Category: News Broadcasting

  • Import duty on foreign content in effect in Sri Lanka; local broadcasters hit

    Import duty on foreign content in effect in Sri Lanka; local broadcasters hit

    MUMBAI: In a conscious move to boost the island nation’s slipping local entertainment industry, the Sri Lankan government has introduced strict finance regulations on foreign content.

    As per the regulations made by the president under section 8 of the Finance Act, No.11 of 2006, effective 16 July, all imports of Bollywood and Hollywood movies and television content are taxed in the country.

    As per the new regulation, for every 30 minutes or part there of tele-drama or film if dubbed in the Sri Lankan native language Sinhala or Tamil will bear an import duty of Rs 90,000. For every 30 minutes or part there of tele-drama or film not falling within the above category will have to pay Rs 75,000 in tax.

    The media tax also covers television commercials made abroad for local companies. This regulation mainly targets local firms, which have been outsourcing their promotional work to Indian advertising firms. Commercials are being charged Rs 1,000,000. This is for any number of telecasts, during the period of one year, commencing on the date of issue of the Certificate of Clearance.

    Programmes with Tamil language content are exempt from the tax as Sri Lanka produces very little Tamil programming. The tax would also not apply to documentaries, educational dramas, movies screened in theatres and children’s entertainment.

    News wire AFP has quoted market watchers as saying that, the local television stations air more than 1,500 movies, mainly English, Tamil and Hindu, each year. English content on local stations is limited to about four movies, four dramas, music programmes, adventure series, cartoons and a few sitcoms per week. Though native Hindi speakers are virtually non-existent in Sri Lanka, subtitled programmes made in Bollywood are hugely popular on local television and easily attract sponsors — unlike local productions which hardly draw any viewers.

    President Mahinda Rajapakse, who also handles the finance portfolio, has been quoted in media reports as saying that, the money would be used to develop the local film industry. According to industry sources indiantelevision.com spoke to, the government move would put a virtual ban on the import of foreign content.

    “The government wants to nurture the local entertainment industry. At present, foreign content enjoys a clear majority in local channels. For example, out of the 57 films aired on Sri Lankan TV each week, nearly 50 are foreign language ones. This is a matter of grave concern for the government as well as the local industry,” says a Tamil Nadu-based television producer, who put his plans to sell content to Sri Lankan TV on hold due to the new regulation.

    The local Sri Lankan television players agree that the business will take a hit due to the almost “impossible” taxes. They are not buying Rajapakse’s contention that the move would boost the local entertainment industry. “The only way the local industry can achieve growth is by learning from the foreign players. Before competing with the foreign players, it needs to get itself updated with the global standards of production and storytelling. Now, if the government thinks otherwise, it will only narrow down the opportunities of growth for the local broadcast industry,” states Maharaja Television (MTV) CEO Mohan Nair.

    From the Indian perspective, the new regulation will see the demand for Indian content hitting a low volume.

    The ruling has forced Zee TV, which was about to kick off a content syndication deal with a Sri Lankan TV broadcaster, to stall the process. “We were about to sell a television soap in Sri Lanka. However, now we are told by our client in Sri Lanka that there was a virtual ban in effect in the country, and the deal has been delayed,” says a Zee source close to the developments.

    However, Star India sounds least concerned by the developments. “We had completed our deals for certain television soaps such as Kahani Ghar Ghar Ki and Kasauti Zindagi Kay two years back. It will take three more years for the Sri Lankan versions of these soaps to catch up with the present storyline. So, at present, this is not a matter of concern for us,” says Star India EVP Marketing & Communication Ajay Vidyasagar.

    MTV’s Nair argues that the local broadcasters have been making attempts to nurture local talent by devoting a certain portion of their content to locally produced shows. In the case of MTV, the broadcaster has two joint ventures in effect with the Chennai-headquartered Radaan Mediaworks and the Mumbai-based Sri Adhikari Brothers Television Network Ltd (SABTNL). Vasudha, a Sinhalese soap produced by the MTV-Radaan venture Talent Factory, has been on air since the last one year. Talent Factory is now all set to launch a new soap Kaavya in August, according to Nair.

    Speaking to indiantelevision.com, SABTNL vice chairman Markand Adhikari said the company was not affected by the new regulation, since it was producing only local content. According to Adhikari, SABTNL’s JV with MTV, Broadcast Media, is presently telecasting five hours of locally produced content per week. “We are planning to take it up to seven hours,” Adhikari says.

