Tag: Bollywood

  • Meet a witty Aamir in Koffee with Karan

    Meet a witty Aamir in Koffee with Karan

    MUMBAI: After a brilliant start to the #KoffeeCentury with the Khan brothers; Karan Johar keeps the celebrations going by inviting Bollywood’s Mr. Perfectionist and acting powerhouse, Aamir Khan in Koffee with Karan. He will be accompanied by his onscreen daughters from his upcoming movie Dangal, Fatima Sana Shaikh and Sanya Malhotra. The episode will air on Star World and Star World HD on Sunday at 9 pm.

    The usually elusive and restrained Khan will be seen getting unabashed, witty and cool. From admitting that he would most definitely succumb to a beautiful woman’s charms to pulling Johar’s leg when he states that he only pretends to like Koffee with Karan, Aamir is candid in a never before seen avatar.

    He also goes on to confess to being so emotional that he cried while watching the trailer of Dangal on YouTube for the first time and also reveals his hidden talents when he cheekily states that all a girl needs to do is get close to him to impress him and he will do the rest.

    Shaikh and Malhotra join in the banter as they claim that Khan has no friends except them. They also go on to accuse Khan of stealing their answers in a bid to win the Koffee hamper in the Rapid Fire Round.

    Link to sneak peek: https://www.facebook.com/StarWorldIndia/

  • Branded Content isn’t all about visibility: Maxus ESP’s Pooja Verma

    Branded Content isn’t all about visibility: Maxus ESP’s Pooja Verma

    MUMBAI:  Gone are the days when brands would like a piece of  popular content and sponsor it, or spend some marketing budget over product placements. It starts with finding out the brand objectives first and matching it with the relevance of the content.  It is not limited to a movie association or being a title sponsor of a prime time show; a plethora of content is available for brands to smartly associate with. Moving on from simple sponsorship deals, brands are donning the role of content creators themselves, both, short and long form, on television and the digital media. Content or, more precisely, branded content, is the new buzz word in the industry, as digital is becoming the norm. Naturally, traditional brands look at it as a risk, the same way digital was spoken of 10 years ago.

    While there are several brands jumping the content bandwagon following a few success stories, it is important to understand what content will work for them, and when. That is when specialists such as Pooja Verma come in. Verma took on the role of head of content, Entertainment and Sports Partnerships  (ESP) at Maxus  a little over a year ago and  life has been very busy since, she happily shares.

    Maxus ESP, the content solutions arm of Maxus stepped up the branded content ante by facilitating some very innovative brand and content associations — Vodafone’s ‘Be Super’ that went live on Independence Day to promote its 4G connections, Maybellene and  Manmarziyan, Tata Tiago’s association with TVF’s Tripling, and recently Vodafone’s association for Rock On 2 are some of the golden examples.

    In a candid chat with indiantelevision’s Papri Das, Verma looks back on the year, and opens up on the current trends in branded content, Indian cinema’s prospects of building franchises, and what brands look for in a piece of content.

    Excerpts:

    What is the truth behind the current buzz for branded content?

    Media agencies understand that it is not about the 30-seconder anymore, ever since social media became the norm. Thus they are investing significantly in technology, data and content of-course. Storytelling is a big part of how brands want to bring its message alive.

    While digital as a medium has gone from  a risk to the norm, content or storytelling for brands has taken up that space. Words like ‘native advertising’, ‘content marketing’ are being thrown up, because today’s consumers aren’t interested in being talked down to. They want to participate and engage, and then make a conscious decision to whether associate with a particular content, brand or product.

    Therefore, good storytelling that is organic and intuitive and captures the essence of a brand is playing a much bigger role.

    Are brands really finding it appealing and willing to spend on it?

    Marketers, brands and advertisers are increasingly looking at content from a partnership perspective. The old concept of buying an IP or putting some money on show is being redefined. Content sponsorships have taken a much larger and smarter role.

    For example, a brand spending  Rs 10 in sponsoring a TV show now thinks how that money can work for the brand as if it were Rs 20. Which is where innovative partnerships come in. Yes, the run-of-the-mill sponsorship is the route taken but the difference is in how those sponsorships bring the brand alive. Moving forward that is the route we see becoming a norm for brands. Making the investment make harder for you and more memorable as well.

    2016 has seen some interesting brands-movie associations. Yet Bollywood has a long way to catch up to international cinema when it comes to being brand-friendly. What do you think is holding Bollywood back?

