Category: Television

  • TiVo’s ‘TiVo KidZone’ to replace parents as TV viewing supervisor

    TiVo’s ‘TiVo KidZone’ to replace parents as TV viewing supervisor

    MUMBAI: The creator of television services for digital video recorders, TiVo has unveiled TiVo KidZone. It is a new service enhancement that for the first time gives parents the ability to ensure that quality children’s programming is always on when their children turn on their television sets.

    The launch of TiVo KidZone comes at a time when there is a remarkable surge in children’s daytime television viewing over the summer, which is also a time when TV viewing is even more unsupervised by parents and is a source of their growing concern, states an official release.

    TiVo KidZone is based on TiVo’s easy-to-use interface and provides all parents the freedom and flexibility to easily find and select the television programming they deem most appropriate for their families while also making it simple to easily block any programs and channels they do not want their children to view. Announced in March 2006, TiVo KidZone allows subscribers to:

    — Choose from entire menus of shows recommended by a variety of leading non-profit organizations focused on children and media including Common Sense Media, Parents’ Choice Foundation and the Parents Television Council and set automatic recordings based on those recommended menus — from their homes or using the internet.

    — Easily add or subtract specific programs or channels to further customize what is available for children.

    — Lock out all other live or recorded programming or channels that are not specified for TiVo KidZone from access by children, while making all channels and recordings available when a parent wants to watch television (after entering a four digit code, as with an ATM).

    “TiVo KidZone answers the many concerns of parents revealed in this survey, by empowering them with a breakthrough new service and by also giving children a continuous array of engaging, high-quality programming to choose from whenever they turn on their television sets,” says TiVo president & CEO Tom Rogers. “TiVo KidZone is offering families a personalized TV area where parents’ own judgments and the recommendations of widely respected national family media review organizations such as Common Sense Media are easily and safely applied to deliver the best children’s television programming.”

    “A number of parents of children under 18 say they are nervous about what their kids are watching, but 81 per cent in the survey say they do not utilize any blocking technology that prevents programming with a certain rating from coming into their homes. It is clear that parents need an easy to use service like TiVo KidZone to ensure that quality TV is always on at their house,” addsTiVo VP, sales & affiliate marketing, Joe Miller.

    Parental concerns are highlighted in the release today of a new survey of 1,000 Americans, sponsored by TiVo and conducted with leading international research firm, Ipsos Research. The survey showed that 64 percent of parents of children under age 18 are concerned that their children will see television programming that does not reflect their family’s values, especially as many of the country’s children are beginning their summer vacation from school, adds the release.

  • TiVo’s ‘TiVo KidZone’ to replace parents as TV viewing supervisor

    MUMBAI: The creator of television services for digital video recorders, TiVo has unveiled TiVo KidZone. It is a new service enhancement that for the first time gives parents the ability to ensure that quality children‘s programming is always on when their children turn on their television sets.


    The launch of TiVo KidZone comes at a time when there is a remarkable surge in children‘s daytime television viewing over the summer, which is also a time when TV viewing is even more unsupervised by parents and is a source of their growing concern, states an official release.


    TiVo KidZone is based on TiVo‘s easy-to-use interface and provides all parents the freedom and flexibility to easily find and select the television programming they deem most appropriate for their families while also making it simple to easily block any programs and channels they do not want their children to view. Announced in March 2006, TiVo KidZone allows subscribers to:


    — Choose from entire menus of shows recommended by a variety of leading non-profit organizations focused on children and media including Common Sense Media, Parents‘ Choice Foundation and the Parents Television Council and set automatic recordings based on those recommended menus — from their homes or using the internet.


    — Easily add or subtract specific programs or channels to further customize what is available for children.


    — Lock out all other live or recorded programming or channels that are not specified for TiVo KidZone from access by children, while making all channels and recordings available when a parent wants to watch television (after entering a four digit code, as with an ATM).


    “TiVo KidZone answers the many concerns of parents revealed in this survey, by empowering them with a breakthrough new service and by also giving children a continuous array of engaging, high-quality programming to choose from whenever they turn on their television sets,” says TiVo president & CEO Tom Rogers. “TiVo KidZone is offering families a personalized TV area where parents‘ own judgments and the recommendations of widely respected national family media review organizations such as Common Sense Media are easily and safely applied to deliver the best children‘s television programming.”


