Category: Television

  • Affluent Asian’s to form digital generation: Synovate Pax ’06

    Affluent Asian’s to form digital generation: Synovate Pax ’06

    MUMBAI: The Synovate Pax survey 2006 has revealed insights into media consumption, product and service ownership, purchase intention, lifestyle and attitudes of affluent Asians.

    Synovate global head of media Steve Garton said that the results were especially noteworthy because they represented the tenth consecutive year of data on this group of influential consumers.

    “Pax now gives us a picture of Asia’s elites over the past decade. And probably the strongest trend tracked over that time is the emergence of the digital generation. The survey shows how digital has taken off – and taken a firm hold – among the affluent population. Digital communication was still in its early stages when we started Synovate Pax and yet digital technology has changed lives – over the past five years in particular,” Garton said.

    Top technologies

    The growth of some technologies can be traced over a ten year period. Some findings include:

    – Just ten years ago, a mere 11 per cent of affluent Asians owned laptops. In 2006, that figure has grown to 35.7 per cent, representing a 225 per cent increase. A further 11.3 per cent of respondents say they will purchase a laptop or notebook in the next twelve month period.
    – In 1997, the first year of the Synovate Pax survey, ownership of desktop computers was 44.2 per cent. It’s now 64.1 per cent, a rise of 45 per cent.
    – The mobile phone has moved from 46.8 per cent to 86.3 per cent over ten years (a rise of 84 per cent), and is much higher in some of the markets surveyed. Singapore’s mobile phone ownership is 95 per cent and Hong Kong, Sydney, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Seoul and Taipei all have over 90 per cent ownership.
    – Not surprisingly, the internet has enjoyed huge growth over the past ten years. It is now accessed by 71 per cent of Synovate Pax respondents, an increase of 132 per cent since 1997.

    The rise of digital
    Other technologies have become prominent only within the last five years:

    – MP3 players are now owned by 38.7 per cent of affluent Asians, a growth of 116 per cent since 2001 – with a further 7.3 per cent intending to buy one in the next twelve months. On the flipside, the mini-disc player has suffered somewhat at the hands of the MP3 with ownership declining 34 per cent since 2001 – 14.6 per cent of respondents now own one.
    – Ownership of digital still cameras has increased 127 per cent over the past five years, from 23.6 per cent in 2001 to 53.6 per cent, meaning more than half of all affluent Asians now have one. There is a further 6.1 per cent who expect to purchase one in the next year. If you include people with digital camera functionality on their mobile phones, a hefty 72.4 per cent of
    respondents now have the ability to take digital photographs.
    – Digital video cameras are also on the up and up. In 2001, 22.1 per cent owned these items, rising 98 per cent to 43.7 per cent in 2006.
    – The DVD player has become an everyday consumer durable in this time frame, with 67.4 per cent ownership in 2006, up 80 per cent from 37.5 per cent in 2001.
    – Another growth area in terms of digital technology is flat screen and plasma / LCD TVs. Flat screen TV ownership has increased 136 per cent in a six year period (43.2 per cent now own one) and plasma / LCD TVs are now owned by 17.6per cent of respondents – a rise of 120 per cent over five years.

    Synovate Asia Pacific director of Media Research Craig Harvey said the data throws up interesting challenges for technology marketers.

    “Affluent Asians now do business on the go and accept this technology as a key part of their everyday life. Many people already have the products they need, meaning marketers should be looking at ways to communicate new features and functions to these elite consumers.
    “If you look at the purchase intention data, some technology product categories have dropped over time. Many of these items may be reaching the mature end of their product lifecycle among the affluents, including mobiles without internet access, desktop computers and PDAs. However, other products – like mobiles with internet access and MP3 players – are growing.
    “Laptops have maintained steady growth the entire time, probably because they are an essential business tool and need to be kept up-to-date,” he stated.

    Garton added that Synovate Pax continually updates its information so that marketers can stay on top of trends. “The trends we’ve discussed here are largely retrospective. But of course trends are all the more powerful when you can see them as they happen. The beauty of Synovate Pax is that media owners, planners and marketers are always across what’s happening in the world of affluent Asians right now,” he said.