    I would give the industry credit for sitting up and taking notice. Firstly, stories are becoming central to the craft. The craft of storytelling and how it has changed is more than visible today. The thing with franchises is that it’s the next level. I can tell you very safely that the franchise culture will soon hit Bollywood as well. ‘Dhoom’ has three editions already. The way characters are being created shows that content makers, storytellers are thinking long term when making it. Characters around which you can spin another tale. That is great news for brands.

    Look at all the bond movies, Aston Martin for car, and the Omega watch is a given. I can’t say how soon India will adopt the franchise culture, but it will be sooner than you are expecting. Hollywood saw the franchise boom because the studios took notice of the opportunity in allied businesses. The good thing is brands have started budgeting annually for movie partnerships.

    At which point does a brand start its association with a piece of content?

    It is around the same time a story is conceived. The thing about branded content is — whether you look at it from the film lens, or the passion point lens of sports, live gigs and others, or from a pure-play content perspective of TV, digital etc — stories are at the center of it. The whole point is ‘a brand should be spoken of in the context of the right story, which the consumers can relate to. Brands should come in at a time when it spots a great story, knows that there is future to the story, characters are memorable, and the product or the brand seems organic to it.

    When it comes to films, studios take the call when stories come to them, and it is usually when they are making up mind for cast, shoot plans etc. Since it is a relationships based business, we are always in touch with the studios and keep an out for which film they are investing in.

    How pressing are clients when it comes to RoI from branded content? How do you measure the success of branded content for your clients?

    Looking for RoI is a given and rightly so. True, though, that the measurement of a successfully done brand integration is an industry wide debate. Everyone has a different opinion, a different take on how to measure. The way we look at it is not as simple as how many times a brand’s logo popped up in the content. It is not about how many times your brand’s name appears. It is equally if not more important to ask ‘How many people are speaking of the core thought of the  brand.’

    For example, when we did the ‘Be Super’ campaign for Vodafone during Independence Day, the entire exercise brought alive how one can be super. People were talking about it. Of course, we got good views on the video, but that 20 other things can get you. A 30-sec TVC also gets great views. Acknowledging that measurement in the field of branded content is important, however the lens needs to be changed a bit.

    How do you convince a traditional brand to agree to an unconventional brand association? What parameters do you follow to decide if particular content works for a brand?

    We focus in getting the context and relevance of the content that we are recommending  fits well with the brand. Then comes the efficacy of the platform itself. Then, we discuss how we are making it ‘discoverable’. These are the questions that keep brand managers up at night as well.

    There are two ways to approach it: art and science. Art is great story, memorable characters, uniqueness of content. The science part is platform, ‘discoverability,’ finding if it’s being delivered to the right TG, is it in line with the cultural codes of the brand.

    I have had a client keen on associating with Bigg Boss, but the brand’s message was socially inclined. I couldn’t possibly recommend that. Yes, your product might be spoken about, but the brand’s positioning in the market and the psychographics it wanted to fit in will not be matched with Bigg Boss. It is not about just visibility.

    Can you think of any brand associations in recent times that were a bad fit according to you?

    Quite a few, and the examples are not just from outside, some of them were done by us. The kind of branded content we are doing now didn’t have several decades of precedence. It takes time to figure out what works for a brand and what doesn’t. But, increasingly, brands are becoming more aware of the value that good branded content can bring them. And, it is only because these bad examples exist that I can speak about the good ones.

  • Branded Content isn’t all about visibility: Maxus ESP’s Pooja Verma

    Branded Content isn’t all about visibility: Maxus ESP’s Pooja Verma

    MUMBAI:  Gone are the days when brands would like a piece of  popular content and sponsor it, or spend some marketing budget over product placements. It starts with finding out the brand objectives first and matching it with the relevance of the content.  It is not limited to a movie association or being a title sponsor of a prime time show; a plethora of content is available for brands to smartly associate with. Moving on from simple sponsorship deals, brands are donning the role of content creators themselves, both, short and long form, on television and the digital media. Content or, more precisely, branded content, is the new buzz word in the industry, as digital is becoming the norm. Naturally, traditional brands look at it as a risk, the same way digital was spoken of 10 years ago.

    While there are several brands jumping the content bandwagon following a few success stories, it is important to understand what content will work for them, and when. That is when specialists such as Pooja Verma come in. Verma took on the role of head of content, Entertainment and Sports Partnerships  (ESP) at Maxus  a little over a year ago and  life has been very busy since, she happily shares.