    “A number of parents of children under 18 say they are nervous about what their kids are watching, but 81 per cent in the survey say they do not utilize any blocking technology that prevents programming with a certain rating from coming into their homes. It is clear that parents need an easy to use service like TiVo KidZone to ensure that quality TV is always on at their house,” addsTiVo VP, sales & affiliate marketing, Joe Miller.


    Parental concerns are highlighted in the release today of a new survey of 1,000 Americans, sponsored by TiVo and conducted with leading international research firm, Ipsos Research. The survey showed that 64 percent of parents of children under age 18 are concerned that their children will see television programming that does not reflect their family‘s values, especially as many of the country‘s children are beginning their summer vacation from school, adds the release.

  • IBM files patent infringement lawsuits against Amazon.com

    IBM files patent infringement lawsuits against Amazon.com

    MUMBAI: IBM has filed two patent infringement lawsuits against online book and retail major Amazon.com for unspecified damages.

    The lawsuits come after nearly four years of attempts by IBM to resolve its concerns with Amazon.com over infringement of IBM’s patents.

    The suits were filed in two District Courts for the Eastern District of Texas: one suit in the Tyler Division and the other suit in the Lufkin Division.

    IBM Technology and Intellectual Property senior VP Dr. John E. Kelly III says, “We filed this case for a very simple reason. IBM’s property is being knowingly and unfairly exploited. IBM is one of the world’s leading creators of intellectual property and one of the most progressive in embracing new, highly collaborative ways of driving and managing innovation.

    “Everything we do is premised on the fundamental principle that IBM’s intellectual property is one of our core assets, and represents the work product of tens of thousands of scientists and engineers and billions of dollars of investment.”

    IBM said that Amazon.com has willfully infringed and continues to infringe on a number of key IBM patents.

    Dating back to September 2002, IBM says that it has notified Amazon.com numerous times of the infringement, but Amazon.com has shown no willingness to have meaningful discussions.

    “When someone takes our property, without our permission through a license, we have no option but to protect it through every means available to us,” said Kelly.

    IBM holds more than 40,000 patents worldwide and has been awarded the most US patents for 13 consecutive years. The company has a long history of licensing its patents covering e-commerce on fair terms. Over the past five decades, IBM has entered into numerous patent licensing agreements with companies that respect intellectual property rights in a broad range of industries. Many companies have licensed these five high-quality patents from IBM, as well as others, in “field of use” patent licenses.

  • Discovery launches broadband channel in Germany

    Discovery launches broadband channel in Germany

    MUMBAI: US media firm Discovery has launched Discovery Broadband in Germany. It is now available at www.discoverybroadband.de.

    Discovery Broadband is a subscription service offering access to programming from Discovery via broadband. Focussed on core Discovery genres including animals, machines, engineering, science, history, real life and travel, a full range of content is available to view online.

    This includes shows such as American Chopper, Mythbusters, Deadliest Catch and Conspiracies on Trial. At launch, Discovery Broadband in Germany will offer more than 40 hours of fully languaged programming for broadband consumers to enjoy at their convenience.

    Approximately 10 hours of additional content will be added to the service each month in order to offer enhanced choice each month and build an extensive, wide-ranging library for subscribers to the service.

    Discovery Networks in Germany VP and country manager Dr. Patrick Hörl says, “The launch of Discovery Broadband in Germany underscores our commitment to extend the company’s quality content across multiple media platforms in order to provide increased flexibility, convenience and control to consumers”.

    Discovery Broadband is available to consumers on a monthly or annual subscription basis at a cost of €5 and €50 respectively. Consumers can also access individual programmes for 24 hours on a pay-per-view basis for a fee of €1 or €2 based on the duration of the content. A free one-week trial of the service will be available at launch.

    With a total of more than 12 million broadband subscribers, Germany is currently the largest broadband market in Europe and also one of the top five broadband markets in the world (Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, June 2006).

    To access the range of programming available on the Discovery Broadband site, consumers simply register their details at www.discoverybroadband.de to open an online BT click and buy account and will then receive a username and password for continued account access.

