Tag: APTN

  • “APTN is a not a channel, nor has any ambition of becoming one” : Ian Ritchie APTN CEO

    “APTN is a not a channel, nor has any ambition of becoming one” : Ian Ritchie APTN CEO

    Associated Press Television News (APTN) is the world’s largest video news agency, breaking international news service delivered via satellite to 87 per cent of the world’s television news broadcasters. It has a specialised Broadcast Services department, an Entertainment News division, a Corporate Video & Video News Release (VNR) distribution service and an extensive video and film archive.

     

    The company, set up in 1994 is also the international television arm of The Associated Press, the world’s oldest and largest newsgathering organisation. APTN has over 80 bureaus in 67 countries, from which breaking news stories are gathered, then relayed back to a central newsroom in London, UK. These stories are then edited, and sent with fact-based scripts via satellite to over 500 broadcast newsroom subscribers around the world.

     

    But APTN has realised that with a boom in the news segment in the electronic medium, just providing a service would not do. The service has to be tailored for the customer’s needs and, more importantly, tailored in such a way that it addresses the region and audience that the broadcaster, who is a customer of APTN, wants to target and is targeting.

     

    Keeping that in mind, APTN is in a structuring mode, especially where South Asia is concerned where India is an important market with a large number of television news channels and media companies experimenting with alternative media like broadband and the Internet too. APTN CEO Ian Ritchie is currently in India to explore various business possibilities to meet the demands of a changing world, which includes forming joint ventures with Indian telecom and/or media companies.

     

    Ritchie brings a wealth of experience stemming from senior roles at some of the most high-profile television companies in the business. During a distinguished career spanning over 25 years, he has held senior management positions within Russell Reynolds Associates, Yorkshire Tyne Tees Television Holdings plc, Carlton Studios, London News Network and Channel 5 Broadcasting. Prior to taking the reins at APTN, he was the CEO of Middle East Broadcasting from 1998 to 2000.

     

    In this interview with indiantelevision.com’s Anjan Mitra, Ritchie discusses various aspects of APTN, stressing on the fact the company should not be confused with a broadcaster “as APTN is not a foreign broadcaster and neither has any ambitions of becoming one in the near future.”

     

    Excerpts:

    What brings you to India? 

    We do consider India an important market for APTN and feel that the needs of the customers should be addressed. As an organisation, we also feel that there is a need to enhance regional content and the new agenda is based on that. The feedback that we have got is that our broadcasting customers’ needs are dependent on their target audience. For them, the domestic news comes first on the priority list, followed by regional and international news.

     

    Since there are good players in the domestic circuit in most countries, we are not interested in getting into this segment extensively. APTN needs to focus its product to enhance the overage in a particular region. And South Asia is a region for us. We think, we can provide good regional coverage to our customers. In this connection, I am in India to explore the various possibilities and how such things can be done.

    How would you define regional coverage? Does it also mean getting into regional coverage of India as a market? 

    My definition of a region would be like that of the South Asian region, which would include countries like India, Singapore, Thailand and Pakistan. But to provide focused coverage of a region, we would also need to improve the coverage from the region that can only happen if our network is big enough.

     

    We are planning to expand our Delhi and Mumbai bureaus that would provide coverage from the region to supplement our international coverage.

    Considering APTN is also a service provider to non-traditional media, what are the opportunities in the region for that sort of a service? 

    Yes, the second most important thing in a market place is new media like mobile telephony and broadband services. We are exploring these too here, but for a technology like 3G to come to India may take some time, but it is a potential area that we need to keep in mind, especially from the point of view of providing regional content via such new media. And to tell you the truth, we are in talks with potential business partners in this regard.

    Does that mean that APTN is looking at joint ventures with service providers like telecom companies for delivering regional content? 

    That’s right. It’s one of the options. But at this point of time, I cannot tell you the specific nature of the talks and people with whom we are talking.

    What is APTN doing to improve and expand its distribution network of the services? 

    The big issue is providing live or near-live service. We have to get a system in place where the movement of content happens quickly from various regions to be sent to our London centre from where it can be distributed to our customers. For this, again, we are looking at various options like satellite-based and Internet -based delivery.

    Is APTN looking at Indian partners from the delivery point of view?

