Category: Television

  • BBC. HBO to collaborate on ‘Tsunami’ drama

    BBC. HBO to collaborate on ‘Tsunami’ drama

    MUMBAI: Following the success of Rome, the BBC and HBO will collaborate on a two part drama that deals with the tsunami tragedy and the events that followed.

    Tim Roth, Toni Collette, Sophie Okonedo are among the actors that will star. The drama will focus on the aftermath of the cataclysmic natural disaster.

    Developed and written by Abi Morgan, Tsunami is a Kudos production for BBC Two and HBO Films and will air later this year.

    A tale of personal loss, Tsunami follows a group of fictitious characters whose lives are irrevocably transformed by the natural disaster. Based on extensive research and interviews, the drama explores how governments, the media and aid agencies respond, when without warning, they are tested by a natural disaster of this scale.

    The drama will also tackle the relationship between mankind and nature.

    Kudos has been collaborating with local communities and the piece will feature a variety of locations and landmarks affected by the tsunami. Filming on location in Phuket and Khao Lak has commenced.

    BBC controller of drama commissioning Jane Tranter says, “A thought provoking drama of loss, survival and hope, Tsunami is another example of BBC Drama’s commitment to deliver ambitious and distinctive projects that reflect the world in which we live by delving into the headlines and revealing the stories behind them.”

    Kudos executive producer and joint MD Jane Featherstone says, “The catastrophic events of Boxing day 2004 had a profound and lasting effect on people across the globe. Through meticulously researching real life events, real people and working closely with the survivor groups Abi has written a wonderful, powerful drama that purposely asks what mankind can learn from the event, as well as reflecting on the far reaching emotional and political repercussions of that fateful day.”

    BBC Two controller Roly Keating says, “It is a tribute to the power of Abi’s writing that such an extraordinary cast has come together for this important TV event.”

  • Weume Infosys bags mobile rights for Fifa World Cup

    Weume Infosys bags mobile rights for Fifa World Cup

    MUMBAI: Swiss sports event marketing major Infront Sports & Media AG has sold the India territory mobile broadcast rights for this year’s Fifa World Cup to Weume Infosys Private Limited, a Chennai-headquartered provider of mobile content and Internet services.

    Infront made the announcement as part of four agreements it has signed for its World Cup new media rights package; the other three territories being France, Canada and Sweden.

    The agreements enable the licensees to transmit up to four minutes of key match footage for “near-live” and/or delayed coverage over the Internet and/or via mobile networks to mobile phones, geo-blocked for user access only within each territory.

    The exclusive mobile broadcast rights Weume Infosys has acquired, covers English and Hindi languages and applies also to archive video material of the 2002 event, which took place in Korea and Japan.

    Weume (pronounced as We-U-Me) will distribute the content through Weume’s portal as well as mobile networks and mobile portals within the territory. The company’s target is to reach approximately 85 million subscribers, the announcement states.

    Meanwhile, telecommunications operator France Telecom has secured the non-exclusive French-language rights for Internet highlight coverage of all World Cup matches for the territory of France. France Telecom will offer the match footage via its Internet platform.

    In Canada is Rogers Communications Ltd, a diversified Canadian communications and media company, that is exclusively licensing the English-language Internet and mobile telephony rights in Canada to all 64 matches of the World Cup as well as archive material from the 2002 edition of the tournament. Rogers will leverage the rights acquired on its multiple platforms including Rogers Wireless, Rogers Cable and Rogers Yahoo! Hi-Speed Internet. Rogers Sportsnet, a subsidiary of Rogers Communications, is already a World Cup television rights holder.

    Swedish territory rights have gone to the Scandinavian nation’s largest commercial television broadcaster TV4 AB, which has acquired the Internet and mobile telephony rights to all 64 matches and archive access to 2002 tournament’s matches in Swedish and English languages. TV4 is already a television rights holder.

    Infront has so far concluded new media agreements for almost 100 countries worldwide. With more such deals in the pipeline, Infront asserts that the 2006 Fifa World Cup will be the most diversified of any international sports event to date.

  • Karnataka Opening Up!