    Discovery Broadband is also available in Europe in the UK, France, Italy and the Netherlands.

  • Lodestar national media director Nandini Dias

    Lodestar national media director Nandini Dias

    Think Emvies and pop comes Lodestar to your mind and with that comes the image of Nandini Dias. At the helm of the agency since its inception, Nandini and her team have consistently performed at the Emvies year after year. So much so that at this year’s presentations and shortlisting process for the awards, every agency took a dig at Lodestar and Nandini couldn’t stop laughing.

    One of her peers from a rival agency introduced himself to the jury as Mr So-and-So from Lodestar. “We really felt we had arrived in life,” she laughs. Such has been the stranglehold of Lodestar over the Emvies and the perfectionist that Nandini is, she is always determined to get it right every time… time after time.

    A science graduate, Nandini went on to do her Advertising & Marketing post-graduation from Xavier Institute of Communications (XIC). Around the same time she was selected into Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management, and faced with a choice, preferred to jump straight into the deep end and joined advertising. “At that point in time, I didn’t realize that ‘MBA-ness’ would go on to become such a critical label and preferred to get straight to the point with advertising and marketing at XIC,” she ponders, in retrospect.

    Though, most of what she has learnt about media, all the tricks of the trade, she avers, has been from hands-on work experience. Albeit with some trial and error.

    Today, as vice president of Lodestar, she is a force to reckon with and many clients agree to come on board only if Nandini personally oversees their account. That in itself speaks eons about the kind of commitment and passion she has for her work and the respect she has earned in the industry.

    With no mentor to guide her through her media odyssey, Nandini learnt to tune the strings herself. After XIC, she joined a small agency called Interpublicity (run by Nargis Wadia) and was with them for one and a half years. “I joined them in 1988 and in those days Interpublicity used to be a very creatively inclined agency. Interpublicity had virtually no media department and Mrs Wadia used to keep telling me that I had a very business like mind and that I should actually be on the servicing side of the business. At that time the media stream of the business was really unheralded and the one of the most powerful media departments was housed in the then Lintas, so I decided to join them. While I already had a year and a half of experience, I really didn’t mind learning everything from scratch all over again. ” she says.

    The Lintas of those days was structured as autonomous groups like Bombay 1, Bombay 2, Bombay 3 and so on, each functioning as a mini agency within an agency. Nandini used to look after the clients that fell under the Bombay 3 division of Lintas. In her five-year stint at Lintas, she handled clients like Cadburys, Johnson & Johnson, Walls (from Unilever) and Marico amongst others.

    Interestingly enough, her quest for a mentor ended with herself. “Thrown into the deep end, I realized that there is only so much that someone can really ‘teach’ you. Beyond that, I realized, that the only way to learn was to learn by yourself,” she recalls.

    Inadvertently out on her own, she had to sink or swim. And swim she did, by constantly absorbing information and digesting the wealth of knowledge that she found all around her. From basic sources like books, papers, journals and thesis to the more interactive periods she had with colleagues, peers who were always around when she was faced with a problem. “I just learned it all by myself and figured out the method to the madness,” says she.

    In 1994 Nandini had a winged visitor. The stork came calling and the birth of her first son led to her taking her first break from advertising. “I was in this holiday pregnancy spirit and since it was my first child, I didn’t want to leave the baby to anyone in the early months. After my baby was born, I was debating whether to take a break and then go back to work. Also the fact was that since I had already taken a six month maternity leave, someone else had been servicing my accounts at Lintas. So I thought it would be better to join another organisation. My first child was born on 1 January 1994, and in November the same year, I joined FCB Ulka as media supervisor,” says Nandini.

    From media supervisor to vice president, it’s been a long 11 years for Nandini at FCB Ulka and its media independent Lodestar. “Four months after joining the agency I was pleasantly surprised to be promoted to group manager,” she says. And since then she’s been going from strength to strength in the organisation.

    For about three years after 1996, Nandini was handling the entire media planning business of FCB under Kalpana Rao while Apurva Purohit was handling the media buying.

    But in 1998, the stork came a calling a second time and Nandini had a brief part time stint before being faced with her next big challenge. At that time FCB decided to re-launch its second agency Interface Communications in India and Nandini was part of the core start up team. The agency had already been launched earlier as far back as 1985.

