 and VTrak A-Class shared SAN appliances at the show, which provide the ideal solution for the entire rich media workflow – from ingest and editing to delivery and processing. Demonstrations will take place in Promise’s booth (D-446) on the show floor.

    Rivera Digitec

    Rivera Digitec will be displaying the VR-4HD is a complete HD studio in a compact and portable package that replaces several different pieces of complex A/ V equipment. Designed with single-person operation in mind, the VR-4HD enables easy switching and mixing of sound and video using advanced video and audio Digital Signal Processing (DSP) along with dedicated hardware controls faders, buttons and touch screen interface. It beautifully integrates a digital audio mixer, video switcher, multi-viewer touch screen and USB video/audio streaming interface into a stand-alone device. This portable live HD production solution is ideal for schools, churches, council meetings, corporate events, sports, training sessions, or any other live event.

    Techinfoplace Softwares Pvt. Ltd.

    Techinfoplace Softwares Pvt. Ltd. offers end to end IT Services including software development, cloud based media processing, cloud backup, hosted exchange and product development. The products that are will be exhibited are Hybrik – a cloud-based media processing system that provides transcoding, media analysis, and quality control to deliver superb video optimized for every screen. Hybrik’s media workflow produces outstanding results, distributing the workload across hundreds of machines to deliver the fastest throughput at the lowest cost. The workflow can be customized through a public API, allowing seamless integration with customer operations. Customers like Sony DADC and Vevo depend on Hybrik for their cloud media workflow because of its superior performance, scalability, and cost-effectiveness. Another product on display is Backup Unlimited which provides backup of data with a wide range of backup types such as File Level Backup, Windows System, Exchange Server, VM ware, MS SQL, Office 365, Cloud to Cloud and many more. Core advantage of the product is that it backups the data on the cloud so it will be secure and easily accessible from anywhere. Every backup set has ability to configure schedule, manage differential and Incremental, Continuous Backup, Retention Policy and many more.  It also provides full audit report of backup jobs. It uses 256-bit SSL transmission & using 128-bit AES encryption algorithm with HIPPA Compliance. We also offer  white  labeling (branding)  of the software where one can use their own name, logo, arts for branding.

  • IDOS 2017: OTT is here to stay but may not replace pay TV

    IDOS 2017: OTT is here to stay but may not replace pay TV

    NEW DELHI: The over-the-top (OTT) medium is here to stay and cannot be put down, but the television medium will continue to survive in the face of this challenge in India.

    The stressful life of today and the relationship built by the local cable operator are other reasons for the survival and well-being of the television medium. These were some of the views expressed at a discussion on the OTT Challenge to Pay TV at the Indian Digital Operators Summit organised by indiantelevision.com and moderated by the latter’s founder, CEO and editor-in-chief Anil Wanvari.

    Viacom 18 Digital Ventures’ senior vice-president and head of marketing Akash Banerji said that OTT would fundamentally change the scenario but admitted that “we over-estimate the short term, and under-estimate the long term.” He felt that the impact of OTT on pay TV may begin to show some change by 2020-21, but not immediately.

    Clearly, he said, some disconnect with the cable operators had led to the growth of OTT. Secondly, OTT was providing the content relevant to the individual viewer. Thirdly, he said that Viacom 18 was for the first time indulging in a B2C model where the consumer had the last word. He, however, admitted that the long-term survival of OTT lay in the medium moving to a subscriber-based scenario.

    Shaji Mathews, who has recently joined as the CEO of Kerala Cable Communicators in Kochi, said that OTT was no challenge, and (on the contrary) it would augment TV. He was confident that wired technologies will continue to dominate even as wireless technologies attempt to make inroads.

    He also felt that there was no level playing field for OTT at present, and so growth will take time.

    DEN Networks CEO S N Sharma said that the MSOs had entered the field of OTT in an attempt to provide a platform to various OTT players only to reach the consumer, realising that the consumer habits are changing. DEN had made inroads as far as fee-to-air OTT was concerned, and was only amalgamating the OTT players. The aim was to move with technology.

    Ashok Mansukhani of Hinduja Media Group admitted that OTT was a gigantic disruptor of the entire value chain but felt it would take some years to make inroads.

    Vynsley Fernandes of CastleMedia felt that the growth of OTT would largely depend on who has the TV remote in the home.

    Sisir Pillai of Lukup Media was confident that whatever the medium, it would survive if it had adequate content.

  • IDOS 2017: Tech needed to integrate different media in a single box

    IDOS 2017: Tech needed to integrate different media in a single box

    NEW DELHI: With the scenario changing to that of a multi-screen era, the need of the hour is to create a single technology that can deliver all systems into the home.

    This was the general view of CastleMedia’s Vynsley Fernandes and Rahul Nehra, the founder of Kalpin and national secretary of Society of National Telecommunication Engineers, in a panel on soft solutions for set-top box hardware at the Indian Digital Operators Summit organised by Indiantelevision.com whose founder and CEO Anil Wanvari moderated the discussion.

    Fernandes felt that the STBs of today should be like home media gateways that could help operate OTT, tablets or laptops, SD and HD TV, gaming and even radio. The aim was to have master devices that could operate all media.

    He regretted that the failure rate of the present STBs which were mostly of Chinese origin was very high – seven to eight million failed every year.

    The cable industry had learnt its lesson the hard way whereas the direct-to-home STBs were more porous and met the needs of the DTH industry.

    With more options which included complicated technologies like virtual reality, Nehra said, there was need for more sophistication. He said there were no STB manufacturers but the demand for TV remained high, thanks to the cable operators.

    But, he said, work had begun in this direction and a pilot project near Hyderabad was almost ready to prepare hardware for the software. He said consumers wanted HD at the rate of SD and so newer technologies had to be found.