  • Archer Media to launch 2 IPTV channels in China

    Archer Media to launch 2 IPTV channels in China

    MUMBAI: Archer Entertainment Media Communications Inc. will open its Beijing, China offices amid preparations to begin broadcasting of China’s first television-over-the-Internet (IPTV) channels exclusively for the Chinese people both within China, and Chinese Living Abroad (CLA) of over 30 million Chinese living around the world.

    As per an official release, Jun Chen, Archer VP of business development, China, will direct Archer’s activities in China.

    China Broadcast Live (CBL) and the PCO TV (People of Chinese Origin) channel targets a potential audience of a billion consumers and follows the inauguration of Archer Media and IndiaTVLive’s PIO TV (People of Indian Origin) via IPTV protocol, in New Delhi, on 17 August, 2006.

    India TV Live and PIO TV are the first Internet television channels exclusively for the Indian diaspora community. Archer’s IPTV ventures in Asia heralds many more entertainment products to come from Archer Media, the release adds.

    “Archer’s pioneering success in Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) places Archer Media in the forefront of the burgeoning global revolution in content delivery via the Internet,” says Archer CEO Michael Selsman. Archer Media will partner with Bangkok-based Buzz Technologies Inc to provide a state of the art experience for IPTV viewers.

    Buzz Technologies has recently formed an alliance with Nero www.nero.com and a number of China based Manufacturers of Mobile Handsets and Computer Hardware, details of the agreements are expected to be made public in the coming week. Buzz will deliver IPTV over a range of devices including Smart Phones and PDAs.

  • Jack Gao appointed Star China CEO, News Corp. VP

    Jack Gao appointed Star China CEO, News Corp. VP

    MUMBAI: Star has appointed Dr. Jack Gao as its CEO of Star China. Gao will officially join Star in November 2006, and will report to Star CEO Michelle Guthrie.

    Based in Beijing, Gao will be in charge of Star’s overall business interests in China. He will be responsible for developing strategic and business directions while also overseeing Star China’s day-to-day operations.

    Gao has also been appointed VP of News Corporation and will assume the position of chief representative of the News Corporation Beijing representative office, responsible for running News Corporation’s activities in China, informs an official release.

    Commenting on Gao’s appointment, Guthrie said, “Jack’s insights to the China market, combined with his wealth of networking and business experience, and a proven track-record of success, make him a unique fit to lead our businesses and growth initiatives in China. We are fortunate to have attracted him to join us.”

    “Bringing on someone of Jack’s caliber to lead our China operations underscores Star and News Corporation’s commitment to this important market. As we expand aggressively into the digital media space, Jack’s technology background and experience in running businesses for multinationals such as Microsoft and Autodesk in China will serve as important assets in taking us to the next stage of our development in China,” Guthrie continued.

    Gao said, “With China poised for sustained and strong economic growth in the years ahead, a tremendous number of opportunities for dynamic and progressive companies such as Star and News Corporation will continue to open up. I am thrilled at the opportunity to apply my experience in China to Star and News Corporation’s businesses and look forward to working with Michelle and the rest of the talented team at Star and News Corporation in seizing growth opportunities in this exciting marketplace.”

    Prior to joining Star, Gao served for more than three years as Apac Emerging Geography VP for Autodesk Inc., where he was responsible for strategy, marketing and sales, product research and development, government and public relations, investments, human resources, finance and administration operations in Greater China and India. Before that, Gao was general partner of Walden International, a leading venture capital firm in the USA. Between 1999 and 2002, Gao was president and general manager of Microsoft (China) Co. Ltd. Prior to joining Microsoft, Gao spent five years with Autodesk, as regional director, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Mainland China, the release adds.

    Gao holds doctorate, master and bachelor degrees in engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles, and Harbin Institute of Technology in China.

  • Digiserv announces suite of content delivery services

    Digiserv announces suite of content delivery services

    MUMBAI: Digital Entertainment Services (Digeserv) in the US has announced that it will provide the complete suite of services necessary for the motion picture industry to move cost effectively and expeditiously from analogue to digital film and advertising delivery.