    “For three years I had been doing the same thing and this came as a challenge to me at a time when I was thinking about what my next move should be. I thought that running a start up would be easier than running a large organisation. But the reality was totally different. You have to invest so much time to in clients, people, processes and infrastructure apart from putting systems in place to just get the organisation running. The biggest challenge was to get people to join us since most of them want to join large, known organisations as media is very strongly driven by buying power and industry clout. Another thing was also that we were fighting with the biggies and that was a far tougher job,” she says.

    “We started from scratch and really struggled to get the organisation up and running. Our aim was to separate it from the existing organisation and give this agency its own identity,” she adds.

    Setting up a new agency is no cakewalk since media is all about clout and about the amount of money being put down on the table. “We were very keen on starting it as a separate organisation. That was a tall task for anyone. I think it was a big high for me to get business on the basis of what I would bring to the table. It was a big responsibility and I was initially very awed when clients began coming on board citing my leadership as one of the reasons,” she narrates.

    Four years after Interface Communications was launched, the management decided to bring Lodestar – the brand – to the forefront. And Lodestar became an independent identity. “While there are different divisions and groups under Lodestar to start with, they eventually got integrated,” Nandini informs.

    Lodestar came into being around 95-96 but at that point in time it was only a buying and implementation operation. The strategic area was a part of the mainline agency. “It was not a separate media house per se but for the last three – four years, we’ve been running Lodestar as an independent media house,” she says.

    How did the transition come about? “It had a lot to do with market forces and also the fact that there were many clients who not aligned to any creative agencies. So there were a lot of AOR clients, which came in. Now, 50 per cent of our clients are pure AOR clients. It made sense to run it as an independent organisation,” says Nandini.

    One immediate challenge was that FCB’s global media arm didn’t have any multinational clients that fall into Lodestar India’s lap merely on the strength of international alignments. Unlike, the P&Gs, Pepsis and Unilevers of the world, Lodestar had to brave it on their own and pitch for MNCs in India which were aligned to rival agencies internationally. L’oreal is one such example.

    The team at Lodestar found an approachable leader and a hard taskmaster in Nandini. Her office is a free walkway for anyone who is facing a problem. Being a perfectionist to the T, she has very high expectations from her team and trained them to be perfectionists as well. Lodestar’s performance at the Emvies during her tenure at the top is a testimony to the commitment her team has towards clients. “We may be much smaller but our consistent track record at the Emvies over the last few years has been extremely satisfying. The businesses we handle, the quality of output we deliver and also the team we have all put us ahead of a lot of the competition,” she proudly states.

    One of her peers in Group M once said to her, “The best people in the industry are trained under you. So you continue training them and after a couple of years, we will poach them.” To which her reply was, “The more people you pick up, the more I will train. So let’s see who wins the battle – whether you hire more or I train more.”

    Lodestar has, over a period of time, become a starting point and a destination for a lot of people who want to do quality work. “As an organisation, we give a lot of importance to the quality of thinking rather than just mindless buying,” she says.

    Being a perfectionist, she finds it difficult to accept people who work in a particular place just to earn good money. “Of course money is important but if I don’t find enough involvement and commitment in people, both of us have to work at it that much harder. We try to work with such people and get the entire team on to a common ground. And once you’re alongside them, then it’s very difficult for them not to see things the same way,” says she.

    It’s not a much publicized fact that Nandini has been very active in sports during her school and college days. She played badminton at the state level and has won many awards too. Today, she compares herself to a sports trainer… albeit in the media field. Drawing comparison she says, “I push people to work hard just like a sports trainer keeps pushing you. But ultimately, the rewards are yours to keep.”

    Her contribution to the industry has been huge in terms of quality of work, research, innovations, tools, etc that the agency churns out year after year, which in turn sets benchmarks for the rest.

    One personal grouse of hers is that a lot of new people coming into the industry are irrationally ambitious. Little do they realize that seniority is not achieved via job hopping and getting designation hikes. “Personally it is a big high for me that I joined FCB Ulka as media supervisor and have reached to where I am today in the same organisation,” she says.

