Tag: Boys Over Flowers

  • MX Player to bring new original and international shows in September

    MX Player to bring new original and international shows in September

    Mumbai: MX Player announced its latest slate of originals and international series on Friday. The OTT platform brings plenty of drama, fiction, romance, mystery, and thrill with the web-shows scheduled to launch in the month of September.

    As a part of MX’s original series slate, Shiksha Mandal is set to launch on 15 September.

    Shiksha Mandal is a hard-hitting narrative inspired by true events that revolves around the biggest scam in the educational system in India. With a socially relevant premise, Shiksha Mandal will reveal corruption, fraud, cheating, and criminal conspiracy that affect vulnerable students in India.

    Shiksha Mandal is directed by Syed Ahmad Afzal and stars Gauahar Khan, Gulshan Devaiah, and Pavan Raj Malhotra in lead roles.

    In addition to Shiksha Mandal, as a part of their latest content category – MX VDesi, MX Player is also bringing six acclaimed international shows from across the globe, including one of the most popular Korean dramas, Boys Over Flowers, which started the K-wave in India with the same love of melodrama, intricate storylines, and adrenaline-pumping action.

    The shows included in the pipeline for a September launch are:

    Boys Over Flowers

    The 21-episode long Korean drama, Boys Over Flowers, starring Ku Hye Sun, Lee Min Ho, and Kim Hyun-Joong, launches on 7 September in Hindi. The blockbuster series follows the story of a humble girl who attends the prestigious Shin Hwa High School. She is immediately bullied by the leader of F4 (the four richest boys), who eventually falls in love with her. However, she has a crush on his best friend. Whom will she pick? Tune in to find out.

    Alphas

    Up next is the Hollywood hit series Alphas. Alphas are ordinary citizens with amazing abilities, including superhuman physical and mental abilities, who operate within the department of defence. A secret group, led by pre-eminent neurologist Dr. Lee Rosen, investigates cases that point to others with similar Alpha abilities. With its unique premise, this show will keep you on your toes throughout 12 episodes. The science fiction drama will be streamed in Hindi from 14 September onwards.

    Secret of Love

    All 30 episodes of the hit show Secret of Love will be streamed in Hindi from 21 September onwards on MX Player. The show revolves around the story of Su Yi, who loses her memory after getting burnt in a fire accident. She meets Li Jia Cheng, who has countless ties to the incident. The pair form a tactical partnership on equal footing after Su Yi challenges his outlook and beliefs.

    Signed, Sealed and Delivered

    A crew of postal detectives seeks to unravel the mysteries behind undeliverable letters and packages from the past, delivering them at crucial moments in the Hollywood production Signed, Sealed, and Delivered. Watch 34 episodes of this series in Hindi starting 21 September.

    Wild District

    After the signing and approval of the Colombian Peace Agreements, a deadly guerrilla warrior escapes from the forest and makes his way to Bogotá, where he attempts to reintegrate into society. Watch all 20 episodes of this Spanish series in Hindi streaming from 28 September onwards!

    Innocent Defendant

    At the Seoul central district prosecutors’ office, a prosecutor wakes up one morning to discover that he is a death row inmate. He is temporarily amnesiac and is unaware of the events that led to his arrest. Before his time is out, he tries to jog his memory and clear his name. Catch this award-winning Korean series starring Seong Ji, Ki-joon Uhm, and Jo Jae-yoon on 28 September in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, Bengali, Kannada, and Malayalam!

  • Exclusive: Zee Café to develop more unscripted formats to expand reach

    Exclusive: Zee Café to develop more unscripted formats to expand reach

    Mumbai: English entertainment channel Zee Café is looking to reach out to a larger set of audiences by creating more unscripted format shows after launching the second seasons of “Chef vs Fridge” and “Dance With Me” shows. 

    “Every time a limited series, which typically runs over 13 weeks, comes to an end, we want to begin something new to keep audiences engaged,” says Zee English Cluster chief channel officer Rishi Parekh. “We know that cooking and dancing formats work and are searching for more unscripted formats that audiences are looking forward to watching and consuming.”