    In the last two years, the South Indian television market has witnessed much churn in terms of fresh investments and new initiatives. In all the languages combined, at least 10 new channels were launched during this period. In this two-year period, there has been one market missing all the action – Karnataka.

    However, 2006 holds something different for the Rs 1.5 billion Kannada television market. Zee has made the first move by launching its second South Indian channel Zee Kannada, a pay channel, on 11 May. Not to be left behind, the Hyderabad-headquartered Associated Broadcasting Company Pvt Ltd, which runs Telugu news channel TV9, is targeting a July launch for its Kannada news channel – TV9 Kannada.

    Exploring the news space further in the market will be Kannada Kasturi, promoted by chief minister Kumaraswamy‘s wife Anitha. The news channel is expected to launch by year-end.

    Though the Kannada television market is the third largest player in the regional space (behind Tamil and Telugu), it, surprisingly, didn‘t help much in attracting new investments. While the Rs 1.25 billion Malayalam (Kerala) television space witnessed the launch of about five channels in 2005, Karnataka received just one single player, Udaya 2, a youth-oriented music channel from the Sun Network stable. And it required two outside players – Zee and TV9 – to bring some changes in the pattern.

    “It has something to do with people‘s mindset. It looks like Kannadigas are not very enterprising when it comes to television. They are more involved with the film business. Also it requires a mammoth effort to make your presence felt in the market since you have two established players — ETV and Udaya — to compete with. Then, Hindi also attracts audience here,” points out Shyamsundar, head of the production house Yantra Media.

    Explains ETV chief producer Manvi: “The Kerala market is different from Tamil and Telugu because, here it is not a one-sided competition. Asianet and Surya are going neck and neck, but you have smaller players also making significant contributions. The market attracts fresh investments since it is open to all kinds of experiments and fresh programming strategies. In Kerala, new players are thriving on this confidence. Other regional markets are yet to deliver that confidence.”

    In that case, what is the strategy that Zee has zeroed in on to take on ETV and Udaya in Karnataka? The media behemoth had suffered a setback five years ago when it first entered the South market through Kannada with Kaveri TV through a joint venture with Asianet. Understandably, Zee has done its homework before making the second attempt as an independent venture now.

    The preparations included extensive field research involving about 700,000 households to get its programming mix right. Soaps, films and telefilms will constitute 25 per cent of the channel programming. Gameshows and talk shows will make up another 25 per cent. As for the rest of it, there will be a stress on current affairs programmes, events and film-based shows.

    Zee Kannada‘s positioning is in direct contrast to that of its southern sibling Zee Telugu. The one-year old Telugu channel targets the young upwardly mobile viewer segment, while Zee Kannada is following the traditional strategy of going for the mass audience.

    “Being the second largest player in the regional space, you can afford to experiment a lot in the Telugu space. We had our options to choose our target group (TG) in Telugu. But Kannada is a comparatively a smaller market. Hence, the plan is to follow the traditional strategy,” states head of Zee South Initiatives Ajay Kumar.

    Most importantly, Zee Kannada will be making a conscious attempt to be very close to Kannada culture and retain the local flavour in its programmes. According to market sources, Zee has adopted this strategy from ETV Kannada.

    “ETV‘s programmes are very local oriented and that is the channel‘s USP. Almost 95 per cent of the programmes are done by local producers. Zee Kannada seems to be following the same strategy by signing up a chunk of local producers. At the same time, Udaya follows a different gameplan as it explores the whole of South and Hindi as well (Balaji Productions),” says a source.

    Shedding light on the programming strategies of the leading channels, both Udaya and ETV Kannada have created their own compartments in the space. ETV banks on serials and fiction programmes, while Udaya is known for its films and film based programmes. Udaya has three more channels in Udaya News, Ushe (film and music) and Udaya 2.

    One common strand in any South market is films and this plays a crucial role in Kannada television as well. Acquisition costs for a blockbuster film ranges from Rs 15 million to Rs 20 million.

    Knowing that having strong film content would matter a lot for the channel‘s strategy in the movie-crazy market, Zee Kannada has acquired a combo package of new and old films to create its movie library.

    “Since the TG is the same, Zee Kannada will have a head-on collision with Sun Network‘s Udaya TV and its sister channels. In this context, having strong film content will be crucial,” says a source.