    Strengths
    I will be hard on myself till I know that something is done to the best of anyone’s ability. If I decide to do something, I will do whatever that needs to get done, which is obviously not underhand, to do it. Building relationships with people is my strength. All my clients today are my friends.

    Eleven years is a long time to stay put in an organisation, especially when rampant poaching of professionals goes on in the ever so competitive media environment… but Nandini has no regrets whatsoever. “There have been opportunities and some of them were tempting. But I’m a person with very basic wants and I’m not into exorbitant living. I work for people and principles and I should like what I’m doing. I have been involved with it for so many years, constantly nurturing it that I’m in no hurry to abandon it. I have been one of the most consistent faces leading Lodestar and you can blame anything good or bad that has happened in the agency to me,” she chuckles.

    She however adds, “Unless something really challenging comes my way, I will stay put. Apart from that, my desire is to really grow Lodestar so why would I hop jobs.”

    Shashi Sinha once told her, “Nandini, if you have set your mind on something, you will achieve it irrespectively. I can see the kind of determination in you that will not let you stop till the job is done.”

    This also rings true for her husband Agnello Dias (JWT senior vice president and executive creative director), points out Nandini.

    Weakness
    I will call a spade a spade, which is a very tough one. I’m not a ‘Yes Boss’ person. And this trait of mine has put me in a tight spot all the time. But I can’t change myself. And that makes it tougher for me because if you’re not a person who toes the line, to prove yourself you have to work that much harder. I get too involved into people.

    Passionate about sports, if Nandini was not doing what she is doing today, she would go back to sports and strive to do something for the players for whom sport is bread and butter. “Unfortunately, there isn’t much money in sports except for cricket and those people who are into other games have pursued it at the cost of their education. Hence they find it difficult to get jobs. For me the alternative job would be sports marketing, sports advertising and growing the industry keeping players’ interests in mind,” she dwells.

    How does she juggle between home and the ever-pressing demands at work. “It is tough to manage home and professional life. It’s a conscious effort to balance out the two and it can only happen if you are determined to do it. I teach my two sons myself. I teach kids at office so why can’t I do it at home?” she chuckles.

    While earlier she was a total workaholic, since the last three years she has been taking her regular one month of privilege leave. “Prior to that, there always used to be something that was important enough so that I couldn’t take off. Now I am making a conscious effort to take time out,” she emphasises.

    Being a true blue nature’s person, Nandini loves trekking and camping and her favourite getaways are the Himalayas, Ganges and Beas.

     

  • Broadcast Bill still has minefields to clear before becoming law

    Broadcast Bill still has minefields to clear before becoming law

    So the government again renews its long-in-the-trying attempt to get broadcast regulation in place. Is it just us or is this feeling of déj? vu that it may be another exercise in futility shared by the industry as well?

    Still, that doesn’t take away the importance of having a comprehensive legislation for the sector that is estimated to be worth Rs 427 billion in 2010 according to the PricewaterhouseCoopers report presented at this year’s Ficci Frames convention.

    The Broadcasting Bill has been dangling on an uncertain thread for close to a decade now. Several information and broadcasting (I&B) ministers in several governments, who have tried to maneuver it past the corridors of the houses of Parliament and into law, have come and gone. All have failed; none have had the drive to push it through. It has proved to be an untouchable piece of legislation; a hot potato that is dropped every time an effort is made.

    The Bill tries to address the issue of encouraging domestic originating content on TV channels by mandating a 15 per cent share for it.
    _____****_____

    Another attempt is being made to enact the covered-with-dust Bill. A draft has been prepared for the Union Cabinet’s persual and initial indications are that it is going to impact almost everyone in the broadcasting food chain. It is slated to be introduced in Parliament during the Monsoon session by not-even-a-year-in-the-seat I&B minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi.

    I&B ministry secretary SK Arora has been working for a long time on putting together the document. Help has been sought from several quarters while drafting the Bill: the US FCC, Casbaa in Hong Kong, other consultants, consumer groups and interested parties.

    The Bill tries to address the issue of encouraging domestic originating content on TV channels by mandating a 15 per cent share for it. Then it caps cross media ownership at 20 per cent, and even share of voice for a TV channel or cable TV network nationally at 15 per cent. A Broadcasting Regulatory Authority of India (Brai) is to be set up (have we not heard this one before?), which will monitor the content on TV channels and oversee the broadcast industry in all its aspects the same way as the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India does in the telecom sector.

