Category: People

  • Bharat Ranga launches new venture RanCorp Media

    Bharat Ranga launches new venture RanCorp Media

    MUMBAI: Former Zee Entertainment Enterprises (Zeel) chief content and creative officer Bharat Ranga has launched his new venture called RanCorp Media Private Ltd.

     

    It may be recalled that Ranga quit Zeel in September last year after a 16-year long stint to explore newer avenues.

     

    When contacted by Indiantelevision.com, Ranga confirmed the development but refused to divulge further information on the same.

     

    RanCorp Media is a broadcast and digital media company. According to Ranga’s profile on a social media platform, the business plans for the venture is being prepared. The company will be involved in building video content brands that would participate in both traditional TV and digital sectors.

     

    During his career span with Zee, Ranga contributed to the overall growth of the organisation by leveraging new revenue opportunities, bringing about path-breaking content, starting new streams of content through new channel launches and transcending the business beyond geographies; to name a few.

     

    In Zeel, Ranga moved across functions and domains seamlessly, from sales to business head roles to being the international business head and then, the chief content and creative head for the organization. During his tenure, he was instrumental in creating value and building numerous opportunities for the organisation.

     

    An MBA from the University of Ajmer, he has also completed an Advanced Management Program from Wharton Business School. Before joining Zeel, Ranga had worked for companies such as Times of India and Modi Korea Telecommunication.

  • Marketing heads continue to roll at ZMCL

    Marketing heads continue to roll at ZMCL

    MUMBAI: In a recent churn of events at the Zee Media Corporation, resignations galore are pouring in and surprisingly they are all from the marketing department. 

     

    As was confirmed to Indiantelevision.com by various channel sources, Zee Media Corporation AVP marketing Manoj Sandal has put in his papers at the company. A pass out of Indian Institute of Commerce and Trade, Sandal was promoted to the rank of AVP marketing in April 2013.

     

    It may be recalled that the first resignation came in from Zee News AVP marketing Rohit Kumar, whose decade long tenure at the group ended a few days back.

     

    While the reason behind the same could not be ascertained, sources from the group said, “We are unaware about the reason but the call has been taken by the management entirely.”

     

  • ZEEL’s Punit Goenka receives Young CEO award

    ZEEL’s Punit Goenka receives Young CEO award

    MUMBAI: Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (ZEEL) MD & CEO Punit Goenka has been awarded with the Young CEO award by CEO India Magazine.

     

    The award was presented to him by Tata Sons Group executive council member Dr N.S. Rajan.

     

    The Young CEO award recognises an extraordinary individual who has shown strategic foresight and leadership to deliver superior performance, effectively managed all key stakeholders and prepared the organisation for the next phase of growth.

     

    On receiving the award, Goenka said, “It is a great honour to receive this award and I would like to dedicate it to my team at Zee since the award focuses on both company success as well as personal achievements. I would also like to thank our chairman for his pioneering vision and continued guidance, which has been instrumental in helping us achieve our current leadership position.”

     

    The CEO Awards recognise exceptional and extraordinary individuals – both existing and aspiring CEOs. Some of the key leadership attributes that were embedded in the application, shortlisting and evaluation process included strategic and visionary, performance oriented, globally competitive, innovative, socially responsible, committed to skill and people development, focused on system and controls and aptitude to create and manage change.

  • Disney shareholders re-elect board; reject split of CEO & chairman roles

    Disney shareholders re-elect board; reject split of CEO & chairman roles

    MUMBAI: Shareholders of The Walt Disney Company at the 2015 Annual Meeting today elected all 10 members of the Board of Directors and supported Board recommendations on the Company’s auditor and the advisory vote on executive compensation, based on preliminary results.

     

    Shareholders agreed with the Board in rejecting two shareholder proposals, one regarding the future selection of an independent Board chairman, and the other limiting accelerated executive pay.

     

    Disney chairman and CEO Robert A. Iger welcomed shareholders to the meeting at The Palace of Fine Arts Theatre in San Francisco and introduced independent lead director Orin C. Smith and the other members of the Board of Directors.

     

    “We’ve had four straight years of record results. Driven by extraordinary creativity, innovative technology and global expansion, 2014 was in fact the best year in our history. Our revenue was up 8 per cent to $48.8 billion, our net income was up 22 per cent to $7.5 billion, and our EPS was up 26 per cent to $4.26.

