Category: Television

  • Nick, CBBC competing for channel of the year at the Bafta Awards

    MUMBAI: The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) has announced the nominees for the British Academy Children‘s Film and Television Awards. The show takes place on 26 November, 2006.


    CBBC, CBeebies, Nickelodeon UK and Nick JR UK are competing for the channel of the year trophy. For film of the year the nominees are The Choronicles Of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe, Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire, Pirates Of The Carribean: Dead Man‘s Chest and Wallace And Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit.


    For best entertainment show the nominees are The Basil Brush Show, Raven, Top Of The Pops Reloaded and Tricky TV – Vanessa


    In addition children below the age of 16 can vote for their favourite film. The nominees include Cars,
    Chicken Little and The Chronicles Of Narnia

  • Dreamworks, Nick announce tie-up to bring big screen properties to TV


    MUMBAI: US kids brand Nickelodeon, is working with DeamWorks Animation to make television shows based on the films Madagascar and Kung Fu Panda.


    Media reports state that the Madagascar show will chronicle the adventures of its penguin characters — Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private.


    Nick will handle the day-to-day development of the series, but plans to outsource the actual CG production. DreamWorks‘s Jeffrey Katzenberg was quoted in Variety saying that these two projects are likely just the first of what will be future partnerships between Nickelodeon and Dreamworks, which have been in the works since DreamWorks was acquired by Paramount last December


     

  • BBC’s new reality show focusses on aspiring restaurateurs

    BBC’s new reality show focusses on aspiring restaurateurs

    MUMBAI: British chef and restaurateur Raymond Blanc will put nine couples through their paces to see if they have what it takes to run their own restaurant in a new television event for 2007 for UK pubcaster BBC Two.

    Incredibly, more than 1,000 new restaurants open every year in Britain; unfortunately, 900 close within a year. The Restaurant features nine couples whose dream is to run their own eatery. They have to create their perfect restaurant and then open the doors to the paying public.

    Every decision, every mistake they make, every argument they have, will be caught on camera. They are working and living together 24-hours a day, under huge pressure. Each week, one of the restaurants is eliminated from the competition by Blanc, acting as judge.

    At the end of the run, the winners get to run their own restaurant, financially backed and personally supported by Raymond with a six-figure sum of his own money.

    The show is a brutal insight into the business of running a restaurant and the incredible pressure of living and working with your partner.

    It’s a lesson on how to and how not to cook, a lesson on how we like to be served, what we like to eat and what we like to send back to the kitchen.

    It’s a story with a great climax at the end of each show and a winning couple who will have been proven to have what it takes in the restaurant trade, the toughest of all business challenges.

    Raymond Blanc said: “To set up a business – especially a restaurant business – and make a success of it is one of the hardest things in the world.

    “It is a constant balancing act – of passion with acumen, ego with humility, knowledge with a hunger to take risks.

    “Of course, I am very proud to be a leader within the restaurant industry. I owe a great deal of my success to my excellent team and maybe my greatest success is to have credited their intelligence rather than restricted it.

    “I look forward to sharing my experience and expertise with like-minded people who are eager to enter this crazy but irresistible world and achieve the dream for themselves.”

    Raymond Blanc, widely acknowledged as one of the world’s finest chefs, has held two Michelin stars for the last 22 years for his esteemed centre of excellence, Le Manoir aux Quat’Saisons in Oxford. Raymond has also run a scholarship programme for ten years.

    He has been at the very top of the restaurant game for more than three decades and has trained some of the UK’s most brilliant chefs, including Marco Pierre White, Michael Caines and Eric Chavot.

    BBC Two controller Roly Keating said, “BBC Two viewers are fascinated by food and business – this show audaciously brings them together for a television event. As well as providing an insight into the food that is served on our plates, it will reveal the harsh realities of the restaurant business. We’re delighted that Britain’s most legendary chef has joined forces with BBC Two to create this project.”

    The BBC adds that many people dream about running their own restaurant, but what many don’t know is how high the casualty rate is. It’s a dangerous business to be in. For those who get it right, it’s hugely lucrative, challenging and rewarding, but get it wrong and they could lose everything. This show will capture all the drama, the pain and pleasure of setting up and either keeping, or losing, a restaurant says the pubcaster.

  • Discovery gets all fashionable with high heels

    Discovery gets all fashionable with high heels

    MUMBAI: Infotainment channel Discovery has caught the fashion bug. It has acquired the one hour special High Heel Confidential from Canadian firm CBC.