    “Though ETV Kannada acquires many good films every year, Udaya is ahead when comparing the number of films acquired,” adds Shyamsundar.

    Switching to the news space, we have TV9 Kannada and Kannada Kasturi gearing up to explore the relatively virgin land. Finally offering some competition to the lone player in the segment, Udaya News. Kannada Kasturi is still in the process of streamlining its strategies whereas TV9 Kannada is preparing the ground for a July launch.

    Driven by the tagline “Close to your heart”, TV9 Kannada is positioned as a young-at-heart, urban news channel with an international look and feel. TV9 has adopted its Telugu strategy for Kannada as well.

    “We targeted the urban youth and women with TV9 Telugu. We are following a similar strategy for TV9 Kannada also. Within a short duration, TV9 Telugu reached an impressive position in the market, and we are confident of repeating this performance in Kannada as well,” states TV9 chief news coordinator Rajasekhar.

    TV9 Kannada is planning to create a space for itself in the film-crazy, entertainment-oriented market through efficient coverage and innovations. “The idea is to crack the market by providing something fresh. Kannadigas are used to the traditional methods of news delivery and presentation. Our attempt will be to take it to a new level, with a lot of innovations. The plan is to woo the urban crowd by offering them international standards in the local language,” says Rajasekhar.

    Inspired by the entry of new players, the Kannada television market is targeting a 25 per cent expansion this year. Market analysts feel that this would also inspire more local advertisers, including retailers, to try television.

    “The ratio between local advertisers versus national advertisers is as low as 10 per cent versus 90 per cent in Karnataka. The television advertising here totally depends on Mumbai and Bangalore clients. We hope this will change with the entry of players such as Zee and TV9,” says Shyamsundar.

    “The market has the potential to touch even the Rs 2 billion mark in a short time. New players mean competition, but it is surely a good sign for the business,” adds Manvi.

  • ‘Dance Revolution’ to debut on CBS in September

    ‘Dance Revolution’ to debut on CBS in September

    MUMBAI: CBS and DIC Entertainment (DIC), in collaboration with Konami Digital Entertainment Inc., are set to produce a new dance competition series, Dance Revolution, to debut on 16 September 2006 on CBS’s Saturday Morning Secret Slumber Party branded programming block.

    Dance Revolution (previously titled Dance, Dance, Dance!), a live-action television series inspired by Konami’s hit video game franchise Dance Dance Revolution (DDR), will join the new schedule of programming on CBS’s Saturday Morning Secret Slumber Party.

    The series will encourage physical activity. Dance Revolution complements the programming block’s overall theme of promoting healthy, balanced active lifestyles.

    The line-up of previously announced programming to debut on CBS’s Saturday Morning Secret Slumber Party includes Cake, Horseland, Kooky Kitchen, Sabrina: The Animated Series, Trollz and Madeline, informs an official release.

    In Dance Revolution, ‘tweens’ and teens bring their freshest moves to this sensational new dance competition where teams of dancers display their innovative routines.

    “We are thrilled to partner with Konami to create a program that will entertain kids of all ages, and get them motivated, active and off the couch,” comments DIC Entertainment chairman & CEO Andy Heyward.

    “We are focused on using CBS’s Saturday Morning Secret Slumber Party as a vehicle to address the national concern of obesity and inactivity among children by providing motivating and innovative entertainment.”

    He adds, “We are excited to add this unique series to our schedule and to the international markets.”

  • Discovery cracks the Da Vinci Code this month

    Discovery cracks the Da Vinci Code this month

    MUMBAI: With the highly anticipated movie The Da Vinci Code starring Tom Hanks scheduled for release on 19 May across India, Discovery will air a special Da Vinci Declassified on 14 May at 8 pm.
    This special will present facts, information and a new look into the controversy that has captivated millions across the world. Dan Brown’s bestseller upon which the film is based explores the theory that Jesus had an affair with Mary Magdelene and had children by her.

    The special takes a fresh look at The Priory Of Sion. Is it real? If so, who’s behind it and what are its actual goals? Ultimately, whose destinies are they out to control? Discovery will take viewers on a journey through two thousand years of European history and art, going on location throughout Europe to unravel intricate clues about the Priory.