    Unlike many previous companies in the industry, Digeserv says that its diversified management team has performed film and advertising delivery in the entertainment industry for over 30 years. The firm says that it is committed to all industry participants to offer integrated, modular and complete services that expedite delivery and optimize cost and quality in the transition to digital. The firm adds that it is industry and participant neutral and is able to provide interfaces so any industry participant can benefit from its capabilities:

    Digital Network Services – Digeserv says that itsnetwork services will be open to each participant in the motion picture industry so any digital delivery companies, exhibitors and studios can move their content securely to ensure the digital delivery of films, pre-show and alternative content on a more cost effective basis. The digital network services will offer 24×7 service delivery with standardised protocols, thereby making access uniform throughout the industry.

    Digital Equipment Services – These the company says will accommodate any manufacturer’s equipment with the objective of increasing throughput while lowering cost and facilitating standards that permit DCI compliance throughout the industry. Each equipment package will accommodate both advertising as well as other digital content delivery.

    Funding Platform – The company says that it will make available to the industry a financial platform that permits the cost effective funding of exhibitor equipment that meets its compliance standards. In addition, the platform will monitor and settle all commercial trade transactions electronically between all parties in the distribution chain, whether they be digital delivery companies, studios, exhibitors, manufacturers or other vendors. The financial platform will allow all parties to minimize their working capital requirements with certainty of payment in settling all trade transactions.

    Alternative Content – The company adds that it has been approached by numerous content providers that would like to utilise the Digiserv open network services for offering new venues not currently available to the motion picture industry.

    The firm will provide a demonstration of its digital entertainment services and capabilities early next year in the US. After its demonstration, the firm will consult with all parties in the industry to exhibit how each participant can benefit by implementing a lower cost solution using proven technology and delivery partners.

  • Disney to encourage kids to eat healthy













    MUMBAI: The Walt Disney Company has introduced new food guidelines for licensed foods and promotions aimed at children that will govern Disney‘s business partnerships and activities in the U.S. on a going-forward basis and will be adapted internationally over the next several years.


    The new policies call for Disney to use its name and characters ond fat and sugar. ly on kid-focused products that meet specific guidelines, including limits on calories, fat, saturated fat and sugar.


    Disney also announced nutritionally-beneficial changes in the meals served to children at all Disney-operated restaurants in its parks and resorts and unveiled a company-wide plan to eliminate added trans fats from food served at its parks by the end of 2007 and from its licensed and promotional products by the end of 2008.


    “Disney will be providing healthier options for families that seek them, whether at our Parks or through our broad array of licensed foods,” said Disney president and CEO Robert Iger. “The Disney brand and characters are in a unique position to market food that kids will want and parents will feel good about giving them.”



    Disney Consumer Products has already begun to offer many licensed products which comply with the guidelines. They include breakfast items such as instant oatmeal featuring characters like The Incredibles and Kim Possible, and Disney Garden fresh produce such as kid-sized apples and bananas. Lunch and dinner foods such as Mickey-shaped organic ravioli and other pastas are also now available, informs an official release.


    Beginning this month in U.S. Disney Parks and Resorts, kids‘ meals are automatically being served with low fat milk, 100 percent fruit juice or water along with side dishes like apple sauce or carrots in place of the traditional soft drinks and French fries. Initial tests involving 20,000 kids‘ meals show that as many as 90 percent of parents and kids stayed with the more nutritious option.


    Added trans fats are in the process of being removed from all Disney food offerings. Food served at the U.S. Disney Parks and Resorts will be free of added trans fats by the end of 2007. Disney‘s U.S. licensing and promotional groups are aiming to meet an end-2008 deadline.


