Category: News Broadcasting

  • BBC World’s ‘Asia Today’ speaks with Bollywood actress Priety Zinta

    BBC World’s ‘Asia Today’ speaks with Bollywood actress Priety Zinta

    MUMBAI: Bollywood actress Priety Zinta speaks about being a ‘Star’ in India on BBC World’s show Asia Today. It airs at 7 pm on 22 December.

    She speaks with BBC World’s Karisma Vaswani and talks about the diverse characters that she has played in her films. She admits that she doesn’t mind bidding adieu to showbiz and settling down to domesticity.

    Priety also gives her candid advice to the numerous aspirants, who come to the entertainment capital of India, Mumbai to make it big in the Hindi film Industry.

    Ms. Zinta however, is not very pleased with certain section of the Indian media, whom she believes have been rather irresponsible in their reporting lately.

  • NGC unveils ‘Science Safari’ in Kannada

    NGC unveils ‘Science Safari’ in Kannada

    BANGALORE: The ministry of science and technology (MS&T) and National Geographic Channel today unveiled the Kannada version of ‘Science Safari’, a film that showcases Indian science and technology through the unique Nat Geo perspective. The film is a part of the year long campaign announced by the ministry and NGC earlier this year to promote Indian science and technology.

    The 48-minute film is directed by Nutan Manmohan and produced by All Time Productions in close association with NGC at a cost of around Rs 20 million. Funded by the MS&T, it showcases a mix of scientific achievements across India and presents various innovations made by well known Indian scientists and some unknown inventors in a travelogue format.

    The English version of this film has already premiered on NGC on 26 September and will also be telecast on Doordarshan. The film is also being dubbed into various Indian regional languages to reach out to a wider audience. The Kannada version is the first in the regional language series and will also be telecast on Doordarshan’s Kannada channel.

    A 360-degree campaign encompassing both on-air and off-air initiatives to promote the film will be also launched. On air promotion initiatives will include programme promos on NGC and The History Channel pre and post the premiere of the film and telecast of a special compilation of the channel’s best science and technology programming.

    The channel will also run informative scrollers, factoids, vignettes and 15 short films throughout the year on Indian science and technology.

    An extensive school outreach programme will also be initiated to generate further interest about Indian science and technology through this film.

    Meanwhile, Union minister for science and technology Kapil Sibal announced that a dedicated science and technology channel was being considered to start operations over the next four to five years.

    Sibal was in Bangalore today to receive the Kannada version of the ‘Science Safari’ film funded by his ministry and made through the NGC perspective. Sibal has plans for a number of similar projects that will showcase Indian science and technology capability.

    “India is making great strides in the field of science and technology today, innovation and creativity are the most important assets for our future. Through this programme, we want to create more awareness amongst the people of our country, especially children about our achievements in this field and to encourage the spirit of scientific inquiry,” he said while commenting on the 48 minute Science Safari.

    Sibal expressed satisfaction with the work done by NGC on Science Safari, hailing the association as a sort of a public private partnership, while NGC vp marketing Rajesh Seshadhri said that this was the first time that such an association had happened.

    Sibal said that after the telecast of the Science Safari, his ministry has received a number of proposals from many channels for producing similar films, and that his ministry would consider the offers. Upon being questioned about these developments, Seshadhri said that his channel was committed to creating content on Indian science and technology irrespective of the government’s participation.

  • News Corp increases stake in NGC

    News Corp increases stake in NGC

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate News Corp is acquiring NBC Universal’s 25 per cent stake in two entities that run the international operations of the National Geographic Channel (NGC).

    Media reports state that News Corp said in a regulatory filing that it was buying the stakes in NGC Network International and NGC Network (UK) for an undisclosed sum. NBC Universal is a unit of General Electric.

    The deal will increase News Corp’s stake in NGC Network International to 75 per cent, with the rest held by National Geographic Television. The British unit is now owned 25 per cent by News Corp, 25 per cent by National Geographic Television, and 50 per cent by BSkyB.

  • Prasar Bharati CEO selected, anouncement later

    Prasar Bharati CEO selected, anouncement later

    NEW DELHI: A high-level committee meeting under vice-president Bhairon Singh Shekhawat late this evening is understood to have finalised the name of the chief executive of Prasar Bharati.

    As information and broadcasting minister Priyaranjan Dasmunsi is out of the country, the name is unlikely to be announced until his return.

    The post of chief executive has been lying vacant since 30 June this year, when K S Sarma retired after serving his term of six years.

    The post was held on a temporary basis first by Doordarshan director general Navin Kumar until his retirement and then by All India Radio DG Brijeshwar Singh.

