Tag: BBC World

  • BBC World’s ‘Asia Today’ speaks with Bollywood actress Priety Zinta

    BBC World’s ‘Asia Today’ speaks with Bollywood actress Priety Zinta

    MUMBAI: Bollywood actress Priety Zinta speaks about being a ‘Star’ in India on BBC World’s show Asia Today. It airs at 7 pm on 22 December.

    She speaks with BBC World’s Karisma Vaswani and talks about the diverse characters that she has played in her films. She admits that she doesn’t mind bidding adieu to showbiz and settling down to domesticity.

    Priety also gives her candid advice to the numerous aspirants, who come to the entertainment capital of India, Mumbai to make it big in the Hindi film Industry.

    Ms. Zinta however, is not very pleased with certain section of the Indian media, whom she believes have been rather irresponsible in their reporting lately.

  • ‘Being Indian’ voted best BBC World documentary in 2006

    ‘Being Indian’ voted best BBC World documentary in 2006

    MUMBAI: The six documentary programmes with the most votes in BBC World’s Best Of The Year: Documentary online poll have been announced. Throughout November, BBC World viewers have had the opportunity to vote for the most outstanding documentary programme shown on the channel this year, from a selection of 15 documentaries – many of which are award-winning BBC productions.

    Voting closed on 4 December, and the six documentary programmes that received the most votes will be shown across two weekends at the end of December.

    Being Indian with 18.95 per cent of votes came out on top. This airs on 30 December at 8 pm with repeats on 31 December at 11 am, 4 pm. Being Indian follows the lives of four children from widely differing backgrounds, in a country with a fast moving economy and half its population under the age of 35. The programme delves into what the social change and mobility really means for children of India today. This episode follows Biru Malik, a nine-year-old, who lives with his family in one bedroom. One of his family’s main jobs is to prepare funeral pyres and cremate bodies on the banks of the Ganges.

    Another documentary The World Uncovered: Sex Crimes And The Vatican got 16.36 per cent of votes. This airs on 30 December at 5:45 pm with repeats on 31 December at 7:45 am, 1:45 pm. This programme examines a secret document which sets out a procedure for dealing with child sex abuse scandals within the Catholic Church. Crimen Sollicitationis was enforced for 20 years by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became the Pope. It instructs bishops on how to deal with allegations of child abuse against priests and has been seen by few outsiders. Critics say the document has been used to evade prosecution for sex crimes.

    Kill Or Cure? The Deadly Sleep got 15.04 per cent of votes. This airs on 30 December at 9 pm, and 31 December at 6 pm. Sleeping sickness is one of the most deadly of the forgotten diseases. Experts thought it had been eradicated, but it’s back with a vengeance and now mobile field teams are out in the bush in the Democratic Republic of Congo, carrying out tests to try to beat the disease.

    BBC World’s editorial team selected the original shortlist of 15, based on viewer panel research and feedback, spread of subject matter and global availability.

  • BBC World examines the state of Aids in India

    BBC World examines the state of Aids in India

    MUMBAI: News channel BBC World has announced that its initiative Who’s Afraid of HIV? returns for a new four-part series exploring the global social revolution driven by HIV, where life and society are being re-shaped by a disease. Breadwinners die, girls are forced into prostitution, and infidelity is on the increase. In this series, we revisit some of the locations featured in the series last year, to find out how some of the children affected by this deadly disease have managed to survive.

    On 14 December 2006 at 4 pm the channel looks at India. In traditional conservative India victims of the HIV virus are frequently referred to as “those with bad blood” or ‘those with low morals”. Stigma and discrimination are so commonplace that with the threat of wives being divorced, employees fired, children abandoned and refused entry to schools, few are willing to reveal their HIV status to even those closest to them.

    A year on the show returns to Nammakkal, Tamil Nadu, Southern India in search of 11 year old Vinod and his family. Has his and his mother Poonkundi’s HIV status become public as they feared, has the vital financial support from Poonkundi’s brother been withdrawn as a result? If so what does this mean for them in their small rural community. And are the anti viral drugs that Vinod and Poonkundi have become dependant on still available?

    On 21 December Russia takes centrestage. Following the fall of the communist states in eastern Europe and the subsequent economic depression and unemployment, HIV has spread at alarming rates over the last 10 years. Fuelled by a huge intravenous drug use problem much of Russia in the late 1990s had very high HIV infection rates.

    The Russian Baltic territory of Kaliningrad, nestling between Poland and Lithuania, may now have drug use being brought under control but for the orphans of this epidemic, like 3 year old Svieta, the future is still very uncertain. The damage most likely caused by Svetia’s mother’s continued drug abuse during her pregnancy could be clearly seen when we first met her, one year on has she begun to talk or are the affects of this combined with the virus continuing to stunt her development. For her elderly adoptive parents the strain of raising a 4 year old child is taking its toll.