    These guidelines are based on The Dietary Guidelines for Americans and have been developed in cooperation with two child health and wellness experts, Dr. James O. Hill, director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and Dr. Keith Thomas Ayoob, Associate Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

  • Genpact names Ricky Bindra as CEO of NGEN Media Services

    Genpact names Ricky Bindra as CEO of NGEN Media Services

    MUMBAI: Genpact, a global provider of business services and technology solutions, has announced the appointment of Ricky Bindra as the CEO of the recent Genpact- NDTV joint venture, NGEN Media Services, today. 

    In his new role, Bindra will be responsible for the growth along with revenue and EBIT targets for NGEN Media Services, according to an official release.

    The Genpact- NDTV joint venture will be offering outsourcing solutions to address the huge demand driven by changing customer behavior and the dynamism of the regulatory environment, impacting the media industry today.

    The partnership combines Genpact’s offshore experience, global delivery capabilities, sales and marketing infrastructure, reputation for operational excellence with NDTV’s brand image, domain knowledge and world class media skill sets, according to an official release.

    Prior to joining Genpact, he has worked with organizations such as Accenture, Phoenix Global and Wipro Spectramind in leadership roles across operations and business development.

  • Star signs first CAS agreement in Delhi

    Star signs first CAS agreement in Delhi

    NEW DELHI: Star India looks like being the first major broadcaster to sign on to the CAS bandwagon.

    In a clear statement of intent directed at its detractors who have been claiming that India’s leading broadcast network is only paying lip service to the government mandated rollout of addressability, Star has signed up with one of South Delhi’s biggest independent cable TV networks, Home Cable, for CAS-enabled services.

    This agreement between a broadcaster and a cable network also heralds that the “CAS dawn” is around the corner.

    Says Star India president – advertising sales and distribution Paritosh Joshi, “We have sent out CAS agreements to all the cable networks operating in the CAS notified areas of Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata. We expect to have signed contracts in place well within the government-stipulated deadlines.”

    “Other than Home Cable, we expect to sign up the other networks in Delhi like SitiCable (now called WWIL), INCablenet and Hathway (26 per cent owned by Star) by tomorrow evening. In Kolkata there are seven or eight networks while in south Mumbai the main ones are Hatway and INCablenet,” Joshi pointed out.

    Addressability is an issue that has been buffeted by various forces, including political ones wherein the underlying theme had been to stall it as long as possible.
    Home Cable is owned by Vikki Chowdhry and services a sizable number of households in the posh Maharani Bagh and New Friends Colony areas of South Delhi where CAS is scheduled to be rolled out from 1 January 2007.

    According to Chowdhry, “The court mandated CAS has to be rolled out and since my network was one of those that has registered with the government, it is better I finish signing up the various agreements with broadcasters as soon as possible.”

    Those cable networks and MSOs who have applied for government clearance for CAS rollout in Delhi include WWIL, the Hindujas-controlled INCablenet, Hathway and few other independent operators who have big networks servicing a large area.

    CAS is scheduled to be rolled out in south zones of Mumbai, Kolkata and Delhi from the midnight of 31 December 2006 wherein all pay channels would have to pass through a set-top box on a mandatory basis.

  • ABC to air ‘Ugly Betty’ full season

    ABC to air ‘Ugly Betty’ full season

    MUMBAI: The American version The Ugly Betty or the original Colombian show Yo Soy Betty La Fea or the Indianised version Jassi Jaissi Koi Nahin has charmed audiences of all territories. 

    The US network ABC has given a full-season order to Ugly Betty, which has emerged as the most-watched new series of the 2006-07 season.

    Produced by Salma Hayek and stars America Ferrera as Betty Suarez, the show has already established itself a solid second to CBS’ Survivor at 8 pm. 

    Among the age bracket of 18-49 years, the show Ugly Betty has drawn an average rating/share of 4.7/13, while holding the top position on average with adults 18-34 year (4.0/12). The show has improved the time period for ABC by 96 per cent in total viewers (15.3 million against 7.8 million) and by 92 per cent in adults 18-49 (4.8/14 against 2.5/7) over the same nights last year, according to media reports.

    ABC Entertainment president Stephen McPherson noted, “In just two weeks Ugly Betty has given us an impressive foothold leading into the Grey’s Anatomy hour on Thursday night. The show has proven to be competitive in a very strong time period, and we’re thrilled with Ugly Betty’s performance.”