    Drawing on the expertise of historians, art specialists, scientists, mathematicians and actual representatives of the novel’s other famous secret society, Opus Dei, the special goes to great lengths to separate truth from fiction. From building an actual Cryptex (a device used in the book to hide and potentially destroy secret documents) to unraveling hidden messages allegedly encoded into famous works of art by Da Vinci and possibly even more controversial, Jean Cocteau.

  • Asiasat selects Zenith rocket for Asiasat 5 launch

    Asiasat selects Zenith rocket for Asiasat 5 launch

    MUMBAI: Satellite operator Asiasat has signed a launch contract with Sea Launch for the launch of Asiasat 5 aboard a Zenith-3SLB rocket on the Land Launch system.

    The launch will take place in the second half of 2008.

    As had been reported earlier by indiantelevision.com, Asiasat 5 will be built on a SS/L’s 1300 series satellite platform and will carry 26 C-band and 14 Ku-band transponders with an estimated operational life of 15 years. It will replace Asiasat 2.

    AsiaSat 5’s C-band footprint will offer an extensive pan-Asian coverage and its high power Ku-band beams will focus on both East and South Asia, with a steerable beam that will cover anywhere within Asiasat 5’s geographic coverage.

    Asiasat CEO Peter Jackson says, “We are pleased to have completed this major milestone in our procurement of Asiasat 5. The Land Launch Zenit-3SLB rocket is based on a mature, flight-proven design; it is a highly reliable launch vehicle that offers the schedule assurance that meets our requirements for a 2008 launch.”

  • Disney signs VoD deal in Germany

    Disney signs VoD deal in Germany

    MUMBAI: Disney’s international TV distribution arm Buena Vista International Television (BVITV) has concluded a multi-year agreement with German video-on-demand (Vod) operator HanseNet.

    The German firm will air a selection of upcoming, current and library movies from BVITV’s portfolio on its new set top box VOD and TV service Alice homeTV.

    With this agreement, Alice homeTV’s customers will be able to enjoy a selection of current and upcoming features from Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Miramax Films via the new set top box service.

    Titles include The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, its upcoming sequel The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest. The agreement also includes recent titles such as Flightplan and Cinderella Man. Subscribers will also be able to enjoy a selection of library features, and a selection of local German acquisitions such as Die Wilden Kerle 3.

    The agreement also includes provisions for co-operation between BVITV and Alice against piracy of BVITV’s content, while at the same time appropriately safeguarding the privacy of Alice’s service subscribers and remaining consistent with local law. Under the agreement, Alice will forward notices to its internet subscribers allegedly engaged in the unauthourised distribution of BVITV’s copyrighted works, without identifying the subscribers to BVITV.

  • Dasmunsi launches Zee News director Laxmi Goel’s book ‘Pehal’

    Dasmunsi launches Zee News director Laxmi Goel’s book ‘Pehal’

    NEW DELHI: You cannot fault Zee News for not trying. Ratings, or the lack of it, notwithstanding.

    I&B minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi, along with Zee News director and author of the book Laxmi N. Goel, after unveiling `Pehal’ And the fact was also noted by information and broadcasting minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi yesterday when he said here, “I wish more news channels would follow Zee News’ examples of showing programmes that are not always aimed at garnering ratings, but aimed at highlighting life beyond politicians, sting and page three.”

    Speaking at a the launch of a book Pehal, which has been inspired by a programme of the same name on Zee News, Dasmunsi took a light-hearted dig at television channels, which are “running after TRPs” and have forgotten their social responsibilities.

    Former Zee News anchor Nidhi Kulpati, who has joined NDTV India, with Dish TV business head Jawahar Goel at the post-launch party Zee News director Laxmi N. Goel, who has authored Pehal that carries a chapter each on the big difference made in the society by small unknown people from various parts of the country, said, “I am really moved by the efforts of these ordinary people who are really leading extraordinary lives.”

    He added, “They deserve more in their lives. This book should really be reaching out to every corner of the nation and inspire our citizens to help the cause within their own limitations and, if possible, to open a new front to provide a solution to the problems persisting in their immediate environment.”