    There is a good probability of that happening. There are two aspects to such decisions too. First, it always makes sense to have a local partner who understands the market. There is no point is sitting in London and thinking that we also know various markets. But then the local partner should be good enough to gel in with our plans. The second aspect is that we may do it on own.

     

    However, I’d like to be categorical here that the decision would depend a lot on the regulatory framework in India and the need (or the redundancy) for a local partner vis-?-vis the law of the land. APTN abides by the rules and regulations in all the countries and recognises the need for such a set up in each country. We’d abide by all the regulations in the country.

    “Internet is one area where we are very bullish and trying to see how we can combine the text (AP’s wire service), photo and video services together for a client delivered on the Internet”

    Is APTN focusing on the non-traditional media with a new aggressiveness? Does it feel that new technology and delivery platforms would come up with better business opportunities? 

    Yes. There is a feeling that faster the content is delivered, the better. Internet is one area where we are very bullish and trying to see how we can combine the text (AP’s wire service), photo and video services together for a client delivered on the Internet.

     

    I personally feel that products delivered over the Internet would hold sway over other media. If you see, many media houses are moving slowly towards this structure where the text is combined with other services like streaming video and still pictures.

    Considering the expansion that is being undertaken by APTN here, what is the size of investment? 

    I obviously cannot tell you the exact figures, but the investments run into multi-million dollars. The investment is generally broken into two parts, the operational cost and the capital expenditure. Investments in both the segments are in seven digit figures. It may not be a huge number, but the regional news coverage would get an extra boost.

    Who are your Indian clients? 

    Most big broadcasters like Aaj Tak, Star News and NDTV are our clients. We are also in discussion with Doordarshan.

    Has APTN tried tapping the Indian regional language channels? 

    Yes, that’s an area we are actively looking into, but no actual discussions have been held with possible customers yet. But we do realise that vernacular language channels are potential customers of news and other events too and are exploring how such a service, as and when it materialises, can be tailored to suit their needs. Simply because one size would not fit all.

    How big is the Indian market in the global kitty of APTN? 

    At present, pretty small. But the effort is to try expand the traditional market and tap the new media too.

    What has market research , which you have undertaken, shown you? 

    Several aspects came up through the market research. There is a feeling that we provide too much content or are not sufficiently focused. Then we need to keep in mind the order of priority of our clients and segment the market and content.

     

    But it is also true that the basic issues in India are the same as in any other parts of the world. The strategy for enhancing regional coverage is based on this only.

    There is a distinction between us and news channels operating in India and we have to get this across to the government too

    How do you view the Indian regulatory framework for media that has been undergoing several changes in recent times and also creating controversies in the bargain? 

    Personally speaking, I feel the march of technology is going to make a lot of such framework and structure anyway redundant. If you are trying to be projectionist, then it may create problems as the free market would ultimately have its say.

     

    Having said that, I also feel and recognise that every country needs to have its own set of rules and regulations and in that way, India is no exception. I would appreciate if you have a projectionist attitude , say, in the field of production of entertainment related stuff. Many countries like France do that. Still, I feel that greater liberalisation is an inevitability.

    Are you also meeting government ministers and officials to discuss the regulatory framework in India? 

    I haven’t yet, but I think we need to clarify certain issues with the government. The government has asked for clarifications on whether we are a channel and that too foreign owned. We also understand there are various riders for foreign wire services.

     

    So, I think these things need to be clarified and the doubt removed.Though I must admit that I have not found anyhting inhibiting in the government queries. APTN is a not a channel, nor has any ambition of becoming one. There is a distinction between us and news channels operating in India and we have to get this across to the government too.

     