    Under the Prasar Bharati (Broadcasting Corporation of India) Act 1990, the selection of the chief executive has to be made by a high-level committee comprising the chairman of the Rajya Sabha (who is the Vice-President), Press Council of India chairman (Justice G N Ray), and a nominee of the president. It is understood that S K Arora who is secretary in the I&B ministry was the third member on the committee.

    The chief executive normally has a term of six years and functions under the Prasar Bharati Board which is headed by a chairman.

  • Zee News to launch two interactive shows

    Zee News to launch two interactive shows

    MUMBAI: Zee News is coming up with two interactive discussion programmes this weekend, Kitna Bole Baba and Main Azaad Hoon.

    These programmes will primarily focus on two issues – Have religious gurus become the role models of the society today; and Is the society in Gujarat accepting the liberal women. Viewers can send in their queries through SMS.

    The two programmes have been designed in a way to have the highest possible viewer’s interactivity. Main Azaad Hoon initiates the discussion on today’s liberal attitude of women, whereas it is commoner’s increasing dependency on the religious gurus takes the center stage in Kitna Bole Baba.

    The programmes are aimed at clarifying the prevailing misconceptions about the issues. Kitna Bole Baba will focus the society’s current mindset of making larger than life picture of their religious gurus.

    It is going to be a discussion between today’s famous gurus and the social scientists with a view to bring a clearer picture of the thought process the gurus put in, while advising their disciples in their day to day affairs. It will be telecast on 23 December at 8 pm.

    Main Azaad Hoon will focus on the pragmatic situations, which today’s women often find them into. From having a boyfriend to having an extra marital affair, no question is going to be hypothetical, asserts an official release.

    The discussion will further cover the morality factor in the women’s action from society’s viewpoint. Apart from survey and field stories, the guests in the studio will also contribute with their views. Guests would include some social activists, young girls and a psychologist. This will be telecast on 24 December at 8 pm. The survey was conducted in four cities – Ahmedabad, Surat, Vadodara and Rajkot.

    A deep research was conducted, before zeroing down on these topics. The channel has been frequently providing a platform to discuss the important topics, which will pave way to an open-minded society, adds the release.

  • CNBC Awaaz lines up a slew of shows for 2007

    CNBC Awaaz lines up a slew of shows for 2007

    MUMBAI: CNBC Awaaz has lined up fresh new shows in 2007 like Smart Shopping with Tech2, Stree Super Achievers – II, What’s Cool and Hot , a brand new Capital Report, and Hafte ka Audit in a new avatar.

    The channel has also slated best of shows and seasons from careers, shopping, holiday destinations, cars or influential people, to wrap up the year 2006, asserts an official release.

    CNBC Awaaz will revive the year 2006 with programmes like:

    Best of Smart shopping

    22 December 4:30 pm – Gifting Special
    25 December 4:30 pm – Toys Special

    26 December 4:30 pm – Party Dressing for Gals

    29 December 4:30 pm – Party Dressing for Guys

    Weekend Masti on 30 December 11:30 am, Holiday Special will wrap up the year 2006 with a holiday special featuring the top national and international destinations. This special will also feature the best holiday packages for the New Year.

    Best of Khas Mulaqat on 30 December at 8:30 pm will see CNBC AWAAZ anchor Sanjay Pugalia in intense one-on-ones with the people who make a difference. The year end show will be a Khas Mulaqat special featuring excerpts from the most interesting episodes of Khas Mulaqat.

    Chalti Ka Naam Gadi on 30 December at 3:30 pm, the year end show will feature all the top cars that will hit the road in 2007. Experts comments, brand comparisons, pricing and technical analysis all and more.

    Hum Honge Kamyaab, Top jobs special on 23 December 4:30 pm The year end special will focus on the top jobs, best career option, courses and top premier institutes of the country. The show will educate the viewer on the best career choices of the year 2006 and what to expect from the Year 2007.

    Prime Property, Hot Spots 2007 a half hour episode on 30 December at 9:30 pm will give you a run down on the best cities and places to invest in real estate. Inter and intra city real estate comparisons in terms of quality of construction, facilities, location and infrastructure, adds the release.

  • Mobile forum in Mumbai focuses on music market

    Mobile forum in Mumbai focuses on music market

    MUMBAI: Mobile2win, India’s VAS enabler, hosted its first mobile Monday forum in Mumbai.The meet was attended by more than 60 professionals and enthusiasts from the Music, Telecom, Media and IT industry.

    Mobile Mondays is an open community of mobile professionals and enthusiasts and are arranged city-wise every month.