    Among the channel’s socially motivated programmes, Goel said Pehal has acquired a unique place because of its larger than life tales of true humanity.

    Forty of those who featured in the programme and the book were also honoured with a plaque at the Friday event, which was attended by many prominent people of Delhi.

  • Television entrepreneur Raveena Raj Kohli

    Television entrepreneur Raveena Raj Kohli

    You’ve only got a short time to grab a little glory,I want to have a good life, not a sad story,To stay within the boundaries seems so formal,If that’s what life is, I don’t want to be normal.

    She prides herself on being a “born rebel” and these lines from a song by Randy Newman best describe her life’s mantra. What’s more… she has lived by it ever since she heard it as a 20-year-old.

    From advertising to radio to Hindi general entertainment to terrestrial broadcast to the buzzing news business and now to branded entertainment… life seems to have come full circle for Raveena Raj Kohlli as far as her career is concerned.

    Her’s is an interesting story to tell – full of learning and surprises. “I think I have always been in an industry that was on a steep learning curve so while I learnt a lot; I also had a lot of surprises coming my way. These were different from learning because the industry that I was in, too was discovering itself most of the time,” Raveena reasons.

    She was in her 30s when she packed off with all her savings to NYU and studied feature films and broadcast news. “I am very passionate about learning things I don’t know. I have this endless thirst for knowing more. That’s why I went back to school,” she says.

    Whether it was HTA (now JWT), radio (in Singapore), Sony Entertainment Television India, Channel 9 or for that matter even Star News – each had a ‘WOW” factor to them when she joined. “When I was in advertising in the 1980s – advertising for television was just becoming a big thing and was getting more global. We were seeing global brands entering new markets and hence ad films that were made for America were being adapted to India. Then when I was working in radio in South East Asia, radio was just getting into an organised industry there. The late 80s and the early 90s were also the start of satellite television in this part of the world. When I came back to India in 1997, there was this boom of private channels, which I knew nothing about and that in itself came as a big surprise. I have always taken these leaps into the unknown. So my professional life has been very high on the learning curve,” she says.’.

    SONY SAGA

    Perhaps the most interesting thing about Raveena’s association with Sony as programming head is how the job fell into her lap. The lady was busy scuba diving in Lakshwadeep island along with ad man Prahlad Kakkar and his wife Mitali and happened to meet one of Sony’s directors on the same island. Sample what Prahlad said on meeting him, “If somebody up there loves you and if you are a very, very lucky person then here is this girl who will work for you.”

    “This is what Prahlad said to him while I was stumbling out of the ocean looking like a bumble bee in a black and yellow diving suit. I had not decided to move back to India. After that island incident, obviously the director got curious about me and I got a phone call saying, ‘We hear you’re lurking away with Mitali and Prahlad Kakkar somewhere on the Lakshwadeep island. We want you to come and meet us.’ When I got that call, I told them that I was somewhere in Rajasthan on a camel, then going to Bangalore and then to Singapore after which I have plans to move to Indonesia. That call was made by Kunal Dasgupta and at that point in time I didn’t even know who he was.”

    She came down to Bombay and met Dasgupta in the Sony office. “The first thing he told me as he looked up from his desk was when could I join them? I started laughing and said, ‘I don’t even know you,’ to which he said, ‘Nor do we know you,’ which is very typical of Kunal,” says Raveena.

    When she was queried by one of the American directors of Sony as to what kind of Hindi entertainment programming was going to work in India, she said she honestly had no idea. Imagine having got the job on that line! “They were happy that I was honest with them and asked me to work for them,” she says.

    That time Sony was number 56 on the charts. Despite having no experience whatsoever in the programming arena, Raveena had the gall to put a condition for accepting the job. “I accepted on the condition that only one person would carry the can on the programming decisions. If they let me be for six months, I will either sink without a trace and they could pack me and send me away or if I feel that I have it in me to do it… the sky is the limit.”

    When queried as to what made her take up a job that she knew nothing about, she says, “I have always done things that I don’t know anything about. I have been very lucky in the sense that people have taken huge risks with me. And I think I have always done the job that I have been hired to do. So it’s been full of learning, surprises and rewards.”