    On 28 December the channel visits Malawi. The small town of Monkey Bay on the banks of Lake Malawi, like so many other small towns and villages throughout southern Africa, is being destroyed by HIV/Aids. The channel returns to Monkey bay where Joyce Lwanda jumps from class to class struggling to teach an entire primary school on her own. For the children taught by Joyce, head teacher at Kankhande primary School, HIV is both a threat to their lives, and for those lucky enough to avoid the worse affects of the disease it may just take away their best chance at Education. Joyce one of the few teachers that seems to bother to appear at school regularly is HIV positive.

  • BBC World Service names singer Silva as ‘Next Big Thing’

    BBC World Service names singer Silva as ‘Next Big Thing’

    MUMBAI: The BBC World Service has awarded 17 year old Armenian singer Silva with the Next Big Thing award for her song I Like.

    For the song composed by her brother, Silva was chosen ahead of six other acts from around the world at the final, held in the BBC’s Maida Vale studios in London.

    The second spot in the competition was split between Malawian rapper NiC and London duo Stefan and Mya, while the third place was awarded to Brazilian collective Sweet Cherry Fury for their song Cold Blonde Body.

    The finalists were selected by a panel of music journalists and experts. The judges for the final included producer William Orbit, Rough Trade founder Jeff Travis, African star Angelique Kidjo and Dirty Pretty Things drummer Gary Powell.

    The competition which is part of the BBC’s Generation Next season, was aimed exclusively at acts aged under 18.

  • Orange and BBC World expand mobile distribution deal

    Orange and BBC World expand mobile distribution deal

    MUMBAI : Orange and BBC World have extended their current mobile distribution offering by signing a global deal which will allow Orange mobile phone customers in eight new countries to watch the channel live.

    BBC World, the BBC’s 24-hour international news information service will be the only English language news channel to be streamed live to mobiles in Belgium, Poland, the Netherlands, Romania, Portugal, Jordan, Egypt and the Dominican Republic, asserts an official release.

    Orange mobile customers in France have been able to watch BBC World for the past two years. Orange France recently signed a renewal deal to continue this relationship and also offer the channel to IPTV customers.

    The global agreement will allow Orange mobile broadband customers to access live news wherever they are by watching BBC World on their mobiles. It also increases BBC World’s new media distribution channels worldwide, encompassing mobile, broadband and live streaming to PCs and airline seatback TV systems, adds the release.

    BBC World’s regional director and business development Europe, Middle East, South Asia, and America Gerry Ritchie said, “Orange is one of the most forward thinking new mobile distribution platforms for television so we are thrilled to extend our relationship with them. This new live streaming deal makes our channel even more accessible to mobile users who like to keep in touch with breaking global news while on the move.”

    France Telecom executive VP content division Patricia Langrand added “Orange was first in several countries to offer mobile TV to our customers. This agreement allows us to extend and enhance our mobile TV offer ensuring Orange customers have access to a variety of channels at any time. We are now delighted to increase the scope of our partnership with BBC World to include multiple territories.”

    The Conference agreed that the transition period from analogue to digital broadcasting, which begins at 0001 UTC 17 June 2006, should end on 17 June 2015, but some countries preferred an additional five-year extension for the VHF band (174-230 MHz).

    Orange mobile TV offers customers a multitude of television services and content, customers may view a variety of programmes on their mobiles including soap operas, music videos and sports programmes, further adds the release.

  • BBC looks at how the winners of the first edition of The World Challenge 2005 are faring

    BBC looks at how the winners of the first edition of The World Challenge 2005 are faring

    MUMBAI: World Challenge 2006 – a global competition seeking to highlight and reward outstanding examples of community enterprise and innovation – enters the final stage of this year’s competition with only a few days of voting left. The winners will be announced at an event in The Hague on 6 December 2006.

    BBC World had joined with Shell for the second year to run World Challenge 2006.

    As a prelude to unveiling this year’s winners, BBC World takes a look back at how last year’s winning projects have developed in the past 12 months. The three winning finalists from the 2005 competition feature in World Challenge: One Year On, which airs on BBC World on 18 November.

    In the programme, the three projects – Coconets from the Philippines, Malta’s Edible Oil Company and Vanuatu’s Nguna-Pele Rechargeable Battery – are revisited to find out how they have developed since the competition last year.

