Category: News Broadcasting

  • Murdoch’s ‘The Times’ to launch US edition

    Murdoch’s ‘The Times’ to launch US edition

    MUMBAI: Rupert Murdoch’s London-based The Times newspaper announced that it will launch a US edition on 6 June 2006 and will be available to subscribers at $1, in retail outlets across New York and New Jersey.

    The 64-page newspaper will be printed and distributed by the New York Post, also owned by Murdoch’s News Corp. It will however, repackage stories from the British publication and be edited by John Mair, presently the editor of the International edition.

    The US edition will also be printed in a smaller tabloid-style format.
    Commenting on the launch, The Times editor-in-chief Robert Thomson said, “This is a key moment in the development of The Times as an international media brand. We have seen a large increase in our Times Online readership in the US and the appearance of the newspaper on the streets of New York marks the next stage in our print and web expansion.

    “The Times has one of the largest international networks of any newspaper in the world and US readers want and need sophisticated global political and economic coverage.”

    As part of its strategy, the US edition has been timed to coincide with the football World Cup that kicks off on 9 June in Germany, for which it will be giving extensive news coverage.

  • Hungama TV COO Zarina Mehta

    Hungama TV COO Zarina Mehta

    A true blue Mumbaiite, Hungama TV chief operating officer Zarina Mehta is one of the three founder members of United Television (UTV). Her child like enthusiasm for her work is contagious but at the same time, there is a fiery temper lurking behind somewhere. With no formal training in the media and television space, Zarina has come a long way from her early days of being an edit person.

    An Economics graduate from Mumbai University, challenge is what makes her tick. “The minute everything goes smooth, I am bored to death. I don’t live for the result. I live for the actual act of fixing the problem. If there are no problems, I create one,” says she.

    This year, from being programming head of UTV’s kids channel Hungama TV, Zarina was made its COO. Kids’ programming is what she is most passionate about and it also came through her shows The Mathemagic Show, Hip Hip Hurray and Shakalaka Boom Boom for Doordarshan, Zee TV and Star Plus respectively. Hungama TV under her stewardship has recently touched the number two position in the kids’ channels space and the lady can’t stop gushing about it.

    From being a shy, terrified and retiring young girl, who used to get bullied in school, Zarina has evolved into a confident media savvy woman. And the change came about when, as an eight year old, she came back to India from Washington (where her dad was posted). “The American system of education in school is so pathetic that when I came here, I did not know how to read or write at eight. I was enrolled in JP Petit High School for girls and that is where I changed completely. It was the most nurturing, fun and fabulous place to be in. Our principle, Shirin Darasha (she’s still there), was the most fantastic principle anyone could ever ask for. She taught us to question everything. She opened up education for us and made it meaningful,” reminisces Zarina.

    By contrast when she went to Xavier’s, she hated every second of it. “It was complete rubbish. I studied Economics and if I asked a question in class, the teacher would throw a piece of chalk at me and ask me to get out. I believe English was really good because Rajdeep’s (Sardesai) mom used to teach it. But I did a terrible mistake by taking Economics,” she says.

    Confusion in her mind after graduation was what took her to Xavier Institute of Communications (XIC). There she studied advertising and marketing, only to realise that that was not what she wanted to do.

    The turning point in her life actually came in school, where she met Pearl Padamsee, who used to do theatre with them. “We used to do these magnificent school plays with her. That is what really became a career for me. It took me right through college,” she recalls.

    Being an independent person by nature, she was loathe to take money from anyone even when she was young. And as soon as her studies got over, she started giving English tuition to kids and also approached Pearl Padamsee for a job. “I asked her to give me some work and she made me a production manager in one of her plays. Right through college I did a lot of theatre and that was my best training. Theatre teaches you discipline and also what the audience likes because you are an actor on stage and you get the reactions right there,” points out Zarina.

    It was here that she met Deven Khote and Ronnie Screwvala. UTV, which is today one of the most respected film and television production companies, was born “out of fun.” Reportedly, the trio started out with Rs 37,000 in their pockets to float the company.