    9 TIMES

    Then came Channel 9, which was a different ball game altogether. Raveena feels that much more is made of it than what was actually true. “The aim was to set up a broadcasting company, which would start off as a programming company and then move on to a channel in the terrestrial space. In the terrestrial space you have far bigger reach and far more scope for many things. For this you need to have an alliance and some sort of a financial arrangement with the one and only national broadcaster, which had professionals who had set up the company and worked for it. Our belief was that we were doing something really good and of high impact. None of us went into that with any agenda and none of us had any influence over anything,” she reflects.

    For her, the challenge at Channel 9 was whether they could set up a channel within a channel in three months. The aim was to set up a team that was the best in the business and to put all the programming on air. “My answer was, of course we can do it. Have I ever said no? So that was the challenge and that’s what we did,” says she.

    However the dream was short-lived with all the politics involved. The issue of licence came up and that’s where the dream ended. “People like me who joined the company, joined with the belief that this was going to happen for the long haul. Definitely, nobody joins the company for one year at that age. But soon we realised that there was trouble in paradise and it was again after the owners and promoters of the company to do whatever they had to do to make that licence work. But it was not meant to be. To put it in very succinct terms – I don’t know what actually happened. It may have just been an error of judgement on their part but on our part, we had a firm belief that we were going to do something and we did succeed to a certain extent,” she mulls.

    This experience is what matured her overnight. “It was a painful thing because it is harder to shut down a company than to start one. You realise the importance of human relationships because I still have a special relationship with everybody who I worked with in Channel 9. It was just nobody’s fault,” says Raveena.

    How was it being a woman CEO at that point in time? “I think it’s not just about being a woman, it’s about being a young woman. That may have been an issue in some people’s minds. I didn’t think that the Channel 9 dream was short lived because I was a woman and neither did it have anything to do with the government officials,” she supplies carefully.

    Being a young woman at the top sometimes attracts more attention than is necessary and that’s what Raveena faced at that point in time. “The problem of being a woman at an early age in a young industry, has its own consequences. You tend to make more enemies than friends and evoke more jealousies and raised eyebrows. I was always treated very well when I walked into an all male environment in the space of legislation and administration. I don’t see why a woman should have a problem because you are there as a representative of your company and it’s a job that has been assigned to you. You are not there for you. Yes, as I said earlier, you tend to attract more attention but that’s not from the people you are dealing with. It is from the people you are not dealing with,” she reasons.

    Known to be successful in whatever she has dabbled with, Raveena has “almost” never faced any insecurity from her bosses. “All the bosses that I have had have been very secure in their positions. I have had a very enjoyable and mutually respectful relationship with them, which has always been full of giggles and lots of work together minus the man-woman thing, politics and tension. A man who is your boss has to be very sure of himself to be able to deal with a woman who is capable. And a woman who is capable has to be very astute and mature and recognise who is the right boss. The only time there was any tension was in circumstances where I had a male senior who was insecure,” she provides without naming names.

    STAR WARS

    Once the Channel 9 story ended unsuccessfully, Raveena started her own production company – Sundial, which she envisioned as a multimedia company that would begin by being a production house. Hardly had she set up her company and team, than yet another challenge came her way and this was the mother of all challenges. This time it was huge. Rupert Murdoch wanted Raveena to take an English brand and convert it into a Hindi brand in 11 months.

    “It was a sheer challenge for me to take up the Star News job. The moment somebody says – She can’t do it. I HAVE to do it. The more people throw the brickbats, the more I was determined to make it happen. It did not bother me,” says Raveena, who faced a lot of negative remarks on taking up the assignment.

    When she joined, Star News did not have “a nut, a bolt, a person, a building, a network, a piece of footage, a camera… Nothing!” Her mandate was to create a news centre, bureaus, hire the team, train, orient, create programming and the backend and be on air within 11 months.

    And the rest as they say is history. She joined Star News on 15 April and on 31 March the next year, the channel was on air – one full day before the deadline!!