    Maxus ESP, the content solutions arm of Maxus stepped up the branded content ante by facilitating some very innovative brand and content associations — Vodafone’s ‘Be Super’ that went live on Independence Day to promote its 4G connections, Maybellene and  Manmarziyan, Tata Tiago’s association with TVF’s Tripling, and recently Vodafone’s association for Rock On 2 are some of the golden examples.

    In a candid chat with indiantelevision’s Papri Das, Verma looks back on the year, and opens up on the current trends in branded content, Indian cinema’s prospects of building franchises, and what brands look for in a piece of content.

    Excerpts:

    What is the truth behind the current buzz for branded content?

    Media agencies understand that it is not about the 30-seconder anymore, ever since social media became the norm. Thus they are investing significantly in technology, data and content of-course. Storytelling is a big part of how brands want to bring its message alive.

    While digital as a medium has gone from  a risk to the norm, content or storytelling for brands has taken up that space. Words like ‘native advertising’, ‘content marketing’ are being thrown up, because today’s consumers aren’t interested in being talked down to. They want to participate and engage, and then make a conscious decision to whether associate with a particular content, brand or product.

    Therefore, good storytelling that is organic and intuitive and captures the essence of a brand is playing a much bigger role.

    Are brands really finding it appealing and willing to spend on it?

    Marketers, brands and advertisers are increasingly looking at content from a partnership perspective. The old concept of buying an IP or putting some money on show is being redefined. Content sponsorships have taken a much larger and smarter role.

    For example, a brand spending  Rs 10 in sponsoring a TV show now thinks how that money can work for the brand as if it were Rs 20. Which is where innovative partnerships come in. Yes, the run-of-the-mill sponsorship is the route taken but the difference is in how those sponsorships bring the brand alive. Moving forward that is the route we see becoming a norm for brands. Making the investment make harder for you and more memorable as well.

    2016 has seen some interesting brands-movie associations. Yet Bollywood has a long way to catch up to international cinema when it comes to being brand-friendly. What do you think is holding Bollywood back?

    I would give the industry credit for sitting up and taking notice. Firstly, stories are becoming central to the craft. The craft of storytelling and how it has changed is more than visible today. The thing with franchises is that it’s the next level. I can tell you very safely that the franchise culture will soon hit Bollywood as well. ‘Dhoom’ has three editions already. The way characters are being created shows that content makers, storytellers are thinking long term when making it. Characters around which you can spin another tale. That is great news for brands.

    Look at all the bond movies, Aston Martin for car, and the Omega watch is a given. I can’t say how soon India will adopt the franchise culture, but it will be sooner than you are expecting. Hollywood saw the franchise boom because the studios took notice of the opportunity in allied businesses. The good thing is brands have started budgeting annually for movie partnerships.

    At which point does a brand start its association with a piece of content?

    It is around the same time a story is conceived. The thing about branded content is — whether you look at it from the film lens, or the passion point lens of sports, live gigs and others, or from a pure-play content perspective of TV, digital etc — stories are at the center of it. The whole point is ‘a brand should be spoken of in the context of the right story, which the consumers can relate to. Brands should come in at a time when it spots a great story, knows that there is future to the story, characters are memorable, and the product or the brand seems organic to it.

    When it comes to films, studios take the call when stories come to them, and it is usually when they are making up mind for cast, shoot plans etc. Since it is a relationships based business, we are always in touch with the studios and keep an out for which film they are investing in.

    How pressing are clients when it comes to RoI from branded content? How do you measure the success of branded content for your clients?

    Looking for RoI is a given and rightly so. True, though, that the measurement of a successfully done brand integration is an industry wide debate. Everyone has a different opinion, a different take on how to measure. The way we look at it is not as simple as how many times a brand’s logo popped up in the content. It is not about how many times your brand’s name appears. It is equally if not more important to ask ‘How many people are speaking of the core thought of the  brand.’

    For example, when we did the ‘Be Super’ campaign for Vodafone during Independence Day, the entire exercise brought alive how one can be super. People were talking about it. Of course, we got good views on the video, but that 20 other things can get you. A 30-sec TVC also gets great views. Acknowledging that measurement in the field of branded content is important, however the lens needs to be changed a bit.

    How do you convince a traditional brand to agree to an unconventional brand association? What parameters do you follow to decide if particular content works for a brand?