    “The three of us decided to start this company just for fun called UTV,” recalls Zarina. The first show they did was a television quiz called Mashoor Mahal for DD in 1989, which was hosted by Raman Kumar and created by Alyque Padamsee (who was the head of Lintas at that point in time). This was India’s first independent production as all the other shows prior to this were produced only by DD.

    As for Zarina, her first tryst with the editing machine came with Mashoor Mahal. What she had to do was mundane but she was hooked and how. Zarina recalls with much enthusiasm, “Raman used to host Mashoor Mahal and when he used to start speaking, he had a habit of taking big breaths in between words. My job was to edit Raman’s breaths! I used to come in to work at 7 am to Western Outdoor Media Technologies Limited (WOMTL) and learnt editing from someone there on a small machine with four buttons. I was so excited that I had learnt how to edit that I ended up spending the entire night at the studio. And much to my horror, my parents were frantic at home because they didn’t know what had happened to me. I was totally hooked. Although now when I look back, I don’t know what I was hooked on to, because all I did through the night was editing Raman’s breaths!”

    The rest as they say is history, but it’s still good to relive and recall history. Path-breaking shows that poured out of the UTV stable were Mashoor Mahal, Lifeline, Contact, Shakuntala and The Mathemagic Show – all for DD, since those were the good old days when the pubcaster ruled the skies. But the problem in those days was that DD did not allow any producer more than 13 episodes in a year. So, through the year, there were these “no work” periods as in those early days no one had heard of UTV. “No one recognised us when we told them we were from UTV. Only when we mentioned we were a part of Western Outdoor, did they recognise us,” says Zarina.

    WOMTL used to be one of the oldest and most experienced players in the area of post production in India. In order to strengthen its presence in the post production business, Screwvala’s United Studios (USL) acquired WOMTL in March 2003, post which the brand name was changed to USL-WOA.

    Unlike these days, when production houses have been rightly named “soap factories” as they churn out more content than one can ever imagine, two decades back it used to take producers one and a half years to produce one show. “A whole of research used to go into our shows. Lifeline was shot on film and its music was done by Vanraj Bhatia and it was directed by Vijaya Mehta. I still remember shooting on location at Nanavati Hospital. Now we look back at those days with nostalgia but the fact was that we were very bored half the time because DD would not give us more than 13 episodes a year. You put in all your love and energy into those 13 episodes,” says Zarina.

    Then came the satellite boom in the early 1990s. Channels like CNN and Star Plus entered Indian skies. CNN broadcast the Gulf War of 1991 live on television and the face of Indian television changed. In August 1991, Richard Li launched Star Plus in India, which was the first satellite channel to be beamed in the Indian subcontinent. The year after that in October 1992 Subhash Chandra’s Zee TV hit the airwaves. That was when UTV really burst forth.

    Recalls Zarina, “After producing 13 episodes a year, we produced 208 (52×4) episodes for Zee TV that year. We created blockbuster shows like Snakes and Ladders, Junglee Toofaan Tyre Puncture and Chakravyuh for Zee TV.”

    A whole variety of programming was offered to Indian viewers. One thing that Zarina always did when she went to any channel was to offer them kids programmes, since she is most passionate about them. “The first show I ever did was Mathemagic, and then came Hip Hip Hurray and Shakalaka Boom Boom. Every time I used to go to a channel, I always had one kids’ programme for them but very few of them wanted it. The first one to really recognise the power of kids programming was Star when we did Shakalaka Boom Boom for them,” says she.

    In the 10 years that followed, Zarina was involved in an array of shows like Shanti, Parivartan and Saaya amongst others. One of them also happened to be the mega flop show – Kahin Na Kahin Koi Hai on Sony with Madhuri Dixit as the host. Zarina is smart enough to admit her mistake and sees this show as her biggest failure.

    Kahin NA Kahin Koi Hai was my biggest failure ever. It was very difficult to recover from it and it was a public failure and I’m glad it happened to me because it definitely helped me. One tends to get a bit arrogant in life and Kahin NA Kahin Koi Hai brought me down a lot and that was good,” admits Zarina.