    “I am somebody who doesn’t regret anything. The reason I took Star News is because I realised that if I hadn’t taken it, I would have regretted it because it was a very difficult thing and it was going to evoke the maximum amount of bile, froth, hatred and jealousy. For me it was important to do something that was difficult to do and I did it to the best of my capability,” she says.

    Many people misunderstood her motives for taking this job. A lot of journalists reacted saying, “Who is this woman pretending to be a journalist?” But on Raveena’s part, there were no pretensions of being a journalist. “I am a writer and a multimedia person and I was brought in there because I am a set-upper and Murdoch brought me into Star because he knew I could deliver. And I delivered. It took one year after that for the operations to settle and I always knew I had to move on because I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I had made that decision in the year 2000,” she clarifies.

    Star India CEO Peter Mukerjea told her, “Raveena, you will have to grow the skin of a crocodile.” And she did.

    Post her taking up the assignment, it was reported in the media that she was the replacement for Prannoy Roy. “It was utter nonsense. My job was to hire a good editor and an editorial team, whether I hired the right one or not is not the issue. I accept jobs, projects and challenges,” she says.

    TIME TO DISCOVER HERSELF

    After she quit Star News, Raveena went into hibernation for a year or so. She took a long well-deserved vacation and did all the things that she had kept on the backburner. “I did up my house in Goa. I got back in touch with my family who I hadn’t seen in almost 10 years. I had a reunion with my friends who I hadn’t seen for almost 20 years. I had a family vacation for the first time in 20 years. I did things that were very important to me, which I had totally neglected,” she reflects.

    All through her break, she was very clear that she was going to start her own thing. “What I just did was nest, roost and consolidate my life and I needed to do that to go out and become an entrepreneur. I had to get my basics in order,” she says.

    However, when she was on her break, there were huge amounts of gossip, conjecture, pressure and questions and lots of job offers. She considered most of them and a whole lot of options were available to her. But she realised that her priority was to find out how valuably to spend her time and how much fun to have!

    Used to being somebody whose views are respected and not being seen as a pushover, she is one strong and intelligent lady. “I have never been the one for corporate politics. I am too outspoken and honest to be in that game. I am a team person, believe in my cause and stand up for what I believe in. That makes me a very strong willed person and I am very much used to being my own boss even when I’ve had bosses,” says she.

    HERE AND NOW

    Now is when she is using all her experience from the advertising to broadcast industry and applying the learning into her newest baby – Sundial Creative Media Pvt Ltd. The company has collaborated with Group M and is venturing into the arena of branded entertainment with a company called Show M.

    “Globally, it is the first professional approach to strategic programming for brands and it is the perfect crossover between my years in advertising and brand building and my years in programming and broadcasting. It is very exciting. This harmonious synch of two schools of thought and businesses is going to give birth to a fantastic new hybrid kind of media person, who can think both (programing and advertising) in a creative manner,” says an elated Raveena.

    Apart from television content, co-producing films is also on the agenda. “I am extremely collaborative by nature. This is something that one may not realise of a person who seems to be this strong willed woman. As soon as you get collaborative and you share your spoils, it multiplies more that even you can think. As soon as you get jealous, possessive, angry, political, conniving and vicious – that negative energy doesn’t work for very long. I actually enjoy working with people who are like minded,” she says.

    Not the one with a crab mentality, she has built strong relationships in which she has been willing to invest her time, on the basis of trust. Her honesty and her ability to say things without mincing her words has been the strongest point of her career.

    Dwelling on her life in the fast lane, one thing that Raveena regrets is missing out on her personal life. “In 20 years I think what suffered was my personal life. I am not prepared to let that suffer anymore. But it is still not about balance. It is about being with somebody in your personal relationships who is mature enough to appreciate the amount of time you have to give your work. Neither your work or home should be a compromise. There is no such thing as balance in a man’s, woman’s or professional’s life,” she reasons.

    So does this lady have any weaknesses? “My biggest weakness is that I don’t suffer fools gladly. I think I am a little too honest. I am not diplomatic and that can sometimes be a weakness. I am non-manipulative. I would have been far more successful if I had been a conniving political beast and would have achieved 10 times more than what I have today,” she laughs.