     

    “Total shareholder return for the year was 38 per cent — almost double the 20 per cent return delivered by the S&P 500 during the same period—and we also paid our 59th straight year of dividends, increasing the dividend per share by 34 per cent,” Iger noted.

     

    Iger introduced Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios chief creative officer John Lasseter, who announced that Disney will be making Frozen 2, reuniting the same creative team and cast from the first film. 

     

    Iger also announced that Star Wars: Episode VIII will be released 26 May, 2017, and that the first stand-alone Star Wars movie featuring characters and events beyond the core Star Wars saga will be titled Rogue One and released in December 2016.

     

    Based on preliminary results, all Disney Directors standing for election were re-elected to the Board: Susan E. Arnold, John S. Chen, Jack Dorsey, Robert A. Iger, Fred H. Langhammer, Aylwin B. Lewis, Monica C. Lozano, Robert W. Matschullat, Sheryl K. Sandberg and Orin C. Smith.

     

    Shareholders ratified the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the company’s independent accountants for the fiscal year ending October 3, 2015. They also approved the advisory resolution on executive compensation.

     

    Final voting tallies from this year’s annual meeting are subject to certification by the company’s inspector of elections, and will be included in the company’s report to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within a week.

  • Turner International India appoints Rohit Bhandari as English entertainment head

    Turner International India appoints Rohit Bhandari as English entertainment head

    MUMBAI: Turner International India has roped in Rohit Bhandari as senior director and network head for its English entertainment portfolio that includes HBO and WB in South Asia.

     

    Bhandari will report to Turner senior vice president and managing director for South Asia Siddharth Jain. 

     

    Jain said, “We’re really pleased to have Rohit on board in this key position as we continue to grow our leadership in the English entertainment genre. With his well-established expertise and industry experience, I am confident he will help us build upon our success in the India and South Asia region.”

     

    In this role, Bhandari will be responsible for the growth strategy, planning and execution of all network functions including content acquisition, communications, marketing and brand building. 

     

    Bhandari’s appointment is effective immediately and he will be based at Turner’s office in Mumbai. He has over two decades of experience in television and advertising including overseeing business operations for AXN and Animax in India, as well as advertising sales in both India and Singapore. He previously led the media and entertainment vertical at Sahara India Capsac Limited. 

  • Andrew Demaria upped to CNN Digital International VP & managing editor

    Andrew Demaria upped to CNN Digital International VP & managing editor

    MUMBAI: CNN Digital has elevated Andrew Demaria from CNN Digital Asia executive producer to CNN Digital International vice president and managing editor. As part of the new role, he will be responsible for leading all editorial efforts and new initiatives across CNN’s digital platforms and CNN Arabic. He will officially take over the new role at the beginning of April. 

     

    While Demaria has spent the last few years in Hong Kong; as part of the new role, he will relocate to London in the coming months. 

     

    In addition to being a senior leader for CNN Digital, CNN International and beyond, Demaria will work closely with CNN International newsgathering TV and digital senior vice president Deborah Rayner’s newsgathering editors and managers around the world, thus leading the network to more distinctive digital work on the biggest stories of the day.

     

    “He will also collaborate with the sales teams to generate features and specials that appeal to both audiences and advertisers. He’ll also help identify new audiences and opportunities in new markets, working with teams across CNN Worldwide to seize what we all believe is a huge global digital potential for CNN across mobile, social and desktop,” said CNN Digital editor in chief Meredith Artley.

     

    Demaria was earlier the CNN Travel editor in chief, where he launched and led a vertical that showcased creative work produced in five languages resulting in gangbuster growth. He’s spent time as a producer on the TV side, was part of the launch teams for CNN.com Asia and later CNN.com International and has had stints at the BBC and ABC (in Australia). 

     

    “Demaria’s scope and teams span the world. To that end, he will be spotted very often in London, Atlanta/NYC, Dubai and other corners, including Hong Kong, where he will be based for the next several months as he prepares to relocate to London,” added Artley. 

  • A+E Networks TV18 appoints Avinash Kaul as president

    A+E Networks TV18 appoints Avinash Kaul as president

    MUMBAI: A+E Networks TV18 (AETN18) has appointed Avinash Kaul as president. Kaul will be responsible for day-to-day operational, strategic and financial management of the joint-venture. The role will be in addition to his responsibility as CEO of IBN Network.