    Last year there was tough competition among the 12 projects that made it to the finals. Finalists included a range of projects from the production of organic leather clothes in England, a tribal women’s basket weaving co-operative from Kenya, chilli peppers as elephant repellent from Zambia, eco roof titles from the Ukraine, an employment project from South Africa for casual labourers and wildlife friendly wheat production from Spain.

    In the 2005 competition, a public poll saw the Coconets project in the Philippines emerge as the clear winner. Malta’s Edible Oil Company and Vanuatu’s Nguna-Pele Rechargeable Battery project were both named as runners-up.

    Dr. Justino Arboleda, general manager of Coconets, the winning project says: “When we actually won we were instant celebrities in our country and in all the newspapers and television stations and that gave our company a lot of publicity. People now deal with us as though we are a big company and we are getting larger and larger contracts.”

    Since last year, the company has expanded into the very poorest sections of society and bought more machinery with the prize money.

    There’s a similar story of growth for Vanuatu’s Nguna-Pele Rechargeable Battery project. When World Challenge returned to the reef rehabilitation scheme in September, Peace Corps volunteer Chris Bartlett pointed out that before last year’s competition there were only a few marine protected areas, but as a result of winning the prize money, that number has doubled – with every single village on Pele now having a conservation area. Chris says: “We see many more tourists on a weekly basis and all of that money then goes back to the local communities, which has then tripled and quadrupled the amount of enthusiasm that the local people have for conservation.”

    A year on, Pippa Psalia, commercial director of runner-up Edible Oil Company in Malta says, “Most certainly World Challenge has heightened the profile of bio-diesel… I think a competition like the BBC World’s World Challenge, for a country as small as Malta and a novel project such as ours, gave us a tremendous boost. Not only has it heightened our profile locally but it has also given us access overseas.”

    Robert Lamb, series producer of the World Challenge 2006 programmes says, “What comes through strongly is that it was not just the prize money that was most valuable, but also the publicity through the BBC World and Newsweek coverage. It has the knock-on effect of creating a lot of local press coverage. In that way others have been inspired, which after all is the real purpose of the World Challenge.”

    The inspiration continues this year with the current competition having received a record number of project nominations earlier this year, with a total of 816 from 120 countries including, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Greece, India and Uganda – a 79 per cent increase on the 2005 competition’s total nominations of 457. Voting for the 2006 competition ends on 19 November 2006 and the winner will be announced at an event in The Hague a few weeks later.

  • BBC World Service to kick off roadshow in Northern India from Thursday

    BBC World Service to kick off roadshow in Northern India from Thursday

    MUMBAI: BBC World Service has announced that its radio service BBC Hindi hopes to meet more than 20,000 listeners in a series of roadshow events across three states in Northern India. From tomorrow 16 November to Monday 25 December, Your world, your voice is taking BBC Hindi teams to 14 towns across Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Jharkand, engaging audiences in lively debates broadcast live on the BBC, together with other activities, including street theatre and website demonstrations.

    The debates have been inspired by local residents who took part in specially-commissioned research. Conducted by the Delhi-based rural research agency, Prastut Consulting, the research is based on interviews with decision-makers and residents at each of the roadshow locations and gives the BBC invaluable insights into what really matters to its audiences in India’s heartland.

    BBC Hindi head Achala Sharma says, “We always keep our hand on the pulse of India: what concerns them, what their expectations are, what they want to change in their lives. The special research we commissioned this year is a real treasure trove, giving us first-hand information which will form the basis of our roadshow debates as well as our programming in general.

    “All those interviewed for this research said that they see the BBC as being able to influence change. That’s why we are looking forward to meeting our audiences in this roadshow.”

    Connecting with local culture, the BBC uses traditional Kalamkari artwork throughout the Your world, your voice roadshow. Street theatre will open each event with a dramatised demonstration of the values and benefits of listening to the BBC. There will also be demonstrations of the bbchindi.com website. Simultaneously, BBC World Service has organised purely promotional activity in 34 towns of the states of Madhya Pradesh, Uttaranchal and Rajasthan using the campaign imagery and messages.

    BBC Hindi programmes are produced from studios in London and New Delhi and are set in a rolling format, with news, current affairs and features. The interactive morning and evening programmesAaj Ke Din and Aaj Kal, bring the BBC Hindi listeners news, analysis and interviews on issues, from current affairs and careers to showbiz and sports.

    BBC Hindi is available on short wave and medium wave radio and via cable television.

  • BBC to air 400th episode of ‘Talking Movies’

    BBC to air 400th episode of ‘Talking Movies’

    MUMBAI: BBC World has announced that its film based show Talking Movies looks back over more than seven years of news, views and interviews this week to celebrate its 400th episode.