    No broadcaster or cable TV operator is going to cede power and control they have acquired over the years they have been operating in India.
    _____****_____

    The first piece of legislation is more than welcome and should in the medium to long term give a boost to local TV production and more so animation. Of course, it goes without saying that it is in the interest of local broadcasters to create local content that appeals to audiences and there’s no running away from it if they are seeking to make money out of the market. That they have so largely shied away from doing so, may be part of their business plan. There will be some bickering about this by some of the players.

    Of course, the government will have to specify whether the 15 per cent content cap relates to fresh domestic prime time content or to recycled content. Remember some broadcasters might buy garbage worthy shows dirt cheap and put them on air late at night in order to fulfil the legislative norms.

    Additionally, a transition period will have to be specified so that the domestic production industry gears up to deliver the quality animation and programming that is demanded internationally, so that international broadcasters can – if they want – buy worldwide rights.

    On the whole, over time the 15 per cent imposition could well catapult TV documentary makers and animation studios into the next level. Though some argue that the cap should be higher, it is a good start.

    That is just the soft part of the Bill though. Trying to control share of voice and restricting cross media ownership are two clauses that are arguably going to get the entire Bill stuck in a quagmire; lot of it political. Reason: hectic lobbying is going to commence to do away with them. It is these clauses which in the past have prevented the Bill from becoming a law. And, it is quite likely to do the same once again.

    No broadcaster or cable TV operator is going to cede power and control they have acquired over the years they have been operating in India. Many of their business models are based on this power.

    The setting up of Brai is another moot point. It’s about time a content watchdog was set up. The other option is that the industry kowtows to a xenophobic government’s every content concern and censorship demand.

    Additionally, the draft Bill fails to clearly address broadcasting in a converged era to hand held devices and mobile phones.

    A key question everyone is asking: will the Bill go through this time? It looks unlikely to have an easy ride and, in all probability, will be knocked into another shape and form. Or, it may end up being still born. Its passage will depend on how much pressure the I&B mandarins — and the Congress-led coalition government — are willing to withstand not only from the Opposition, but also allies, some of whose sympathisers have big media dreams in East and South India.

  • Azlan Shah Cup Hockey live on ESS

    Azlan Shah Cup Hockey live on ESS

    MUMBAI: ESS will telecast the 15th Azlan Shah Cup tournament live & exclusive starting 18 June 2006. Staged every two years till 1998, the tournament is now an annual feature owing to growth of popularity of the game in Malaysia.

    This year, the tournament is divided into two pools with India, Australia, Malaysia and Korea in one pool and Pakistan, Netherlands, Argentina and New Zealand battling in the other. The top two teams after a round robin clash in each pool will clash in the semi finals of the tournament.

    Schedule of matches to be telecast live on ESPN Star Sports

    18 June 2006 06:00 Argentina Vs New Zealand Star Sports
    18 June 2006 12:30 India Vs Australia Star Sports
    18 June 2006 7:30 Malaysia Vs South Korea Star Sports

    19 June 2006 06:00 Netherlands Vs Pakistan Star Sports
    19 June 2006 12:30 Korea Vs Australia Star Sports
    19 June 2006 2:30 India Vs Malaysia Star Sports

    20 June 2006 12:30 Netherlands Vs Argentina ESPN
    20 June 2006 2:30 Pakistan Vs New Zealand ESPN

    21 June 2006 12:30 India Vs Korea Star Sports
    21 June 2006 2:30 Malaysia Vs Australia Star Sports

    22 June 2006 12:30 Pakistan Vs Argentina Star Sports
    22 June 2006 2:30 Netherlands Vs New Zealand Star Sports

    23 June 2006 12:30 Semi Final I Star Sports
    23 June 2006 2:30 Semi Final 2 Star Sports

    24 June 2006 05:00 7th/8th Placing Star Sports
    24 June 2006 07:00 5th/6th Placing Star Sports
    24 June 2006 12:30 3rd/4th Placing Star Sports

    25 June 2006 2:30 Final Star Sports

     

  • Hungama TV to air antics of ‘Shin Chan’ from 19 June

    Hungama TV to air antics of ‘Shin Chan’ from 19 June

    MUMBAI:The series featuring the naughty antics Shin Chan that has garnered huge popularity in Europe, Latin America and the Far East, will now be brought to India. Come 19 June, Hungama TV will air Shin Chan every weekday, Monday to Friday at 5 pm.