    When queried as to where she thinks she went wrong on that show, she says, “I know exactly what I did wrong and I will never repeat it again. The only reason it didn’t work was because it just wasn’t real enough. It is as simple as that. You can’t have an unreal reality show. And there were other problems too, which I don’t want to get into. At the end of the day, we did put our hearts and souls into it and at that time nobody knew how to make a reality show so we should have recognised and fixed that problem. That was a mistake and the biggest failure of my life.”

    In March 2005, Zarina joined Hungama TV as head of programming and introduced local shows like Hero and Sanya at a time when the kids’ channels space was dominated by international animation and live action shows. Hero became instantly popular among kids and also was amongst the top rated show on the channel. Sanya, on the other hand, was India’s first interactive daily show for kids, wherein at the end of each episode, Sanya faces a dilemma and has two options to get out of it. At the end of every episode Sanya turns to the viewer and asks for help. Viewers can then vote via SMS, telephone or on the Sanya website www.sanya.hungamatv.com. UTV made two versions of each episode’s ending and aired the version that garnered most votes from the audiences.

    She also introduced the Hungama TV Captain’s Hunt, wherein the channel looked for kids to be on their board of directors to provide suggestions on what was right and wrong on the channel. The Captain’s Hunt has received a hearty response from kids all over. Then came the Hungamathon – one of a kind mini-marathon for kids, which was held in Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata. All these initiatives have made Hungama TV a truly home grown kids channel.

    Apart from local shows, some smart international acquisitions also helped the channel in a big way. Doremon is one of the most popular international shows on the channel.

    Now Zarina has another ace up her sleeve — a first of its kind reality show for kids. In what can be called a coup of sorts, Hungama TV has roped in current Bollywood heart-throb John Abraham for the John Aur Kaun? talent hunt where two kids who win the hunt will get a chance to star opposite John in a UTV produced movie. John will also be the brand ambassador for the channel for the next two years and will be involved in some innovative projects with the channel, which at the moment, Zarina is tight lipped about.

    When queried as to what she thinks is her biggest achievement, she says, “I think my biggest achievement is the way I work with people. I need them to have the same mindset as me which is hard working and go kill for the product – whatever it takes – if I may borrow CNN-iBN’s tagline.”

    “I hate hearing ‘No’ from people and that they ‘can’t’ do something. Because the fact of the matter is that if you can’t find a solution, I know I will. That’s the way I work. I hate people coming to me with small irritating problems. There is no such thing as an insoluble problem. That’s what I believe in and thankfully, all the people I work with also believe in the same,” she adds.

    Failures like Kahin NA Kahin Koi Hai aside, what from her vast portfolio is her biggest achievement? “My biggest talent is to bring out the best in people and also to recognise a good idea and make it happen. And my biggest achievement is Hungama TV. I think whatever I am doing now is my biggest achievement. I never look at the past… because that has gone by. I have enjoyed my failures as well as my successes,” she says.

    When queried as to what she thinks about the future of the television and media industry in India, she says, “The television industry space is really going to boom now. India is booming. Why is everyone going on and on about India? It is because it’s going to boom. Look at any industry – the stock market, the media space, advertising spends… it is all on the rise. The only problem in this space is pay revenues, which seem to have got stuck and it is irritating. After becoming COO, I realised what a huge impediment it is to growth. If that were to happen, there will be massive growth. So I have the most fantastic sense of excitement. I don’t think we have seen anything yet. It’s still all to come.”

  • mFormation plans expansion in India

    mFormation plans expansion in India

    BANGALORE: mFormation Technologies Inc, the provider of mobile device management solutions, has announced the opening of its new facility in Bangalore which will also serve as the company’s headquarters.

    It will be one of mFormation’s three main hubs for product development and will provide professional services and support for customers across the globe.