  • APTN gets exclusive interview with McCartney

    LONDON: Back from his hugely successful tour of the United States, rock ‘n’ roll legend Paul McCartney was interviewed on 24 March, exclusively by Associated Press Television News (APTN).
    Speaking to APTN Entertainment’s News Editor Katherine Smith, on the eve of his first date of his European tour, McCartney said that despite the war in Iraq, the show must go on.
    “What we are here to do is lift people’s spirits, so obviously if the times are difficult, that kind of identifies our job a little more clearly. So, I was thinking in difficult times people need something else to balance their feeling, so that is what we are here for is to just lift spirits and we hope to start doing that tomorrow night.”
    McCartney also revealed that the European leg would end in his hometown of Liverpool.
    “It is always lovely to go home to Liverpool, so I think we can expect a party you know, we’ll be up for it and I think the audience will. I can say I love the people of Liverpool because I am one of them and it is my hometown and I get up there quite a lot. I have a lot of relatives there – that will probably be the entire audience, my relatives.”
    The three-month European tour will include a stop in Moscow, where McCartney will play his first-ever Russian gig on 24 May 2003. McCartney’s two and a half hour, 36-song show includes 22 Beatles songs, the most Beatles songs ever performed in any one show, plus more than a dozen hits from his Wings and solo periods.
    McCartney, who was reunited with Ringo Starr and George Harrison, before the latter’s death, for a secret jam session, says that performing Beatles tracks during this tour is the only way they will now be heard. 
    “Obviously The Beatles broke up, it would have been great if we would have been able to continue and it was The Beatles now, but as that did not happen, and could not happen, this is how it is now. So, I don’t worry about the past. You know that it was something great and I am really proud of it and had a great time then, but strangely enough I am having a great time now you know, so I don’t worry about what it might have been specially when it is this good.”
    Talking about his appeal to young and old alike, McCartney compared the appeal of the timeless Beatles’ song to the current success of Eminem. “You get the nostalgia, you get the sheer fact that the songs still work. That is something that I would have never prophesied, you know.You don’t think it would work, but even alongside people like Eminem, who I like, I really respect his work and his lyrics, I think our stuff still works. Something like ‘Eleanor Rigby’ alongside something of Eminem’s, I think there is something in common, it is something you can get hold of, you can get interested in the story, so I think there is something there that just lasts and touches a nerve in people.” 
    APTN News and Entertainment subscribers were able to access the entire interview on Monday, 24 March 2003, in their evening bulletins. 

  • APTN brings war into Chinese drawing rooms

    LONDON: Associated Press Television News (APTN), the world’s leading television news agency, made broadcast history when it helped bring live coverage of the war in Iraq to the Chinese state television, China Central Television (CCTV).
    CCTV is one of 40 broadcasters which has signed up to APTN Direct – a new service which delivers two satellite channels of live, war-related coverage to it existing subscribers.
    When war broke out, CCTV broke into scheduled programming, using APTN coverage from Baghdad and also live coverage of war planes taking off from the USS Constellation in the Persian Gulf. “China watchers say it is the first time they can remember CCTV breaking into scheduled programming for an international news event. It is certainly the first time they have run live pictures from an American warship in action,” said Nigel Baker, APTN’s Director of Content. 
    APTN used a videophone with a gyroscopic antenna to deliver live pictures from the USS Constellation. The live video was used by broadcasters worldwide. APTN was also the first organisation to broadcast live pictures of Umm Qasr, in southern Iraq, using a specially-equipped desert friendly vehicle fitted with a customised light-weight satellite uplink. A similar vehicle was also used to deliver live coverage of the bombing of Mosul in northern Iraq. 
    APTN made a multi-million dollar investment in technology and satellite capacity to deliver the APTN Direct service, which allows broadcasters to access live material of the war – including pictures from Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Turkey, and the Persian Gulf. The 40 customers were signed in the two weeks before war broke out. 
    Said Baker: “This must be the fastest roll-out of a news agency service and demonstrates the intense international interest in live news coverage.” APTN currently has 120 staff and 14 uplinks deployed in the Middle East. It is also the only international organisation providing transmission facilities for broadcasters – remaining in Baghdad since the conflict started.
    APTN Direct was launched on 14 March 2003, and is available to customers of its main channel – known as the Global Video Wire. 