    The distinguished cinema correspondent Tom Brook hosts the show which began in 1999 and has been praised for its fresh approach to film by actors including Michael Caine and Russell Crowe and directors such as Baz Luhrmann. With reviews, in-depth interviews, and behind-the-scenes reports, Talking Movies is regularly filmed from New York with specials from Hollywood and the Cannes, Sundance and Toronto international film festivals. Tom is currently celebrating his 22 year of reporting on the US film industry for the BBC, and has attended every Academy Awards ceremony during this time.

    The BBC says tha Talking Movies has interviewed most of the big names in modern cinema. In this special anniversary episode, the Talking Movies team trawls its archives for some classic interviews featuring Michael Caine; Woody Allen; Julia Roberts; Terry Gilliam; Woody Harrelson; Lauren Bacall; Holly Hunter; Dame Judi Dench; Mike Figgis; Robert Redford; George Clooney; and Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    Brook says, “We try to be different from mainstream movies shows. We take a serious, independently-minded journalistic approach in our coverage that sets us apart from our competitors. Our reports have ranged from examining the role of the movie publicist to taking an in-depth look at the Indian film industry. I’m very proud of our programme. I am blessed with a dedicated team of talented picture editors, shooters and reporters who have enabled me to present each episode of Talking Movies since we began in January 1999.”

    BBC says that the show has earned respect from key industry players and has a growing number of fans around the globe. As well as endorsements from celebrities such as Martin Scorsese, Hugh Jackman and top Indian filmmaker Mira Nair, the team regularly receives emails from viewers in countries as far apart as Ghana, India, Israel, New Zealand and Singapore. It also has its own webpage at bbcworld.com/talkingmovies where viewers can watch the programme online.

    This special anniversary edition will transmit on BBC World from 8 November at 4 pm, 9 November at 9 pm and 10 November at 2 pm.

  • BBC World is available on Tata Sky

    BBC World is available on Tata Sky

    MUMBAI: BBC World is now available on DTH service provider Tata Sky.

    BBC World regional director distribution and business development, Europe, Middle-East & South Asia Gerry Ritchie says, “We are very excited about our new association with Tata Sky. At a time, when India is witnessing rapid growth and change in the television and entertainment industry, Tata Sky provides us with an ideal platform to reach our target viewer with an interest in international news and events. This new agreement with Tata Sky will introduce BBC World to new viewers and increase the channel’s audience reach.”

    Tata Sky MD and CEO Vikram Kaushik said, “It is our endeavour to provide Indian viewers with a world-class satellite television service, offering the best in home entertainment. Since the launch of our service in August, we have continuously expanded our offering to include India’s most popular television channels and a host of exciting, interactive services.

    “The availability of BBC World on our platform reiterates our commitment to provide our subscribers with access to top-of-the-line content, in this case, the best of international news.”

  • Casbaa launches mobile TV group

    Casbaa launches mobile TV group

    Hong Kong: The Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (Casbaa) has announced the formal launch of the Casbaa Mobile Group, a team of organisation members dedicated to the effective, business-model focused deployment of mobile TV services across the Asia Pacific.

    The announcement was made during the first plenary day of the Casbaa Convention 2006 in Hong Kong.

    Among the Casbaa members participating in this Casbaa Group are mobile content providers such as Turner Broadcasting, ESPN Star Sports, CNBC Asia, BBC World, Star Group, Walt Disney Television International and Sony Pictures TV International, as well as platform operator PCCW, handset manufacturer Nokia and chipset supplier Sun Microsystems.

    The Casbaa Mobile Group met with the DVB-H Asia Pacific Alliance (Dapa), which comprises DVB-H dedicated broadcast platform operators such as Bridge Networks of Australia, MiTV of Malaysia and MECA from Indonesia, as well as Nokia, an official statement from Casbaa said.

    “The Casbaa objective is to create an environment where the regulatory and business issues surrounding Mobile TV can be debated with hard information exchanged to encourage the distribution of paid video content to as many Mobile TV subscribers as possible,” said Casbaa CEO Simon Twiston Davies.

    The Casbaa engagement with Dapa followed a meeting earlier in the year with the Asia Mobile Initiative (AMI), where video-to-mobile streaming information was exchanged with roaming platforms M1-Vodafone (Singapore), Celcom (Malaysia), DTAC (Thailand) and SMART (Philippines).

    “As is demonstrated by the heavy emphasis on mobile issues in our the Casbaa Convention programme this year, the pay-TV industry places the development of a robust business model for Mobile TV as one of its highest priorities for our digital future,” said Twiston Davies.

    There is a long-term commitment by the content industry to work more closely with mobile platforms and manufacturers to create an economically viable business for everyone. This is just the beginning of the development of new and substantive revenue stream for our industry, he added.