    The Bangalore office has also setup a global Interoperability test centre and enabled device vendors to test their devices against the mFormation product for OMA standards compliance. mFormation is on course to grow the India team to 200 people over the next few years. Moving into the new facility is part of mFormation’s growth strategy to expand it’s human capital to meet growing global customer demands, states an official release.

    mFormation Technologies Inc. CEO Mark Edwards says, “Mobile communication devices and networks are no longer exclusive for simple voice calls. They have grown from e-mailing & gaming to become a full fledged corporate computing device. It’s imperative for mobile operators to adopt cutting edge technology to streamline their data services strategy and secure incremental revenues.”

    mFormation has drawn in a total investment of about $50 million, after closing a Series D round of $24.5 million in April 2006. In the initial series D funding, the company had raised $15.3 million from the same investors. Existing investors Alex Brown Venture Partners, Battery Ventures, Carmel Ventures, Intel Capital and North Bridge Venture Partners participated in this financing, adds the release.

    mFormation Technologies Inc. is a provider of mobile device management software, offering a solution that enables mobile operators to rapidly accelerate their data revenues and reduce support costs. mFormation’s market-leading mFormation Sevice Manager Suite is a comprehensive over-the-air device management software solution in the industry.A modular solution, the suite enables mobile operators to remotely configure settings and new services, diagnose faults, update firmware and software, monitor customer experience and secure device content throughout the subscriber lifecycle.

  • Cinefoundation winners announced

    Cinefoundation winners announced

    CANNES: The Cannes Film Festivals is not only about the big names from cinema. And this is evident from the Cinéfondation that Gilles Jacob and Pierre Viot created in 1998 to promote the discovery of a new generation of filmmakers. An official selection of school films was therefore presented during the Festival. This year, 17 films from Australia, Asia, Europe, North America and South America were selected from the 1100 submitted.

    The Jury presided by Andrei Konchalovsky and composed of Sandrine Bonnaire, Tim Burton, Daniel Brühl, Souleymane Cisse and Zbigniew Preisner awarded prizes to the following films:

    1st Prize:- GE & ZETA – directed by Gustavo Riet, Universidad del Cine, Argentina

    2nd Prize:- MR. SCHWARTZ, MR. HAZEN & MR. HORLOCKER – directed by Stefan Mueller, Fachhochschule Wiesbaden, Germany

    Joint 3rd Prize: – MOTHER, directed by Siân Heder,American Film Institute, USA

    A VÍRUS- directed by Ágnes Kocsis, Színház- és Filmmuvészeti Egyetem, Hungary.

  • Fox TV Studios becomes entertainment studio for HarperCollins

    Fox TV Studios becomes entertainment studio for HarperCollins

    MUMBAI: Fox Television Studios (FtvS) will serve as the entertainment studio for HarperCollins Publishers, developing original content based on its existing library, as well as new HarperCollins titles – initially in the mystery and romance categories.

    Content will be developed and distributed across multiple platforms worldwide, including television, DVD, and digital media including internet, mobile/wireless and emerging applications. The announcement was made by Fox Television Studios president Angela Shapiro-Mathes.

    The first deal resulting from the partnership is for TV series development based on the popular legal suspense novels by international best-selling author Lisa Scottoline, which center around a group of female partners in the fictional, Rosato law firm.

    Scottoline’s first novel in this nine-volume series of thrillers, Legal Tender, was published by HarperCollins in 1997. To date, she has written 13 novels. Scottoline presently has 10 million copies in print in the US and is published in 23 countries.

    Additionally, Fox Television Studios has optioned The Reading Group by Elizabeth Noble. Her novel chronicles a year in the life of a group of women who form a book club, only to see their own personal stories, trials and tribulations mirrored in the literary works they discuss.

    “I’m thrilled to be working with HarperCollins in a venture that connects our two worlds in this way. This collaboration gives us unprecedented access to an untapped resource of talented writers – new voices for the TV and digital space. It also allows FtvS to pursue publishing opportunities for the original programming we develop and produce,” said Shapiro-Mathes.

    To facilitate projects and serve as liaison between FtvS and HarperCollins, Fox TV Studios has retained veteran television producer Karen Glass to work out of HarperCollins’ New York City offices. An experienced executive producer, show-runner and development executive, Glass has developed numerous award-winning shows for broadcast, cable and syndication.

    HarperCollins president and CEO Worldwide Jane Friedman said, “This is a unique partnership that offers endless possibilities. We will now have a professional eye to evaluate our incredible publishing lists – both new titles and our unparalleled backlist – to discover books that are worthy of dramatic portrayal. This is another example of HarperCollins’ continuing effort to create additional opportunities for our authors by introducing them to new audiences.”