    We focus in getting the context and relevance of the content that we are recommending  fits well with the brand. Then comes the efficacy of the platform itself. Then, we discuss how we are making it ‘discoverable’. These are the questions that keep brand managers up at night as well.

    There are two ways to approach it: art and science. Art is great story, memorable characters, uniqueness of content. The science part is platform, ‘discoverability,’ finding if it’s being delivered to the right TG, is it in line with the cultural codes of the brand.

    I have had a client keen on associating with Bigg Boss, but the brand’s message was socially inclined. I couldn’t possibly recommend that. Yes, your product might be spoken about, but the brand’s positioning in the market and the psychographics it wanted to fit in will not be matched with Bigg Boss. It is not about just visibility.

    Can you think of any brand associations in recent times that were a bad fit according to you?

    Quite a few, and the examples are not just from outside, some of them were done by us. The kind of branded content we are doing now didn’t have several decades of precedence. It takes time to figure out what works for a brand and what doesn’t. But, increasingly, brands are becoming more aware of the value that good branded content can bring them. And, it is only because these bad examples exist that I can speak about the good ones.

  • Sony Max brings ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ for media agencies

    Sony Max brings ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ for media agencies

    MUMBAI: Sony Max gave Bollywood enthusiasts a reason to rejoice as it kick-started the third season of its flagship event, No Talkies Nataunki Returns.

    Organised exclusively for media agencies, this property is an absolute treat for movie buffs as it provides them an opportunity to participate in a national level competition wherein registered teams play ‘Dumb Charades’ on Bollywood films using hand gestures to enact and communicate with each other.

    The first round of this three-city event started in Bengaluru on 22 Nov had 13 teams participating from advertising and media agencies. This will be followed by Mumbai and Delhi with an attempt to find the ‘Filmy Deewana’. The closing night of the event will take place in Mumbai.

    The pre-activation buzz for the event is currently being held across renowned media agencies including Group M, Madison, OMD, Lodestar, Lintas and MPG, etc.

    Bollywood-themed characters are engaging with the office audiences in these agencies to play interactive games and drive registration. The participants can visit the microsite of the event on http://notalkies.sonymax.tv/ to register themselves.

    The city rounds of the event commenced in Bengaluru and was followed by Mumbai on 25 November coming to a close with Delhi on 2 December. The finale of the event will be hosted by the RJ Malishka on 9 December in Mumbai wherein the shortlisted winner teams from the three cities will battle it out to win the grand prize worth Rs 25,000 each.

    Sony Max Hindi Movie Cluster market communication senior VP Vaishali Sharma said, “The undying passion for Hindi cinema is what Sony MAX is synonymous with, and our flagship property ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ takes this passion a notch higher. This is the third season of our initiative and we are excited as we bring agencies together to feel the magic of movies as we do. With a whopping 150 teams already registering this year with more to come, we aim to build stronger association with the agencies through the success of this initiative. Also Dumb Charades is an all-time fun game and our intent is also to provide them with an enjoyable get-together.”

  • Sony Max brings ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ for media agencies

    Sony Max brings ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ for media agencies

    MUMBAI: Sony Max gave Bollywood enthusiasts a reason to rejoice as it kick-started the third season of its flagship event, No Talkies Nataunki Returns.

    Organised exclusively for media agencies, this property is an absolute treat for movie buffs as it provides them an opportunity to participate in a national level competition wherein registered teams play ‘Dumb Charades’ on Bollywood films using hand gestures to enact and communicate with each other.

    The first round of this three-city event started in Bengaluru on 22 Nov had 13 teams participating from advertising and media agencies. This will be followed by Mumbai and Delhi with an attempt to find the ‘Filmy Deewana’. The closing night of the event will take place in Mumbai.

    The pre-activation buzz for the event is currently being held across renowned media agencies including Group M, Madison, OMD, Lodestar, Lintas and MPG, etc.

    Bollywood-themed characters are engaging with the office audiences in these agencies to play interactive games and drive registration. The participants can visit the microsite of the event on http://notalkies.sonymax.tv/ to register themselves.

    The city rounds of the event commenced in Bengaluru and was followed by Mumbai on 25 November coming to a close with Delhi on 2 December. The finale of the event will be hosted by the RJ Malishka on 9 December in Mumbai wherein the shortlisted winner teams from the three cities will battle it out to win the grand prize worth Rs 25,000 each.