    It has also licensed Rainbow’s Full Frontal Fashion London, Full Frontal Fashion New York, Full Frontal Fashion Milan and Full Frontal Fashion Paris for its viewers. Its sister platform, Discovery Asia, licensed six one-hour episodes of Ultra Eye for its fashion conscious audience.

    CBC produces high-end documentary specials and series for broadcast on CBC Television/Newsworld and international broadcasters.

    High Heel Confidential CBC says takes a bold step into the the world of high heels and the passion surrounding them. Shoes are hot: in 2004, sales generated close to $40 billion in the US alone and this year, that number is expected to rise another 20 per cent. This lucrative market is now shadowed by a growing underworld of fakes and knock-offs that are consumed almost as eagerly as the originals. Some women are so mad for shoes they’ll reshape their feet and destroy their bank accounts to satisfy their obsession.

    High Heel Confidential travels the globe to bring viewers interviews with the world’s top designers, including shoe superstar Manolo Blahnik, whose rare public appearances draw groupies more typical of a rock band than a shoe designer. Viewers will also women who line up for hours, eager for a chance to meet the shoemaker of their dreams and, of course, buy his exquisite shoes, which can cost as much as $7500 a pair.

    Viewers will also meet Patrick Cox, who thinks he has what it takes to play in the big leagues. Stepping out with his own brand of high heels, Cox takes High Heel Confidential behind-the-scenes for a revealing look at the trials and tribulations of an ambitious designer on the cusp of stardom- from courting international buyers in Paris to wooing celebrity clientele in Hollywood.

    The show also takes a walk in Dublin, Ireland – a gateway for smuggled goods into the European Union. Custom officials give the lowdown on a shipment of fake Guccis on their way to consumers’ feet. The show also looks at women who are obsessed about high heels. There’s no telling the heights they’ll climb for them, including cosmetic surgery to shape the ideal foot. And then there are the women just need their heels to make a living, from the fetish heels of Toronto dominatrices to Las Vegas shoe models.

    What is it about footwear that drives such madness, secrecy and obsession? To many, no price is too high, no sacrifice is too great for the greatest love of all: Shoes.

    Meanwhile in Rainbow Media’s show Full Frontal Fashion, viewers will get to see the hottest looks straight from the spring and fall 2006 runway collections of today’s most talked about designers. Viewers will gain access to a fashion event that will unveil New York bridal fashion featuring every big name in the business – Oscar de la Renta, Carolina Herrera and Vera Wang.

    Full Frontal Fashion then jets of to Miami to give viewers a front-row seat at the newest and hottest American Fashion Week, the Sunglass Hut Swim Show. The work of designers like Rosa Cha, Carmen Marc Valvo and Shay Todd will be showcased.

    Ultra Eye meanwhile is a lifestyle and travel show. Heer viewers will get to visit stylish cities and meet the people who are keeping those cities at the cutting edge of design and style. From Steffen Duemlet, designer of Berlin’s famed Sony House, to David Tang, Hong Kong’s most famed style-maker, Ultra Eye introduces viewers to the people and places that are shaping these internationally famous cities.

    Some of these cities include, Marrakech, a style that is uniquely Moroccan. Tour North Africa’s original marketplace, The Souk, and be a personal dinner guest of Mohammed Zkhiri at the restaurant Yacout.

    Rainbow Media adds that China’s CCTV HD has licensed 10 hours, including 15 half-hour episodes of Reservations Required and five half-hour episodes of Ultra Space. Reservations Required takes viewers behind the scenes of the hottest and most talked about restaurants in three of the food capitals of the world. New York City, Hollywood, and Napa Valley, California. Discover the secrets to creating  dramatic dining experiences that keep everyone, the ‘so-hip’ celebrity crowd, the stargazers, and the ‘foodies’ ? buzzing. Some of these hot spots we enter are ’66’, owned by superstar Jean-Georges Bongerichten and ‘Nick & Toni’s’ where the stars flock during Summer breaks in the Hamptons. The show will look at the design of the restaurant to the menu and kitchen trade secrets.

    Ultra Space takes the viewer on a major style journey. Go inside innovative residential spaces designed to speak to the tastes of a modern world. From New York to California, experience the ultimate in home design and style.