    Fox Television Studios executive vice president, scripted programming David Madden added, “We are delighted to be working with such a wonderful stable of talented authors. And it’s especially thrilling to get a chance to be in business with Lisa Scottoline. The admirers of her work are worldwide and extremely devoted, and we look forward to developing her ‘Rosato law firm’ novels for screens everywhere, from living rooms to mobile phones and anyplace where thriller fans can watch Lisa’s characters come to life.”

  • ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ becomes number 1 DVD of 2006

    ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ becomes number 1 DVD of 2006

    MUMBAI: Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media’s presentation The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe has become the number one top-selling DVD of 2006, it was announced by Buena Vista Home Entertainment (BVHE) president Bob Chapek.

    The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe was released on 5 April and has sold over 11 million units in route to claiming this year’s top DVD spot.

    “We are delighted with the tremendous success of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe DVD. This award-winning film is a stellar addition to the celebrated Disney collection and has set the tone for the next chapter in this promising franchise,” commented Bob Chapek.

    Concurrently, with Narnia in the top DVD spot of 2006, BVHE holds five of the top 10 titles so far this year. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, Chicken Little, Lady and the Tramp, Flightplan, and Bambi II are all strongly positioned within the top 10 titles of 2006, states an official release.

    “We are very fortunate to have such a strong line up of titles that appeals to every demographic. It is the backbone of what this studio has always been known for,” Chapek added.

    The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe is available as a single disc DVD with outstanding bonus features and as a Special 2-Disc Collector’s Edition DVD.

    The special edition takes viewers on a deeper adventure into the world of Narnia with nearly ten hours of bonus features — including a behind-the-scenes tour with the film’s child stars, director’s diary, ‘cinematic storytellers’ film diaries, multiple audio commentaries, 3-D map, interactive timeline, featurettes on the creatures and much more, informs the official release.

  • Digital Cinema Show 2006 discusses business and tech aspects

    Digital Cinema Show 2006 discusses business and tech aspects

    MUMBAI: Digital Cinema Show 2006, organised by Saicom Trade Fairs & Exhibitions got underway in Mumbai today. The three day trade show is packaged with an exhibition, conferences and film screenings.

    This year’s conference topics range from the Cost effectiveness of digital cinema to Animation for digital cinema. Panel discussions and analyses on topics such as Digital Intermediate Film Production, Releasing digital films through satellites, Creating storage for digital cinema at reasonable cost, Digital films from script to screen, Distribution and Exhibition of digital movies and Digital cinema technology from production to post production also feature the three-day line up.

    The show as well as the conference has exhibits and speakers from around the world and India. The sponsors for this year’s event include JVC and Panasonic of Japan, Quantel and Western Digital of UK, Digital Film Systems of Ireland and AGIV India.

    The exhibitors in the trade show include ADI Media, Mhatre Electronics, Quantel Ltd, Screen World Publication, Yasuka Corporation, The FX Factory, Studio Assist and Western Digital.

  • Qualcomm introduces world’s first universal mobile TV chip

    Qualcomm introduces world’s first universal mobile TV chip

    MUMBAI: Qualcomm Incorporated, a developer and innovator of Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) and other advanced wireless technologies, today announced its single-chip Universal Broadcast Modem (UBM) solution supporting three of the world’s leading mobile broadcast standards.

    The UBM solution unifies the world’s leading mobile TV standards into a single, cost-effective chip with support for FLO technology, as well as for Digital Video Broadcasting — Handheld (DVB-H) and one-segment Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting — Terrestrial (ISDB-T), creating a common platform that handset manufacturers can leverage to address multiple standards.

    “Mobile TV on handsets is gaining momentum in the wireless industry, even as network operators continue to evaluate the various standards available. Our UBM solution addresses the industry’s need by providing a single universal chip that supports three of the world’s leading standards, enabling mobile handsets to receive real-time content regardless of the broadcast technology selected by operators,” said Qualcomm CDMA Technologies vice president of strategic products Mike Concannon.

    The UBM solution includes support for FLO, which is part of the MediaFLO system, DVB-H, and one-segment implementations of ISDB-T to address the needs of network operators in Europe, Asia, North America and elsewhere for the deployment of mobile broadcast services. The UBM solution offers a high level of integration to deliver a single-chip FLO solution for the North American market that also includes specific enhancements necessary for deployment outside of North America.