    Viewers can witness the hilarious histrionics of the Nohara family as they struggle to cope with the hurricane, that is, their five year old son, Shin Chan.

    Hungama TV COO Zarina Mehta said, “Shin Chan, like Doraemon, is one of the top 3 shows in the Asian region. Shin Chan’s innocence and antics form a deadly mix designed to give entire families a wonderful time. We welcome Shin Chan to the Hungama Family of fabulous, memorable characters, which include Hero, Sanya, Doraemon, Kochikame & YuGiOh! “.

    Without even trying hard, Shin-Chan manages to be a one-kid disaster squad. Shin Chan can single-handedly turn a pleasant afternoon into a long and never-ending battle of wits. He provides all age groups with something they can relate to – his devilish charm, his care-free attitude, and his curiosity for new things. He just lets it all out and isn’t afraid of what others think. This, unfortunately, is the very reason he always succeeds in invoking his mother Mitsy’s short temper. Watch Shin Chan and his little sister, Daisy whose innocent looks are deceiving, along with his pet dog named Lucky, who is anything but that!

     
     

  • Hungama TV to air antics of ‘Shin Chan’ from 19 June













    MUMBAI:The series featuring the naughty antics Shin Chan that has garnered huge popularity in Europe, Latin America and the Far East, will now be brought to India. Come 19 June, Hungama TV will air Shin Chan every weekday, Monday to Friday at 5 pm.



    Viewers can witness the hilarious histrionics of the Nohara family as they struggle to cope with the hurricane, that is, their five year old son, Shin Chan.

    Hungama TV COO Zarina Mehta said, “Shin Chan, like Doraemon, is one of the top 3 shows in the Asian region. Shin Chan‘s innocence and antics form a deadly mix designed to give entire families a wonderful time. We welcome Shin Chan to the Hungama Family of fabulous, memorable characters, which include Hero, Sanya, Doraemon, Kochikame & YuGiOh! “.


    Without even trying hard, Shin-Chan manages to be a one-kid disaster squad. Shin Chan can single-handedly turn a pleasant afternoon into a long and never-ending battle of wits. He provides all age groups with something they can relate to – his devilish charm, his care-free attitude, and his curiosity for new things. He just lets it all out and isn‘t afraid of what others think. This, unfortunately, is the very reason he always succeeds in invoking his mother Mitsy‘s short temper. Watch Shin Chan and his little sister, Daisy whose innocent looks are deceiving, along with his pet dog named Lucky, who is anything but that!

  • BBC News website to concentrate on popular stories with new page

    BBC News website to concentrate on popular stories with new page

    MUMBAI: UK pubcaster BBC News website has announced the launch of its new Most Popular Now page for users. On the page, site users can find information about which stories are proving most popular or interesting to their fellow readers.

    For the first time, visitors to the site can now see which news stories are read most, which stories are forwarded to friends most and which video clips are being watched most – minute-by-minute throughout the day.

    BBC News Interactive head Pete Clifton says, “This is a fascinating new service for our millions of readers – they will be able to see exactly what people are reading and watching in any part of the world in real-time. We have a huge amount of information about our traffic and it makes sense that we share it with the audience.”

    On the Most Popular Now page BBC News website readers will find a world map with a list of the ten most popular stories read by users of the site across the world – data all generated within seconds of the actual pages being read.

    To find out what the most popular stories are around the globe, readers simply click on the area of the world they want to know about and the list of top stories automatically sweeps into the top ten for that region.

    As a result, people can compare the stories that come top with European readers with those in the US, Africa, Asia and elsewhere. Other features include a live news traffic monitor which measures news consumption and shows whether it is a quieter or busier day than average, and an archive of text and audio video clips.

    Click on the ‘Most popular – Day so far’ tab and users can see how the popularity of stories develops and changes hour-by-hour throughout the day. Readers will be able to find the information via links on the front page and on the right hand side of every story on the site.