     

    Speaking on the occasion, Network18 Group CEO A.P Parigi said, “As A+E Networks TV18 enters a new phase of growth, I’m confident that Avinash is the right person to lead the company forward. He has a proven ability to create strategic clarity, ensure disciplined execution, and deliver results. We believe that his passion for innovation will help ensure that the venture will continue its stellar growth trajectory.”

     

    A+E Networks executive vice president Sean Cohan added, “Avinash brings vast media expertise, foresight and knowledge of the Indian market to the venture. Under his leadership, we are well-positioned to realize our shared vision of strong and vibrant entertainment services in India.”

     

    “I am honoured to take on this role, and excited about the possibilities that lie ahead. Our focus will be to continue to unleash the power of globally acclaimed content with a mix of innovative programming that resonates with Indian viewers. I’m looking forward to working with the business and content teams in our journey to create India’s leading factual entertainment group,” added Kaul

     

    With a career spanning over 16 years, Kaul has rich experience in a variety of roles in sales, marketing and general management across genres like news, entertainment, movie and lifestyle in India. Prior to this, Kaul held the position of CEO – TV division of BCCL, managing Times Now, ET Now and zoOm. He has also worked in leadership and various capacities in networks like Star, NDTV Media and Discovery Networks, among others.

  • Farewell Editor

    Farewell Editor

    The last time I did an India at 9 debate on CNN IBN on June 2, 2014, Vinod Mehta was on the panel. As the debate was ending, Vinod insisted on having the last word. ‘What is this I am hearing about you quitting or going on a sabbatical? Don’t stay away from the screen for long, you must return soon!’ As it turned out, that was my last appearance on CNN IBN: I did not return. Little did I know then, that neither would Vinod. He left us permanently this Sunday, leaving behind a great void.

    I never had the privilege of working under Vinod, although my wife Sagarika did and she told me wonderful stories of an editor who was passionate and committed to journalism. My interactions with Vinod were largely on the television screen though he did get me to write the occasional column for Outlook. I found him the person I had always imagined him to me: honest, straightforward, and above all, irreverent. Most editors take themselves very seriously and believe their one article or programme can change the world. Many will tell you how proximate they are to the corridors of power. Not Vinod. His almost self-deprecating attitude to being an editor was perhaps his greatest strength (he had even named his dog ‘Editor’). That coupled with a nose for news and the big, bold headline made him the ideal reporters’ editor, someone who nurtured and embraced many fine young talents. For Vinod, the story mattered, not the pomposity of the byline or the celebrityhood of being editor.

    In a sense, Vinod belonged to what I would call the grand ‘Bombay school of editors’, reared in the more genteel 1960s and 70s. Leading the pack was my first editor when I was in college: Behram Contractor or Busybee, someone also blessed with the craft of using simple language to bring a story alive. Vinod and Behram were in many ways two of a kind: they didn’t flaunt their connections or get intimate with their sources, but enjoyed the idea of bringing out a cracking good newspaper or magazine.

    Sadly, we live in an age where the editor is an endangered species, combating marketing, corporate and political pressures. Vinod is perhaps one of the last of the editors who would not compromise on journalistic independence. As he once told a colleague: “Let someone serve a legal notice, the story must go!” His views were his own, he did not wish to follow the herd or be intimidated by the cacophony of cheerleaders and naysayers. That both LK Advani and Sonia Gandhi were present at his funeral exemplified his ability to cut across the political divide. He wrote a fine book on Sanjay Gandhi and an equally well written biography of Meena Kumari: in both books, there was just enough gossip and anecdote to make them real page turners. Editor, author, journalist: we shall all miss his affable, always energetic presence. RIP.

    Post- script: Vinod made the effortless transition to being a pundit on television. ‘I don’t really like it, but it does pay well,’ he told me with a smile. That was quintessential Vinod: he liked expressing his thoughts candidly, but not without a glass of whiskey in the hand!