    The UBM is designed as a companion to Qualcomm’s Mobile Station Modem (MSM) baseband chipsets, but also can be used with other products. The UBM leverages the processing power of the Enhanced Multimedia and Convergence Platforms, eliminating the need for additional dedicated application processors for more power-efficient devices with smaller form-factors.

    Specific performance features of the UBM solution include:

    Support for the entire UHF bandwidth — 470 to 862 MHz;
    Tunable modes 5, 6, 7 and 8 MHz channel bandwidths;
    Support for single- and multi-frequency networks.
    Designed to be compatible with both CDMA2000 and WCDMA/UMTS devices, the UBM solution is expected to sample in the first quarter of 2007.

  • ‘Fanaa’ no show: Fun Cinemas deny rift with Yash Raj

    ‘Fanaa’ no show: Fun Cinemas deny rift with Yash Raj

    MUMBAI: Subhash Chandra promoted Fun Cinemas (the multiplex brand of Fun Multiplex Pvt Ltd), which along with Inox are the only two cinema chains not screening the Aamir Khan blockbuster Fanaa, has categorically denied any differences with producer Yash Raj Films.

    A statement issued today by E-City Ventures (the corporate brand representing the Essel Group’s out-of-home leisure interests) made the following clarifications:

    a. There exist no differences between The Essel Group or E-City Ventures and Yash Raj Films (the producers and distributors of Fanaa). All such indications prevailing in the entertainment industry are being spread out of malafide intent, through parties that could have vested interests in this matter.

    b. The revenue model of film exhibition works in a way that films with assured commercial success pay for films that do not justify the exhibitor’s overheads. It is therefore necessary for the exhibitor to price both of them in a way that is acceptable to the audience. This assures a longer shelf life for the given film and ultimately benefits the producer and distributor.

    All the points that The Essel Group and E-City Ventures brought to the table while negotiating terms with Yash Raj Films, were motivated by this strong belief.

    c. The Essel Group and E-City Ventures currently have exhibitory control over 70 single screen cinemas and 40 movie multiplexes. The repercussions of the terms negotiated between Fun Cinemas and Yash Raj Films were to affect all these cinemas. It is not that the exhibitors respect the premium value offered by the producer any less – but they care more for the purchasing power of their audience.

    Thus, the fact that both the parties could not agree on common terms, is a pure business deadlock and not a confrontation of any kind.

    The statement concludes by saying that any subsequent releases from India’s most powerful studio would be “negotiated as an independent premise”. This is a significant point because for the remainder of 2006, Yash Raj Films has a virtual lock on all the big Hindi blockbusters that are slated for release. The A-list movies in its kitty include home productions Dhoom 2 and Kabul Express, as well as the year’s other two biggies – Rakesh Roshan’s Krrish and Dharma Productions’ Kabhie Alvida Na Kehna.

  • Sky & BT win ‘near-live’ Premiership rights

    Sky & BT win ‘near-live’ Premiership rights

    MUMBAI: Satellite broadcaster BSkyB and Britain’s BT Group, in a joint bid, have won the rights for the ‘near-live broadcasts of the Barclays Premiership, via a deal with the FA Premier League.

    The three-year deal extends from the 2007-08 to 2009-10 seasons and allows both parties to broadcast 242 games per season. It enables Sky and BT to offer full delayed coverage or extended highlights of all Barclays Premiership matches not broadcast live, after 10 pm on match days.

    BT will offer the near-live games on its BT Vision service to be launched later this year – on a pay-per-view basis. Sky will however, air these matches at no extra charge, as part of its standard sports packages.

    The Premier League awarded the ‘live’ rights for the same period to BSkyB and Irish pay-TV broadcaster Setanta earlier this month.

    Commenting on the same, Sky Sports MD Vic Wakeling said, “These near-live rights, added to the live matches, give Sky Sports unrivalled Premiership coverage.”

    “We can now promise Football First until the end of the decade and new ways of watching games, on demand, through broadband. Sky remains the home of football.”