  • APTN and Nat Geo sign new content deal

    CANNES: Associated Press Television News (APTN) has signed a multi-year agreement with National Geographic Television and Film, which will see premium news features delivered to hundreds of clients around the world. .
    The deal was announced at MIPTV in Cannes by Ian Ritchie, Chief Executive, APTN, and Matthew White, Vice President, Film Library for National Geographic Television & Film (NGT&F). The deal originated out of the Film Library’s London office. 
    The new partnership will produce non-branded news feature stories on a wide range of topics, from adventure and exploration; peoples and culture; nature and wildlife, science and health, photography; history and destinations. Features will be broadcast on a daily basis over APTN’s international news feed to its broadcast clients worldwide.
    Nigel Baker, APTN’s Director of Content said: “APTN has become a world leader in supplying coverage of hard news. The deal with National Geographic will now enable us to also provide high quality feature material.”
    News features for APTN’s international news feeds will be submitted to APTN on a daily and weekly basis and will cover timely subjects, from a distinctive National Geographic perspective. Stories featured will be cultural, ecological, political and economic.
    “APTN will be an important platform for us to extend the reach and application of our material,” said White. “As we move into an increasingly technology-driven era, National Geographic Film Library is actively seeking new, creative opportunities for our content in news and entertainment. Working on a branded and non-branded basis in a variety of genres and formats, our goal is to create innovative and exciting programming.”
    Features will be primarily international in focus to appeal to APTN’s core audience. A dedicated team of news writers and producers in National Geographic’s headquarters in Washington DC will deliver news feeds to APTN headquarters in London. APTN will deliver the news feed to its clients over its Global Video Wire network of satellites.

  • APTN will launch Direct to cover the Gulf war

    MUMBAI: No news may be good news but bad news is great news. So while Bush is chalking out his invasion plan for Iraq, the Associated Press Television News (APTN) has already made arrangements to capture the action live.
    APTN is launching two extra channels under brand name APTN Direct. The video news agency will be providing the signals to the television news companies who subscribe its main satellite service – the Global Video Wire. 
    According to an official release, the London based new gathering company has invested 12 months of planning and multi-million dollars in hardware, software and satellite capacity to provide live coverage in the event of a new Gulf war.


    APTN Direct will be providing live coverage of events as they unfold in Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Turkey, Israel, and Britain and the United States, as well as live reactions from other parts of the world.
    The channels designed for the war coverage will commence its telecast at 12:30 pm on 14 March 2003 or earlier, if necessary. For the initial three months the channel will operate for 24-hours a day, seven days a week.
    While the move to launch APTN Direct may be recent, the news agency has already begun transmitting news videos from Baghdad since October 2002 via a satellite uplinking truck stationed in the Iraqi capital. It has a total of 120 staff with 40 cameras deployed throughout the Middle East.
    The release also claims that APTN has readied 12 satellite earth stations to the region, including five truck-mount ones. The trucks deployed are specially-constructed desert-friendly vehicles with the latest, lightweight uplinks mounted on the roof.
    Meanwhile the team in the field, for maximum mobility and speed of deliver, has also been equipped with the latest software to allow them to transmit video over satellite telephones.

  • APTN offers Saddam Hussein exclusive to Indian news channels

    APTN offers Saddam Hussein exclusive to Indian news channels

    MUMBAI: Indian news television channels wanting to give their viewers a peek at whom the US calls the monster from Baghdad can do so now. Courtesy Associated Press Television News (APTN), the international video arm of the Associated Press.

    APTN is offering the telecast rights to anyone wanting to air the recent interview of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein by former British politician Tony Benn in Baghdad. The news agency has the international exclusive distribution rights of the interview.

    An APTN spokesperson has asked broadcasters who want to use the footage to contact APTN’s library or aptn_library@ap.org.

    APTN distributed the interview with Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi leader’s first interview since the 1991 Gulf War, at 5 pm – 5:40 pm GMT (repeated at 7:00 pm – 7:40 pm GMT) on Tuesday, 4 February 2003. In the UK, Channel 4 aired Tony Benn’s interviews with Hussein from 7 pm (GMT) onwards on 4 February 2003.

    The network aired around 25 minutes of the hour-long interview during Channel 4 News which was anchored by Jon Snow.

    It is understood that BBC was originally planning to buy the interview for broadcast on BBC Two, however talks with the Arab Television Network, the company which owns the rights to the piece, fell through after the corporation refused to pay more than the bare production costs.

    Channel 4 refused to confirm how much it had paid for the interview — the first the dictator has given to a Westerner in 12 years — but sources pointed towards a five-figure sum.

  • APTN appoints senior producer for S Asia

    APTN appoints senior producer for S Asia

    LONDON: Andy Drake has been appointed as the senior producer for South Asia, by Associated Press Television News (APTN), the international video arm of the Associated Press.

    He will be based at APTN’s bureau in Islamabad and will be responsible for news coverage in Pakistan. He will officially take up his new role in November 2002.

    Drake has worked in the London Newsroom on the Asia desk and has also undertaken extensive field work in Pakistan, India, Kashmir and Sri Lanka, amongst other assignments.