    In India, the version Jassi Jaissi Koi Nahin aired on Sony and had won 3.6 average TVR for the first week of its launch in 2003. The show and the lead character Jassi had become the unofficial mascot for Sony. 

    SET CEO Kunal Dasgupta told to indiantelevision.com in 2004, that Jassi had fetched Sony four million new viewers in the general entertainment category, while the slot sampling too has grown by 300 per cent in the first one year. “The TVRs, naturally, have also shot up by over 300 per cent,” he says.

  • Zoom to launch ‘Levis Diva Quest’ on 21 October

    Zoom to launch ‘Levis Diva Quest’ on 21 October

    MUMBAI: In line with the reality show craze on television channels these days, the Times Group’s glamour and lifestyle channel Zoom is launching a reality show the Levi’s Diva Quest.

    The show has been introduced as part of the channel’s revamp strategy. Zoom is on the lookout for the most stylish anchor through the Diva Quest. It is also planning to launch a few more shows over the next one month.

    “We are now poised to get into the next stage of our life cycle and there are a host of new initiatives both in terms of content and marketing slated to launch in October-November this year. Diva Quest is a stepping stone in that direction that we have taken,” says Zoom business head MK Anand.

    The show has been introduced with an aim to hunt for the most stylish anchor for the channel. It would kick off on 21 October. It will be aired on Saturday and Sunday at 9 pm and will be hosted by ramp model Aparna Kumar. 

    This is not the first time Zoom is indulging in the area of glam and glitz. Earlier, it had launched in L’oreal Paris Elite Model Look India 2006, Pond’s Banungi Main Miss India and Red Hot Countdown.

    The 15 shortlisted contenders will be scrutinized by a panel of judges including ace photographer Subi Samuel, makeover specialist and choreographer Achla Sachdev, celebrity tarot-card reader Sunita Menon, ad-man Prahlad Kakar and acclaimed TV host Mini Mathur. 

    From this lot, the contestants would further be wittled down to 10. The grand finale will be held on 29 October at the Intercontinental, Mumbai.

    Talking about the unique selling point (USP) of the show photographer Subi Samuel claimed, “Like other shows, we are not overtaking their personalities and transforming them, we are just grooming them to be able to deal with the glitz and glamour”

  • FCC to allow new low power devices on vacant TV spectrum

    FCC to allow new low power devices on vacant TV spectrum

    MUMBAI: US media regulatory body the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has adopted a First Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.

    This marks the first step towards allowing new low power devices to operate in the broadcast television spectrum at locations where channels in that spectrum are not in use by television stations or other authourised services.

    This action will enable the development of new and innovative types of devices and services for businesses and consumers in the US.

    The FCC has concluded that fixed low power devices can be allowed to operate on TV channels in areas where those frequencies are not being used for TV or other incumbent licensed services.

    The marketing of such devices may commence on 18 February, 2009, after the digital television (DTV) transition is complete and all TV stations are in operation on their permanent DTV channels.

    The FCC has also invited further comment on a number of issues that were raised in response to the Notice of Proposed Rule Making. It has solicited additional information that is needed to determine whether personal/portable devices can operate in any of the TV channels without causing harmful interference. It also invited comment to explore whether low power devices should be permitted on TV channels 2-4, which are used by TV interface devices such as VCRs, and whether fixed low power devices can be permitted on TV channels 14-20.

    The FCC has made technical proposals to facilitate use of a dynamic frequency selection (DFS) mechanism to ensure that TV band devices operate only on vacant TV channels. In addition, it sought further comment on implementation details for the geo-location and control signal interference avoidance approaches.

    The FCC says that it has reaffirmed its commitment to developing a complete record to ensure that the final rules will protect TV broadcasting and other service against harmful interference. In particular, it has invited parties to submit test results showing that TV band devices will not cause harmful interference. In addition, the FCC plans to conduct extensive testing itself to assess the potential interference from low power devices operating in the TV bands before adopting final rules.