Tag: 7-Star Cable

  • Large Mumbai cable TV operators try to meet on CAS on 17 May

    Large Mumbai cable TV operators try to meet on CAS on 17 May

    If the IBF is meeting on CAS, can Mumbai’s powerful cable TV lobby be far behind? Well not really. IndusInd Media & Communications executive vice-chairman R. T. Hingorani has called a meeting of cable ops in Mumbai’s Aarey Gardens at 4 pm on 17 May.

    Amongst those slated to attend include: Hathway’s K. Jayaram, Siticable’s N. Malik, WinCable’s J.S Kohli, 7-Star Cable’s Shameem Shaikh, and Rajesh Cable Network’s Paresh Thakkar.

    In the note being circulated amongst them Hingorani says the meeting will be to “work out strategies on a common platform. There are a few points that need to be clarified among ourselves.”

  • 7 Star sees red; claims absolute triumph in battle with ESPN-Star Sports

    7 Star sees red; claims absolute triumph in battle with ESPN-Star Sports

    7 Star Cable, respondent in the court case filed by ESPN Star, has taken umbrage against media reports (see ESPN-Star Sports vs 7 Star: Both claim victories) that have refused to accord it absolute victory in the matter.

    According to Shamim Shaikh, a partner in the cable TV independent that operates in Mumbai’s northern suburbs, the broadcaster has not reaped any benefit from the high court decree. The court, in its order asked the cable op to pay its outstanding dues to ESPN Software and allowed the broadcaster to cut off connections to hotels where its channels were being beamed through 7 Star.

    Shaikh insists that 7 Star had never refused to pay the broadcaster its dues. In fact, he says that his company had made a payment by cheque much earlier to ESPN Star’s Mumbai distribution head, which had been accepted. It was however returned by ESPN Star Sports later. “So, why is it claiming that it has won on this front?” he asks.

    He adds that the court allowed it to furnish a bank guarantee for the amount that would have been payable had the contract been in force for the period from 22 August 2001 to 30 November 2001.

    An acerbic Shaikh contends that all broadcasters’ distribution agreements with cable ops are ‘one-sided’ and loaded in the formers’ favour. The agreements usually include clauses that the rates can be changed arbitrarily, says Shaikh, and that cable ops often are not given a copy of the agreement.

    He alleges that broadcasters often pick on cable ops only when there’s an interesting telecast round the corner. “Didn’t they know earlier that we had been showing their channels in hotels all this while?” he fumes.

    Shaikh is also bitter about the claim of 100,000 subscribers put out by ESPN. Alleging that the broadcaster was making contradictory statements, he says that if they believed the subscriber base was so broad, why have they asked for disclosure of only 20,000 subscribers.

    “Let them prove our subscriber base and then extract the exact dues from us,” he says. “Last year, the broadcaster reduced our subscriber base from 8,000 to 7,000. Why did that happen? This year they want to increase it to 20,000? Why can’t they be consistent?” he queries.

  • ESPN-Star Sports vs 7 Star: Both claim victories

    ESPN-Star Sports vs 7 Star: Both claim victories

    The legal brawl between Mumbai cable TV independent 7 Star Cable and pay TV sportscaster ESPN Star Sports over payments to the latter is far from over.

    ESPN Software India has said it is going to take the dispute to an arbitration panel and that it may move the court once again if 7 Star continues to breach its contract. 7 Star says it is going to continue to take the ESPN-Star Sports feed from other cable ops with which it has alliances, even if the sportscaster continues to keep its integrated-receiver decoder box switched off.

    “We have already paid the arrears for a month and 21 days and also deposited the bank guarantee for the remainder period with the court within the timeframe directed by it, ” says Raja, one of the promoters of 7 Star. “We are free to tap the two channels from InCable or any other provider who we choose to affiliate with. The court has not issued any order restraining us from airing the two channels once we meet the conditions it has set for us. “

    So far both claim to have registered victories. While ESPN-Star Sports says 7 Star has been forced to pay up all its arrears, the latter says the former has reportedly not been able to prevent it from retransmitting the two channels to hotels that it services. “We have told them to discontinue the service to 1,518 rooms in hotels that take a cable TV feed from 7 Star’s headend,” says another partner Shamim Shaikh. “We do not have the technical capability to stop doing so. The court has agreed with us.”

    According to Raja, the network is willing to come to an understanding in the cause of the cable TV industry, if the sportscaster network does not stay adamant about the subscriber base it wants to be paid for.

    Says he: “We would like them to gradually up the subscriber base for which we pay and not drastically as has been proposed. An increase from 7,000 paid subs to 20,000 is too drastic a jump. If they are not open to a phased increment of subs, then let them hike the subscription fees levied per sub. Let ESPN-Star not do both: increase the subscriber base and even the sub fees. Hopefully it will come to a settlement. This industry is about relationships, let’s maintain them.”

    The case looks more like a Mexican standoff and the final verdict from this arbitration could probably have far reaching consequences for broadcasters and the cable TV industry.

    To read more about the dispute click here