    Sony Max Hindi Movie Cluster market communication senior VP Vaishali Sharma said, “The undying passion for Hindi cinema is what Sony MAX is synonymous with, and our flagship property ‘No Talkies Nautanki Returns’ takes this passion a notch higher. This is the third season of our initiative and we are excited as we bring agencies together to feel the magic of movies as we do. With a whopping 150 teams already registering this year with more to come, we aim to build stronger association with the agencies through the success of this initiative. Also Dumb Charades is an all-time fun game and our intent is also to provide them with an enjoyable get-together.”

  • Friend MTS-Castle Media to tackle Bollywood’s digital piracy using unique watermark tech

    Friend MTS-Castle Media to tackle Bollywood’s digital piracy using unique watermark tech

    MUMBAI: Piracy is a serious challenge to the entertainment industry in India. In fact, according to the Motion Pictures Distributors Association of India (MPDA), India country is infamous for having one of the highest rate of video piracy in the world. Lack of stringent IP protection laws to counter exponential growth of online piracy has made matters worse. In 2008 alone, the industry lost close to USD 4 billion (Rs 27,000 crore) to piracy, going by Ernst & Young estimates. By 2016, the figure may have doubled by conservative extrapolation.

    Birmingham-based content protection service Friend MTS sees a business opportunity in bringing back this large sum of non-monetised revenue back to the content-owners in India. Friend MTS is leading a delegation to India that will investigate the escalating problem of digital piracy.

    “As pioneers in the creation and provision of content protection services, already used by many of the world’s Pay-TV operators, rights holders and broadcasters, we want to engage with the country’s movie producers and work with them to effectively fight the increasing threat to the revenue of premium channels and rights holders,” said Friend MTS’ global sales & marketing EVP Paul Hastings.

    Friend MTS has already established the company’s base in Chennai, with Rahul Nehra overseeing its India operations. He works with India’s film studios, broadcasters and content owners to help protect them from unauthorised redistribution of their live and premium on-demand content.

    Film producers and content rights owners such as Kollywood’s Venkat Prabhu is excited “at the prospects of having FMTS track and contain on-line piracy” and are hopeful this will give them a significant upside in local and global revenues. Tamil Film Producers Council secretary T Siva, a film producer at Amma Creation, said, “The industry welcomes these initiatives on digital anti-piracy.” Friend MTS had already helped secure Bollywood movies like Baahubali and Pink against piracy.

    India is the biggest film producer in the world making between 1500 and 2000 movies each year, including the cult Bollywood movies.

    “By teaming up with our local partner, Rahul Nehra, a well-known face in the Indian broadcast, satellite, content and OTT markets, and growth consultants from Frost Sullivan, the event and our delegation will be an unprecedented forum for discussing India’s spiraling digital piracy problems and how together we can work to stop it,” Hastings shared.

    To help the international player understand the complex Indian media ecosystem, it has made an alliance with Castle Media. To guide its penetration in the southern market, it is relying on Novacom. Friend MTS’s flagship service titled ‘Studio’ is designed to identify instances of pirated movies on the internet, and is being used by some of the largest content-owners in the world.

    In 2012 India was added to an ‘International Piracy Watch List’ by a U.S. government panel looking to highlight countries not taking sufficient action to address high rates of digital piracy. According to a 2013 article in WIPO Magazine (the journal of the World Intellectual Property Organization), the Indian film industry loses around US$3.34 billion and some 60,000 jobs every year because of piracy.

    Identifying each copyright violator by generating unique watermark within the content for each user is what Hastings calls is the technology’s USP. “It uses a sophisticated but lightweight fingerprinting technology, coupled with our global monitoring platform and network forensics, to identify and enforce against websites and apps that are being used deliver illegal content,” he added.

    In India Friend MTS is already operational for a leading broadcaster, and in talks with pay TV platforms, OTT service providers, and content makers, to ensure it catches up to its vibrant international clientele. “We deliver digital anti-piracy services for a wide range of customers including content owners such as Viacom and Paramount, sports rights holders such as the English Premier League, Serie A (Italian Football League), UFC, WWE, the International Olympic Committee and leading Hollywood studios. We also protect tier one pay-TV operators such as Sky, BT, nc+ (Poland) and OTE (Greece) delivered via satellite, cable and OTT,” Hastings added in parting.