    Nair meanwhile, is hopeful that the government will show the inclination to understand the real picture. “At present we are weighing options for our future course of action. We haven’t called off any foreign deals as yet. Both Indian and American media companies have taken up this issue and they are supporting us in this cause. We are hopeful that, the government would understand the situation and give us justice,” says Nair.

  • Indian TV channels to show solidarity with Mumbai blast victims

    Indian TV channels to show solidarity with Mumbai blast victims

    MUMBAI: Over 30 Indian television channels will simulcast a two-minute film The Voices of India on 18 July at 6 pm and 9 pm. The aim is to show solidarity with the victims of the serial train blasts that hit Mumbai last week.

    It is for the first time that television channels like DD, Star, Zee, Sony, Times, ETV, MTV, TV 18 network, NDTV and Janmat will get together to air the film.

    The Voices of India encapsulates thoughts expressed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh after visiting the bomb blast victims. Sachin Tendulkar, Aamir Khan, Shah Rukh Khan, Fardeen Khan, Anil Kapoor, Yash Chopra, Preity Zinta, Karan Johar and Nana Patekar also feature in the film.

    Designed as a Campaign for India, it is the citizens response to the terrorist attack on Mumbai.

  • Channel 7 brings in CNN-IBN’s ‘Citizen Journalist’

    Channel 7 brings in CNN-IBN’s ‘Citizen Journalist’

    MUMBAI: With the launch of CNN-IBN, the English news channel had brought in a new initiative of empowering ordinary citizen through the show Citizen Journalism. The new sibling Channel 7 is all set to follow the path taken by the big brother by launching Citizen Journalist.

    The show Citizen Journalist encourages the viewers to document in pictures or videos, anything around them that should be brought to the nation’s notice. The most relevant reports sent will be aired on the channel, duly crediting the viewer, informs an official release.

    Citizens can report on news items of importance across the country by sending in a MMS to 2622, SMS CJ (Story) to 2622 or by calling Channel 7’s help-line at 0120-2515340. Citizen Journalists may also e-mail their stories to citizen@ibnlive.com or even post their stories on www.ibnlive.com.

    Citizen Journalist, the initiative started by CNN-IBN and has over 2000 stories in its bank within just six months. Channel 7 managing editor Ashutosh says, “We at Channel 7 endeavour to infuse our mission statement ‘Khabar Har Keemat Par’ in every individual’s life, and ‘Citizen Journalist’ an ideal route to capture it. This initiative by CNN-IBN is exemplary and laudable. We are confident that Channel 7 will also receive an encouraging response and attain similar success.”

    CNN-IBN and Channel 7 editor-in-chief Rajdeep Sardesai said, “Citizen Journalist is an idea whose time has come. It’s a way of engaging the viewer, of making him/her an active participant in the process of newsgathering, of making television news truly interactive. The big idea is to build a citizenry that is engaged with public life.”

    Earlier this year, the management of Channel7 changed hands. The channel also relaunched on 5 June with a new on-air look and a tag line to boot – ‘Khabar, Har Keemat Par’ (News, No matter what the cost).

  • NBC’s ‘The year without a Santa Claus’ in the making

    NBC’s ‘The year without a Santa Claus’ in the making

    MUMBAI: This yuletide season, US broadcaster NBC will air The Year Without a Santa Claus.

    The film which is currently in production is about Santa Claus and a young boy who help each other believe in Christmas again.The film stars John Goodman, Chris Kattan, Ethan Suplee, Eddie Griffin and Carol Kane

    The film is based on the 1974 Rankin-Bass holiday film favourite that featured stop-motion animation. Mrs. Claus is greatly dismayed when Santa (Goodman) convinced that people have forgotten the real meaning of Christmas decides to take a year off and not deliver any gifts.

    She enlists the help of his two closest elves, Jingle (Suplee) and Jangle (Griffin), to help prove there are children who still care about the true spirit of the holiday. But their efforts are complicated by Heatmiser (Elliott) and Snowmiser (McKean), whose help Jingle and Jangle will need to save Christmas before Santa’s devious head elf (Kattan) takes over his job.