    The key note address was given by Netcore Solutions India Pvt Ltd VP mobile products strategy Veerchand Bothra followed by mobile2win CEO Gopala Krishnan, asserts an official release.

    Krishnan explained the concept of Mobile Monday (MoMo) and outlined the agenda for the evening followed by a presentation on the mobile indusry in general and the latest trends in mobile technology.

    The theme for the MoMo was ‘The Mobile Music Market in India- Untapped revenue streams in urban and rural India’. Key speakers were- Soundbuzz GM Mandar Thakur,mobile2win country head Rajiv Hiranandani, Universal Music MD Rajat Kakar, Hutch AVP (VAS) Shailesh Varudkar and ABP head Internet and Telecom Saurav Sen.

    Discussions ranged from wireless technologies to piracy in the mobile music industry, entertainment offerings and value added services, adds the release.

    Kakar said, “Mobile VAS represents a growing format for sale and promotion of Music. Indian mobile landsacpe is among the largest in the World and interventions early in the product life cycles will, hopefully, ensure a viable eco-system for all players in this domain.”

    Hiranandani, “Year 2006 is a landmark year for the Indian Mobile industry.The userbase has touched around 13 crore which is only next to China. Mobile Monday is an industry event and which is driven by the community, whose suggestions and co-operation makes it all possible. The forum give us a platform to discuss concerning issues related to the mobile VAS industry in a more open and informal manner.”

  • Post Percept, Aegis eyes acquisitions in India

    Post Percept, Aegis eyes acquisitions in India

    MUMBAI: Close on the heels of the Aegis and Percept split, Aegis Group plc chief executive Robert Lerwill is drawing up expansion plans for the company in India which include acquisitions.

    Carat, a media buying company, will be looking at local acquisitions, preferably with 100 per cent stake. He is also open to joint ventures with local companies”if that is the way forward in India.” Aegis bought out Percept’s 27 per cent stake in Carat India.

    Aegis is also eyeing acquisitions in the digital space, Lerwill says. There is major growth potential in the digital media segment, which he believes is still underserved in India. Only 2-3 per cent of media usage lies in the digital space but this is likely to boom, he points out.

    With Percept buying out Aegis’ 51 per cent in Posterscope India, Lerwil says the effort will be to first tap the internal clients for out of home business and then spread out. Percept will have to return the Posterscope brand, he adds.

  • CNN to air startling documentary on Christianity

    CNN to air startling documentary on Christianity

    MUMBAI:Was Jesus Christ born on December 25? Was He the founder of Christianity? Ask some basic questions, and the answers will be there for you at the programme “CNN Presents -After Jesus: The First Christians”, premiering on December 22 at 8.30 pm.

    The documentary is a surprise almost at every step, saying things like the fact that the followers of Christ would have thought themselves as Jews, not Christians!

    Then, take this quote from the documentary:”The simplest things (about Christianity), like the date when Jesus was born, was totally fluid through the second and into the third century. It only appears for the first time on a Christian calendar in the fourth century as December 25. So you get the feeling that the entire coalescing of the religion of Christianity is taking place over 100 to 200 years after Jesus is no longer walking the face of the earth.”

    Startling, but that is what Richard Freund, PhD, an ordained rabbi and director of the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Hartford, says.

    “After Jesus: The First Christians” is a major CNN effort that was filmed for four months across nine countries, United States, England, Italy, Israel, Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Turkey and Greece, CNN Productions executive producer and director Jody Gottlieb tells indiantelevision.com.

    The documentary deals more with how Christianity evolved over the centuries to become what it is now today: a faith ruling two billion people across the world in diverse countries and cultures.

    In fact, the early followers of Jesus Christ did not even call themselves Christians. Amy-Jill Levine, PhD, and an expert, says: “Jesus’ first followers – Mary Magdalene and Peter, Martha and the sons of Zebedee, etc. – did not think of themselves as ‘Christians’. The word was not invented until the movement Jesus founded took root outside of Judea and the Galilee.”

    In fact, Jesus was by no means founding a new religion, Levine says. To the contrary, his mission was to prepare his own people for the Kingdom of Heaven. The borderlines between “Judaism” and “Christianity” remained fluid for the next several centuries. Given the diversity in each movement, we can only speak in very general terms.So, is there something that is true about the book “Holy Blood, Holy Grail”, which questions the basic role of the Church in many ways?

    “No, we do not deal with the book at all in the feature,” said Gottlieb. In fact, answering a specific query about whether the film refers to the Dead Sea Scrolls, which too are controversial for their content, Gottlieb says it does not, but adds, “We do deal with the discovery of the Gnostic Gospels.”