    (The piece has been written by veteran journalist Rajdeep Sardedsai on his blog http://www.rajdeepsardesai.net and Indiantelevision.com took his consent and uploaded it after his approval)

  • Jagmohan Dalmiya is Rocky Balboa of India

    Jagmohan Dalmiya is Rocky Balboa of India

    BCCI elections are always overhyped. Sometimes the hype even crosses the level of Lok Sabha and Assembly Elections. It is impossible to make out who is supporting whom, who is foe and who is friend. N. Srinivasan joined hands with Sharad Pawar and Ranbir Singh Mahendra to dethrone Jagmohan Dalmiya in 2004 and now 10 years later Srinivasan seconding Dalmiya is indeed unpredictable. Isn’t it?

     

    Unless Sharad Pawar is certain that he is going to win the election, he won’t contest it and that’s what exactly happened. It’s nothing new. Every time during BCCI elections we see such mutual understandings or adjustments. I would term it old wine in new bottle.

     

    Indian cricket has reached an abysmal low with so much of judicial introspection and legal obligations and it is highly important to regain the integrity of the game. Officials need to plan and act so that they can earn back the faith of cricket lovers, like me, who follow the sport. Why do we need a Supreme Court to intervene when there is a Board and its legal bodies and guidelines? The first priority of the board should be ensuring the fans that they are following a clean sport.

     

    Now the newly elected President is not someone new to BCCI, neither is he a politician. He has proved himself in numerous occasions. It was Dalmiya along with I S Bindra who won the rights for hosting World Cup in South Asia. When he joined BCCI it was not a very rich body, but when he left, BCCI was the richest cricket board of the world. His contribution to ICC is also of very high standard. Overall he is a veteran cricket administrator, who has adequate knowledge of the sport. He has all the potential to repair the damage done; he did it in the past too. Indian cricket was brutally affected by match fixing in 1999 -2000 but he got people’s faith back to the game. I have high expectations from Jagmohan Dalmiya as a liberal and unbiased cricket analyst and I hope he delivers. I will end with a comparison, Jagmohan Dalmiya is Rocky Balboa of India, no matter how much you try to pin him down he always gets up to deliver the knockout blow.

     

    (These are purely personal views of Former first class cricketer and a veteran cricket analyst Hemant Kenkre and indiantelevision.com does not necessarily subscribe to these views.)

  • Tom Rothman replaces Amy Pascal at Sony Pictures Entertainment

    Tom Rothman replaces Amy Pascal at Sony Pictures Entertainment

    MUMBAI: After “firing” Amy Pascal in the wake of the email hack scandal, Sony Pictures Entertainment has now brought on board Thomas E. Rothman as chairman of its motion picture group.

     

    Sony Entertainment chairman and CEO Michael Lynton’s contract has also been extended. Lynton will continue to oversee Sony’s global entertainment businesses, which include Sony Music Entertainment, Sony/ATV Music Publishing and SPE.

     

    As chairman of the Motion Picture Group, Rothman will oversee all of Sony’s movie activities worldwide and will report to Lynton. He will also work with Pascal to “ensure a smooth and orderly transition.” Pascal is now an independent producer at the studio.

     

    Rothman is currently chairman of SPE’s TriStar Productions. He will continue to oversee TriStar and its slate of films for the near term, which includes Ricki and the Flash, Billy Lynn, Money Monster and The Walk.

     

    “Tom has had an extraordinary career and we are thrilled to have him run the Motion Picture Group. Tom’s creativity, strong talent relationships and track record of enduring films and commercial success are unparalleled in this industry and exactly what we are looking for to grow our film business. Having run Fox Filmed Entertainment during a time of great successes and growth for that studio, and then producing at TriStar here at SPE, Tom knows this business inside and out like few others do,” said Lynton.

     

    “I am grateful for and humbled by the opportunity to lead the Motion Picture Group. I have had the pleasure of working closely with the exceptionally talented teams at SPE for the past year, and I am excited to build on those relationships in this new role. I want to thank Michael and Amy for their support ever since I came to the lot with TriStar. I am thrilled at this rare opportunity to lead the Motion Picture Group at such an exciting and transformative time for the studio,” Rothman added.

     

    Rothman previously co-led Fox Filmed Entertainment from 2000 to 2012 and founded that studio’s Fox Searchlight unit and headed worldwide production for the Samuel Goldwyn Company from 1989 to 1994. He also worked at Columbia Pictures from 1987 to 1989.