    Hosted by fashion and decor journalist Melissa Barrett Rhodes, the series thrills the eye with three home tours in each half hour episode. Some of these include the sleek Manhattan home of Lisa Ling, go inside architect Lee Mindel?s penthouse apartment and visit the urban oasis designed by Hariri & Hariri.

    Hong Kong’s ATV has picked up 13 episodes of Gallery Tours and 12 episodes of Magnificent Obsessions. Gallery Tours explores great collections of art from the world’s foremost galleries and museums. Each hour show selects highlights from an individual museum or gallery and explores the work’s aesthetic, composition, visual effect, meaning, relevance, and relationship with the world at large.

    These programmes Rainbow says give the viewer the sense that he or she has literally taken a guided tour of the best museums and galleries in the world, and seen the most notable art pieces each has to offer. The galleries featured include The Saatchi Gallery in London, The Hong Kong Museum of Art and the Sammlung Hoffman Gallery in Germany.

    Korea’s OnMedia has picked up the Reservations Required series. CJ Media licensed the series Full Frontal Fashion Miami and a one-hour special Swim Suits Secrets Revealed for its Korean audience.

    UBC Thailand took a mix of art and lifestyle series, including Reservations Required, Ultra Space, Gallery Tours, Art In Unexpected Places and Magnificent Obsessions. In the last mentioned show viewers will meet collectors who have amassed collections. Each half hour episode features two obsessive collectors with world-class collections. Viewers will hear the stories behind their obsessions and learn what makes these rabid hunters tick. The show will also go behind closed doors to see some of the most treasured collections in private hands.

    The show also focusses on the man behind the largest collection of Statue of Liberty memorabilia and artifacts. Also take a trip back in time and the collector who covets all things Harry Houdini. Viewers will also see how Scooby Doo sparked David Scheve’s obsession with animation art. Then they can check out Paul Kowlschuk’s highly regarded yet odd collection of pottery and ceramic art.

  • Vivendi files a corrupt organisations complaint against T-Mobile

    Vivendi files a corrupt organisations complaint against T-Mobile

    MUMBAI: Global European media conglomerate Vivendi has announced that it filed a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act (Rico) complaint in federal court in the State of Washington in the US.

    The charge is that T-Mobile illegally appropriated Vivendi’s $2.5 billion investment in Polish mobile telecom operator Polska Telefonia Cyfrowa (PTC), through a pattern of fraud and racketeering.

    Named in the complaint are T-Mobile USA, T-Mobile Deutschland, Deutsche Telekom AG and . Zygmunt Solorz-Zak, who controls another Polish company Elektrim, which is Vivendi’s joint-venture partner for its investment in PTC.

    According to the suit, this case involves two companies, Vivendi and T- Mobile, that have substantial business activities in the US, one of whom (T-Mobile) colluded with Mr. Solorz-Zak in a pattern of racketeering activity over US wires as part of an unlawful scheme to take over an enterprise, PTC, and corrupt another enterprise, Elektrim.

    Vivendi says that it considers that T-Mobile and Mr. Solorz’ Elektrim illegally appropriated its $2.5 billion investment in PTC and, at every turn, have defied court orders. By filing this Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act complaint, it is asking the court for a simple remedy – give back its money or its PTC shares.

  • ‘UK’s Ofcom model difficult to export to Asia’

    ‘UK’s Ofcom model difficult to export to Asia’

    HONG KONG: Do any industry players love their regulators? The answer, probably, is a big NO.

    And, in return, a regulator should not expect love, but should have a relationship with a regulatee that is based on transparency and integrity, amongst other things. Ditto for a vice versa relationship.

    This was the message that Kip Meek, senior partner for competition and content at Ofcom in the UK and chairman of the European Regulators’ Group said here today at the ongoing annual convention of Cable and Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (Casbaa).

    Speaking at session, aptly titled `How to love your regulator’, Meek also said that the Ofcom model of regulation is difficult to transport to other places; especially Asia. Reason? Ground realities may differ from market to market.

    “Is the Ofcom model exportable (to Asia)?” Meek posed a question and answered in the negative.

    Detailed regulation should follow on-ground realities, he explained, adding that content regulation in all countries cannot be the same.

    For instance, he said, Ofcom is quite liberal in comparison to some other regulators in developed countries as far as content goes.

    On cue, a majority of over 70 per cent in the audience voted against common regulatory standards in Asian countries, when asked to after Meek had finished speaking.