    Queried as to how the television and media industry has changed in the last two decades or so, she says, “I joined the media business in the mid-80s. When I took my first job at HTA, a nice Punjabi gentleman told my mother – ‘How can you let your daughter work in a field like advertising?’ Today, I have 22 – 25 year olds, new MBAs from Wharton and Harvard beating down my door willing to work for Rs 10,000 a month because they want to be in this business.”

    She feels the self respect, value, salience and positioning of the business had undergone a huge change in 20 years. Defining it as the most happening and relevant business today, she explains, “We are actually making more ‘Made in India’ products in our business than in any other industry. Be it the TV, movie or the internet business, these are not centers for outsourcing. Look at what has happened to the value of people who are in this business. The salary scales are incomparable. There is a shock value when you hear that the managing director of a confectionery company earns as much as a vice president does in any big media company.”

    Raveena thinks that the game in the content business has just begun. “Big players will now form strategies that will grow the business rather than restrict it. If you look at the way even contracts are structured in our business, they have never been fair to talent. In the sense, creators of content have never enjoyed the benefits of their creativity apart from a small fee that they get to produce something. The awareness is just beginning as far as the respect that they want in terms of shared rights, intellectual property recognition and credits. When that will grow, the business as a whole will grow and we will have better people coming in,” she says.

    According to her, the television industry used to be “a new and brash business and the time has come for it to become a more evolved, mature and forward thinking business that is collaborative, professional and non-corrupt. That is the only way the industry is going to grow and it will happen. Better laws, more informed people who make decisions, people who are aware of their rights, better associations, better copyright and IPR laws – when all this happens it will become more rewarding,” she says.

    She, for one, got into the business by mistake but youngsters today are consciously choosing this as their career and she hopes they will come in and create a better industry.

  • Time Warner buys Liberty Media’s Court TV for $735 million

    Time Warner buys Liberty Media’s Court TV for $735 million

    MUMBAI: Media conglomerate Time Warner has acquired Liberty Media Corporation’s half of Courtroom Television Network LLC, the owner of Court TV, for $735 million.
    Time Warner now owns Court TV in its entirety. Court TV will operate as part of Turner Broadcasting System Inc., within its entertainment division, under the direction of entertainment group president, Mark Lazarus.

    Time Warner’s Turner Broadcasting unit, also manages a large group of cable networks including CNN, Turner Classic Movies and the Cartoon Network.

    Seen in 86 million households, according to an official release, Court TV covers all aspects of the US system of justice. It is the leading producer of original programming in the crime and justice genre as well as other content, which appear on its network and popular Web sites as well as, increasingly, new distribution platforms.

    Time Warner chairman and CEO Dick Parsons said, “Acquiring all of Court TV represents a strategic investment in one of Time Warner’s most successful lines of business – our news and entertainment cable networks. We’re confident that Court TV will continue its top-notch performance and become an important contributor to our growth. We look forward to working with our friends at Liberty Media in the future.”

    Liberty chairman John C. Malone said, “We have enjoyed our long association with Court TV and its exceptional management team. The business has created tremendous value for our shareholders. We wish Henry Schleiff and his team well and have no doubt Court TV will continue its strong track record of success and value creation for Time Warner’s shareholders.”

    Henry Schleiff, who served as Court TV’s chairman and CEO, will be the network’s non-executive chairman for the next six months, focused on Court TV’s transition to Turner and the network’s public service initiatives.

    Liberty president and CEO Gregory B Maffei said, “We’ve enjoyed building Court TV with Henry and Time Warner, and we’ll welcome the opportunity to work together again. Liberty is pleased with the value created for our shareholders by this business and transaction.”

    Time Warner president and COO Jeff Bewkes said, “Let me express our appreciation to Henry Schleiff for his keen vision and inspired leadership at Court TV. Court TV has made outstanding progress in its programming, marketing and distribution operations. Turner’s presence and relationships will help us further strengthen Court TV’s competitive position.”

    Turner Broadcasting System chairman and CEO Phil Kent said, “Court TV’s established brand, programming franchises and robust new media extensions complement our successful branded entertainment and news networks and businesses. This integration into Turner will ensure Court TV’s future growth and success, as well as make our portfolio stronger.”