    These Gospels are associated with the early mystical trend of Gnostic Christianity. They are not accepted by mainstream Christianity as authentic, and are therefore declared heresy.

    It was a massive effort, and Gottlieb says, “The film was conceived last November and we began filming in January 2006. She led the production team with the assistance of religion writers, David Gibson and Michael McKinley.”

    The centre of the film would be Saints Peter and Paul, so who played the roles? “We filmed a number of the scenes at Nazareth Village, a working village that recreates a Jewish community at the time of the first century. We used the re-enactors to help cast our scenes. One tour guide had played the Apostle Peter before, and slid into his role with genial ease; another played the mercurial Apostle Paul, and worked with us to reveal the character of this complex man, who is often seen as second only to Jesus in the foundation of Christianity,” Gottlieb says.

    “I think most people imagine that after Jesus died, the Church just emerged suddenly and that you had Christians confessing the Nicene Creed, reading the canon of the 27 books of the New Testament, and that it was all in place right after Jesus’ death. And, in fact, it took centuries for these things to fall into place,” says Bart Ehrman, PhD, James A. Gray Distinguished Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    In fact, Saint Paul could have been the person to start developing the movement that is now known as the Christian religion. “On a more controversial note, it has been argued that while Jesus preached the good news of the Kingdom of Heaven, Paul preached the good news of Jesus himself. In this understanding, Paul changed the message and so created a movement distinct from what Jesus taught. The relationship between Jesus’ message and Paul’s continues to be a matter of debate,” Levine says.

    These are some of the surprises that are revealed, and CNN is keeping the rest, as it is about how much it cost to make the film or revenue generation issues. But nonetheless, it would be a great journey, it seems, from whatever the channel has said so far.

  • Satyam’s BPO outfit bags $25 million contract, in talks for another $10 million order

    Satyam’s BPO outfit bags $25 million contract, in talks for another $10 million order

    MUMBAI: Nipuna Services Ltd, the BPO subsidiary of IT major Satyam Computer Services, has bagged a $25 million animation outsourcing deal. The company is also in negotiations to work on a $10 million contract for another TV series animation project.

    Earlier in the year, Nipuna signed a $9 million deal to provide services for a movie called First Fear which is set for release by June 2007. “We are expecting to bag a fresh contract for around $10 million. The German company will take a call based on the TV episodes that we come up with. We have already signed with this company for $25 million to produce TV series and a movie,” Nipuna chief financial officer M Satyanarayana tells Indiantelevision.com.

    Nipuna will engage UK-based 4K Animation Ltd for the execution and delivery of these projects along with its own battery of 120 professionals over a period of 18 months. The two ‘iconic’ European animation projects include the third season of “Marvi Hemmer Presents National Geographic World,” an award-winning, 52- episode TV series, and a movie, also featuring Marvi Hammer.

    “We will pay a fee to 4K for their services as they will be sending technical professionals from all over the world to work in India and help us in the project. The exact amount will be finalised when we know how many people and working hours we would need from them,” says Satyanarayana.

    For First Fear, Nipuna had paid 4K around $3.25 million. By partnering with 4K, Nipuna is able to source talent from across the world to execute the projects.

    The delivery period for the TV series will start from now and is expected to finish within nine months. The work for the movie will start from April and stretch over 12 months, according to Satyanarayana.

    The series and movie feature a combination of live action and animation. They include actual studio sets used as animation backgrounds, a furry computer graphics creature and 2D-animated characters. Hamburg-based YOUA Edutainment, National Geographic, and German broadcaster ZDF will co-produce the series and movie.

    Nipuna will provide VFX, CGI, 3D and 2D animation services, including pre-production, production, and post-production, from its studio in Chennai. Other animation artists will also collaborate from Hamburg and Berlin for this project delivery.

    Says Nipuna CEO Venkatesh Roddam, “This partnership reflects a growing trend toward ‘corporatization’ in the animation industry, which is leading to increasingly significant opportunities. Long-term contracts such as this one show that companies recognize Nipuna’s capabilities in an industry where ‘human resources’ are integral to quality, and thereby responsible for the success of creative ventures.”

    Nipuna has built significant VFX, CGI, and 3D animation skills by producing numerous global and domestic films. Among the more than 40 Indian films for which it has handled animation projects are Sainikudu, Stalin, Pokhiri, and Belly Full of Dreams. Nipuna also provides artwork and visualization services involving 2D and/or 3D animation techniques and processes to customers in the engineering, architectural, and medical industries.

    Nipuna expects to close this fiscal with a turnover of $40 million, out of which