  • Friend MTS-Castle Media to tackle Bollywood’s digital piracy using unique watermark tech

    Friend MTS-Castle Media to tackle Bollywood’s digital piracy using unique watermark tech

    MUMBAI: Piracy is a serious challenge to the entertainment industry in India. In fact, according to the Motion Pictures Distributors Association of India (MPDA), India country is infamous for having one of the highest rate of video piracy in the world. Lack of stringent IP protection laws to counter exponential growth of online piracy has made matters worse. In 2008 alone, the industry lost close to USD 4 billion (Rs 27,000 crore) to piracy, going by Ernst & Young estimates. By 2016, the figure may have doubled by conservative extrapolation.

    Birmingham-based content protection service Friend MTS sees a business opportunity in bringing back this large sum of non-monetised revenue back to the content-owners in India. Friend MTS is leading a delegation to India that will investigate the escalating problem of digital piracy.

    “As pioneers in the creation and provision of content protection services, already used by many of the world’s Pay-TV operators, rights holders and broadcasters, we want to engage with the country’s movie producers and work with them to effectively fight the increasing threat to the revenue of premium channels and rights holders,” said Friend MTS’ global sales & marketing EVP Paul Hastings.

    Friend MTS has already established the company’s base in Chennai, with Rahul Nehra overseeing its India operations. He works with India’s film studios, broadcasters and content owners to help protect them from unauthorised redistribution of their live and premium on-demand content.

    Film producers and content rights owners such as Kollywood’s Venkat Prabhu is excited “at the prospects of having FMTS track and contain on-line piracy” and are hopeful this will give them a significant upside in local and global revenues. Tamil Film Producers Council secretary T Siva, a film producer at Amma Creation, said, “The industry welcomes these initiatives on digital anti-piracy.” Friend MTS had already helped secure Bollywood movies like Baahubali and Pink against piracy.

    India is the biggest film producer in the world making between 1500 and 2000 movies each year, including the cult Bollywood movies.

    “By teaming up with our local partner, Rahul Nehra, a well-known face in the Indian broadcast, satellite, content and OTT markets, and growth consultants from Frost Sullivan, the event and our delegation will be an unprecedented forum for discussing India’s spiraling digital piracy problems and how together we can work to stop it,” Hastings shared.

    To help the international player understand the complex Indian media ecosystem, it has made an alliance with Castle Media. To guide its penetration in the southern market, it is relying on Novacom. Friend MTS’s flagship service titled ‘Studio’ is designed to identify instances of pirated movies on the internet, and is being used by some of the largest content-owners in the world.

    In 2012 India was added to an ‘International Piracy Watch List’ by a U.S. government panel looking to highlight countries not taking sufficient action to address high rates of digital piracy. According to a 2013 article in WIPO Magazine (the journal of the World Intellectual Property Organization), the Indian film industry loses around US$3.34 billion and some 60,000 jobs every year because of piracy.

    Identifying each copyright violator by generating unique watermark within the content for each user is what Hastings calls is the technology’s USP. “It uses a sophisticated but lightweight fingerprinting technology, coupled with our global monitoring platform and network forensics, to identify and enforce against websites and apps that are being used deliver illegal content,” he added.

    In India Friend MTS is already operational for a leading broadcaster, and in talks with pay TV platforms, OTT service providers, and content makers, to ensure it catches up to its vibrant international clientele. “We deliver digital anti-piracy services for a wide range of customers including content owners such as Viacom and Paramount, sports rights holders such as the English Premier League, Serie A (Italian Football League), UFC, WWE, the International Olympic Committee and leading Hollywood studios. We also protect tier one pay-TV operators such as Sky, BT, nc+ (Poland) and OTE (Greece) delivered via satellite, cable and OTT,” Hastings added in parting.

  • Rumours finally laid to rest: SRK, Alia to star in Koffee with Karan5 first episode

    Rumours finally laid to rest: SRK, Alia to star in Koffee with Karan5 first episode

    Ever since the return of a brand new season of Koffee with Karan was announced last month, fans have been eagerly waiting to know which celebrities will be gracing the Koffee couch. After months of speculation, it has finally been confirmed that the reigning Baadshah of Bollywood, Shah Rukh Khan and rising star, Alia Bhatt will be the first guests on Season 5 of Koffee with Karan.

    Karan Johar also shares a small glimpse showcasing that two of Bollywood favourite stars are stirring up a storm on the Koffee couch in the first episode. The video shows Alia and Shah Rukh having tons of fun answering Karan’s questions. The hilarity ensues when Karan and Shah Rukh gang up against Alia with Shah Rukh hinting that he would read the newspaper daily if he woke up as Alia one morning!