  • Nielsen signs deal with Wegener for encoder product

    Nielsen signs deal with Wegener for encoder product

    MUMBAI: Wegener which provides equipment for US television, audio and data distribution networks worldwide has announced receipt of an order from Nielsen Media Research for the development and manufacture of the new Wegener SpoTTrac Encoder.

    The encoder addresses the industry’s need for improved broadcast verification and commercial tracking services. Nielsen Media Research provides television audience measurement and related services, worldwide. A division of Nielsen Media Research, Nielsen Tracking Services (NTS) is a syndicated offering for advertising agencies, advertisers, public relations companies, broadcasters, producers, and non-profit organisations.

    NTS leverages the Nielsen technology network to capture any video content that airs on television. The service is available to companies that wish to more accurately track their commercials and video content, and manage campaign performance.

    The encoder is a turnkey workstation that will encode both the audio and video of television commercials, Public Service Announcements, and other spots with Nielsen Media Research content identification information as they are being produced and distributed.

    The tracked data will be collected and integrated into Nielsen Tracking Service’s reporting and performance management tools.

  • Podcasting growing in the US: Nielsen survey

    Podcasting growing in the US: Nielsen survey

    MUMBAI: Nielsen//NetRatings, which works in the field of Internet media and market research has announced that 6.6 per cent of America’s adult online population, or 9.2 million Web users, have recently downloaded an audio podcast

    Four per cent, or 5.6 million Web users, have recently downloaded a video podcast. These figures put the podcasting population on a par with those who publish blogs, 4.8 per cent, and online daters, 3.9 per cent. However, podcasting is not yet nearly as popular as viewing and paying bills online, 51.6 per cent, or online job hunting, 24.6 per cent.

    For the uninitiated podcasting is a relatively new technology that enables users to quickly and easily download multimedia files, including audio and video, for playback on mobile devices including iPods and other MP3 players, as well as cell phones.

    Nielsen//NetRatings analyst Michael Lanz says, “The portability of podcasts makes them especially appealing to young on-the-go audiences. We can expect to see podcasting become increasingly popular as portable content media players proliferate”.

    As is often typical with new technologies, young people are more likely than their older counterparts to engage in audio or video podcasting. Web users between the ages 18 and 24 are nearly twice as likely as the average Web user to download audio podcasts, followed by users in the 25-34 and 35-44 age groups, who were also more likely than the average Web user to do audio podcasting.

    Video podcasters showed 25-34 year olds indexing the highest. Web users above the age of 45 were less likely than average to engage in podcasting of either sort. Since the popularity of Apple’s iPod is largely responsible for the spread of podcasting, not surprisingly podcasters enjoy using Apple products and visiting Apple Web sites. For example, audio and video podcasters are over three times as likely as the average Web user to use Apple’s Safari as their primary Internet browser.

    Among audio podcasters, Macworld is the most-visited content site, with a composition index of 606 (see Table 4). Apple and iTunes are the No. 2 and 3 e-commerce sites visited by audio podcasters, with composition indexes of 455 and 396, respectively. The Apple connection is not as clear for video podcasters, who flock to Startrek.com among content sites, with an index of 864. Live365.com and eMusic are the two most popular e-commerce sites for video podcasters, with indexes of 730 and 656, respectively.

    Lanz adds, “Competitors to the iPod are now in the marketplace, but Apple got a big head start. It will take time before other portable media players make significant in-roads with the early-adopters who are currently podcasting”.

  • Times Now tweaks its look, launches four news based shows

    Times Now tweaks its look, launches four news based shows

    MUMBAI:Times Now is giving a double boost to news on television by launching four new daily news based shows. The new shows; News Now Morning, Business Buzz, Live Report and The Game conform to the new look the 24-hour English general news channel has donned.

    With the introduction of four new shows, the channel has evolved a new look and feel by providing more visual space. The channel, which presently runs three tickers, will reduce it to two with the revamp. The channel will showcase its anchors in a white-line bordered frame. According to Times Now CEO Sunil Lulla, “The four new shows add to the quality of information our viewers need.”

    Starting 17 July, the channel has kicked off the day with a new morning breakfast show — News Now Morning. Lulla says that for a Times Now viewer, the morning news bulletin, which will be aired at 6 am, is the best way of getting ready to face the new day.