    According to Meek, the phrase ‘light touch of regulation’ may also sound an absurdity though Ofcom in the UK regulates on three principles, which include unbiased and least intrusive regulation.

    Meek also opined that a converged regulator is better placed to regulate in the present environment, provided it’s “truly independent and truly unbiased.”

    “A fully converged regulatory model does work… but don’t go for harsh measures,” he said.

    However, Meek felt there is a possibility of a converged regulator being considered too powerful.

    Moral of Meekspeak: a regulator-regulate is not the usual run of the mill tale.

  • Granada International to unevil programmes at Casbaa convention

    Granada International to unevil programmes at Casbaa convention

    HONG KONG: Granada International, one of the largest commercial distributors in the world, will debut a wide range of programming at the ongoing Casbaa convention.

    Part of the UK’s ITV, Granada has opened an office in Hong Kong to better serve its clients in Asia.

    Headline programming available from Granada at Casbaa includes Agatha Christie’s Marple. The company also is offering a new TV dramatization of Bram Stoker’s Dracula (90 mins).

    Apart from such programming, Granada will also debut a number of Hollywood TV movies, including Wildfires, a 90 minute film. There are some wildlife shows too on offer, it was announced today.

  • Sony Pictures Television International promotes Kim Hatamiya to executive VP Marketin

    Sony Pictures Television International promotes Kim Hatamiya to executive VP Marketin

    MUMBAI: Sony Pictures Television International (SPTI) has promoted Kim Hatamiya to executive vice president marketing. 

    Based at SPTI’s headquarters in Culver City, California, Hatamiya heads marketing for the division of Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) that oversees all television and on-demand businesses outside the United States. 

    The announcement was made today by SPTI president Michael Grindon, to whom she reports, according to an official release.

    “Since joining SPTI, Kim has overseen the marketing team brilliantly and become an integral part of my senior group of direct reports, whose counsel and management expertise have helped lead SPTI to continued record revenues, profitability and new business ventures,” said Grindon.

    As head of marketing for SPTI Hatamiya will oversee all marketing activities outside of the US for all SPTI business lines, including the distribution of feature film and television product to broadcasters, digital content providers and mobile carriers; international networks; and local language production.

    Hatamiya’s oversight includes all strategic marketing, advertising, publicity, talent relations, promotions, on-air and off-air creative services, interactive and Internet marketing, and research. Hatamiya joined SPTI in April 2003 as senior vice president, marketing.

    Prior to joining SPTI, she served as senior VP and general manager of television and film for Los Angeles-based Mindrocket Media/JP Kids, Inc., an independent multi-platform children’s and family media company, informs an official release. 

    Previously, Hatamiya was working at Passport New Media, Inc. in Los Angeles, Fox Kids Worldwide, where she was responsible for launching Fox Kids U.K. and Fox Kids Latin America.

  • Dreamworks, Nick announce tie-up to bring big screen properties to TV

    Dreamworks, Nick announce tie-up to bring big screen properties to TV

    MUMBAI: US kids brand Nickelodeon, is working with DeamWorks Animation to make television shows based on the films Madagascar and Kung Fu Panda.

    Media reports state that the Madagascar show will chronicle the adventures of its penguin characters — Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private.

    Nick will handle the day-to-day development of the series, but plans to outsource the actual CG production. DreamWorks’s Jeffrey Katzenberg was quoted in Variety saying that these two projects are likely just the first of what will be future partnerships between Nickelodeon and Dreamworks, which have been in the works since DreamWorks was acquired by Paramount last December

  • Nick, CBBC competing for channel of the year at the Bafta Awards

    Nick, CBBC competing for channel of the year at the Bafta Awards

    MUMBAI: The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) has announced the nominees for the British Academy Children’s Film and Television Awards. The show takes place on 26 November, 2006.

    CBBC, CBeebies, Nickelodeon UK and Nick JR UK are competing for the channel of the year trophy. For film of the year the nominees are The Choronicles Of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe, Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire, Pirates Of The Carribean: Dead Man’s Chest and Wallace And Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit.

    For best entertainment show the nominees are The Basil Brush Show, Raven, Top Of The Pops Reloaded and Tricky TV – Vanessa

    In addition children below the age of 16 can vote for their favourite film. The nominees include Cars,
    Chicken Little and The Chronicles Of Narnia.