    From questioning Alia on her dating preferences to having a heart-to-heart chat with Shah Rukh about their long standing friendship – Karan puts his personal equations into play as he gets up close and candid with the two stars.

    Catch all this and more on the first episode of Koffee with Karan Season 5 starting 6th November, Sundays at 9pm only on Star World and Star World HD.

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10154531160111745&id=177606331744

  • Rumours finally laid to rest: SRK, Alia to star in Koffee with Karan5 first episode

    Rumours finally laid to rest: SRK, Alia to star in Koffee with Karan5 first episode

    Ever since the return of a brand new season of Koffee with Karan was announced last month, fans have been eagerly waiting to know which celebrities will be gracing the Koffee couch. After months of speculation, it has finally been confirmed that the reigning Baadshah of Bollywood, Shah Rukh Khan and rising star, Alia Bhatt will be the first guests on Season 5 of Koffee with Karan.

    Karan Johar also shares a small glimpse showcasing that two of Bollywood favourite stars are stirring up a storm on the Koffee couch in the first episode. The video shows Alia and Shah Rukh having tons of fun answering Karan’s questions. The hilarity ensues when Karan and Shah Rukh gang up against Alia with Shah Rukh hinting that he would read the newspaper daily if he woke up as Alia one morning!

    From questioning Alia on her dating preferences to having a heart-to-heart chat with Shah Rukh about their long standing friendship – Karan puts his personal equations into play as he gets up close and candid with the two stars.

    Catch all this and more on the first episode of Koffee with Karan Season 5 starting 6th November, Sundays at 9pm only on Star World and Star World HD.

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10154531160111745&id=177606331744

  • Zee Mundo hires Steinbranding

    Zee Mundo hires Steinbranding

    MUMBAI: Steinbranding, the international design agency with headquarters in Buenos Aires, responsible for the image of more than 50 channels worldwide, was chosen by the major Indian media group, Zee Entertainment Enterprises to create the brand, naming and on-air & off-air branding for Zee Mundo, the new Bollywood movie channel which was recently launched in the US Hispanic Market.

    Steinbranding has been delivering successful branding projects in Latin America, US and Asia, for more than 16 years. In addition to the channel branding, the company is in charge of producing daily and monthly promos for ZEE Mundo, with special campaigns and stunts.

    Zee Mundo provides exclusive and original HD Bollywood movies from the Zee library to the Hispanic audience in the US. It was recently launched in Dish Latino and Sling Latino. The programming offering includes titles that cover five genres (action, suspense, romance, drama and comedy), all dubbed completely in Spanish.

    “The fact that we were chosen as partners for Zee Mundo’s arrival in the USH market is very important for us, especially after having produced 15 projects exclusively in India and more than 35 in Latin America. We are pleased to create new commercial opportunities in the region”, said Guillermo Stein, Steinbranding CEO.

    Furthermore, he added: “Our experience is mainly focused on the creation of brand architecture. We work together with the networks’ in-house teams and produce promos, graphic packages, full-on rebrandings, design for Over-The-Top services (OTT), Subscription VOD (SVOD), news graphic packages, sport events, Idents, special promos, upfronts, trailers and other audiovisual media.”

    Zee Mundo programming manager David Cabán emphasized: “Steinbranding consistently gives us the highest level of creativity and production. Its work reflects the outstanding quality values of modern Bollywood cinema presenting our audience a complete product full of elegance and magic.”

    Likewise, Zee Mundo marketing and communication manager Rolando Figueroa stated: “We are very satisfied with the support Steinbranding‘s creative team gives us. It is a very professional company and they are helpful with all our requirements.”

    Steinbranding has been in charge of several projects in Latin America such as the creation of Doki, Discovery Kids’ brand character, graphic campaigns for Discovery Channel, the complete re-branding for Canal (á), TV Azteca 7 and Azteca 13, Telefé, TV Pública Argentina, Elgourmet.com, Encuentro, Fox, Film &Arts, Fox sports, Paka Paka, Studio Universal, Yups, Cosmopolitan, DeporTv, Ecuador TV and HBO, among other channels. Stein branding has also created the visual language for projects such as Cablevisión, América, Utilísima, Hallmark, CityMundo, CityFamily and MovieCity.