    The channel maintains its agenda is to keep redefining the concept of news for their urbanite target audience. Business Buzz, which will air from 9:30 am to 12 noon and again from 3 pm to 4 pm, is aimed at giving viewers a complete picture of the day’s business news and markets. The channel will also leverage content from sister print publication and leading financial paper The Economic Times as well the global news service Reuters.

    At 12 noon there is Live Report, where the channel will go live for half an hour to the story of the moment. The show’s tagline is pure news at noon.

    At 7:30 pm is The Game, which as the name implies is primarily for sports fans. The Game will have cricket journalists Faisal Sharif and Dinesh Chopra pitching to provide inside stories and scoops on the country’s most popular sport. 

    Talking about the programming of the new shows, Times Now editor-in-chief Arnab Goswami says, “The new look and the new shows will make us pacier and even more newsy. We’ve already been acknowledged as number one in coverage of big stories. Now, we’ll also have the widest range of shows aimed at just one purpose, putting out much more news on our channel and broadcasting the news with energy and conviction, since the viewers are tired of bland or preachy news channels.”

    Concludes Lulla, “In the coming weeks, the channel is likely to launch a brand campaign and we will continue to sharpen the channel as we go long.”

  • Lionsgate signs content deal with Studio Canal

    Lionsgate signs content deal with Studio Canal

    MUMBAI: Independent film studio Lionsgate is continuing to build its library. It has secured access of up to 2,000 titles from Studio Canal in a multi-year deal.

    This deal continues Lionsgate’s strategy of strengthening television, VOD and Internet rights throughout its library.

    The acquisition adds to Lionsgate’s current library of more than 5,500 titles, already one of the most prestigious and prolific in the industry, and positions the company to continue leveraging its content into traditional and digital media distribution platforms. 

    Lionsgate president Steve Beeks says, “The Lionsgate library is the jewel in our crown and, as we move into the digital world, we are capitalizing on opportunities to leverage our stockpile of content into new and incremental revenue streams.”

    The Studio Canal library deal includes television, DVD and a large proportion of VOD rights to a combination of English-language and French-language titles, including Tender Mercies, Crimes Of The Heart, Jean Renoir’s The Grand
    Illusion and Luis Bunuel’s Obscure Object Of Desire.

  • TV show ‘Lost’ triumphs at the DVD technical awards

    TV show ‘Lost’ triumphs at the DVD technical awards

    MUMBAI: US broadcaster ABC’s show Lost received two 2006 DVD Technical Awards for Best Commentary and Best Overall Presentation — Television Release at the VSDA Awards Show in the US.

    Entertainment Merchants Association president Bo Andersen says, “The DVDs available today feature an unprecedented amount of visual and audio quality as well as interactivity and special features for the die-hard movie fan. DVDs of Lost allow viewers to have a richer experience than when watching the programmes on television or pay-per-view, and the features that are included give legitimate retailers a huge advantage over pirated copies.”

    VSDA’s 2006 DVD Technical awards honour DVD titles that have demonstrated the most innovative and entertaining features through the use of the latest DVD technology.

  • Channel NewsAsia goes in for new look

    Channel NewsAsia goes in for new look

    MUMBAI: News broadcaster Channel NewsAsia dons a new look from today 17 July. The channel says that the transformation is a celebration of its evolution and achievement over the past seven years.

    In undergoing the transformation, the channel aimed to give a dynamic, smart and contemporary feel. The on-air look, in-house trailers and colour scheme have been changed.

    Apart from the staple top-of-the-hour news bulletins, there are also new weekend programmes.

    MediaCorp News, MD Woon Tai Ho says, “We have come out with a concept called platinum lifestyle; it’s really high-end leisure, high-end travel, high-end dining and high-end spending, so we could have programmes from watches to cars, hunting for wine to hunting for property. But eventually, the real challenge really would be technologically-driven programmes, that’s high-definition documentaries, and how we tap into the whole cyberworld.”

    The London-based broadcast design company, English & Pockett, was hired to revamp the channel’s studio, converting it from a virtual set to a new “hard set” where the news anchors will present news right from the busy newsroom.

    The channel will also move to a new digital newsroom environment by the end of the year when all the news gathering will be done on-line. The channel’s website, channelnewsasia.com has also been given a makeover.

    It has a new layout and clearer navigation. It now offers more entertainment content like movie reviews and trailers as well as special features and product reviews. There are also added features like photo galleries for selected news stories and streaming of video clips.