    The first seasons of “Chef vs Fridge” and “Dance With Me” garnered 12 million reach and 23 million reach across the network, respectively. Notably, the two shows were created in ‘Hinglish’ and broadcast on sister channels including Zee Zest, Zee TV, Zee Ganga and Zee Magic as well as dubbed in Marathi and Telugu for wider reach. “English language content caters to a specific set of audiences. In order to grow that base, we’ve created a show that’s competitive and has a different format,” remarks Parekh.  “Since we created the shows in ‘Hinglish’ we were able to bring more Zee channels on board and reach a larger audience rather than a specific set.”

    In November last year, the channel partnered with Korean Culture Centre to bring popular K-dramas like “Boys Over Flowers,” “Descendants Of The Sun” and others to Indian TV. Parekh notes that the reception to Korean content has been fantastic with “Boys Over Flowers” initially being the top show followed by “Extraordinary You.” “India is one of the top countries in terms of K-drama consumption. We’ve managed to be top channel over the last seven weeks on Zee Café HD on the back of Korean content consumption. The audiences have expressed outright that they want to consume such kind of content and we’re working on identifying more foreign languages that would work.”  

    English movie channel &PriveHD had launched a property last year called ‘World Box Office’ that featured films across ten foreign languages. “The most popular languages were French and Spanish, however, audiences also enjoyed Swedish and Norwegian language films,” shares Parekh. 

    “The biggest learning was that more than languages people enjoyed genres like fantasy and adventure. Telling the stories in their original language helped supplement the storytelling,” he further says.

    Zee English cluster is working on identifying unscripted formats and foreign languages that can continue to attract incremental audiences to the channel.

  • “Mobile content consumption to impact content on television:” BBC Worldwide’s Myleeta Aga

    “Mobile content consumption to impact content on television:” BBC Worldwide’s Myleeta Aga

    MUMBAI: Over the past few years, BBC Worldwide India has come a long way. The journey from a format owner to a producer and licenser to being a full-fledged production house, UK’s public broadcaster has left no stone unturned to bring the best formats to Indian television screens.

     

    Having one of the successful formats in the world in the UK i.e Dancing with the Stars, BBC earlier licensed the show and then started producing Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa for Colors in India, which is in its eighth season now.

     

    One woman who has stood tall through this incredible journey and walks with pride is BBC Worldwide India MD and creative head Myleeta Aga.

     

    Not only does the production house produce multiple BBC formats both in non-fiction and fiction, but it has also seen a significant growth in its home-grown formats.

     

    For the record, BBC Worldwide Productions India licenses and produces all BBC Worldwide formats in India and works with local networks to develop home grown formats within the territory. The production base has brought local versions of The Week the Women Went (Wife Bina Life), Baby Borrowers (Pati, Patni Aur Woh) and the hugely successful Dancing with the Stars (Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa) and South Korean television series Boys Over Flowers (Kaisi Yeh Yaariyan) on MTV India amongst others to Indian audiences.

     

    In conversation with Indiantelevision.com, Aga talks at length about her journey at BBC, different kinds of content and the future roadmap of the production house.

     

    With almost 20 years of experience in production, Aga has personally produced content in six countries and has worked with different languages, markets and audience groups. One whiff of the huge amount of talent in India and Aga felt that there was immense potential for the entertainment content business here, but the roadblock was that as a community, India is still slightly closed and there is space for us to push ourselves.

     

    Consumers moving to different screens

     

    With digital proliferation in the country and around the world, Aga is of the opinion that consumption of content on mobile devices is going to impact content on TV.

     

    “Sometimes I feel we underestimate our audience. I think our audience is ahead of us, whether you’re talking about the small towns in the Hindi speaking belt or someone who is living in a new development in Mumbai, content is freely available. People have choice, so you really have to acknowledge that choice and it always brings me back to the basic, which is having a good story and whether you can tell it well,” states Aga.

     

    She believes that with consumers moving to different screens and with catch-up episodes, they can record it and find the time to watch it, which in turn is a huge challenge for content creators. “Content creators may think that they have the best program in the 9 pm slot, but someone who has taped something from the night before, which is better is not going to bother watching the 9 pm program if the content is not good.”

     

    According to Aga viewership in India still primarily comes from small towns, which comprises co-viewing television with a large and conservative family. “However, that is now changing,” she’s quick to add.

     

    Learning from MTV’s Kaisi Yeh Yaariyan, where the show openly talks about issues like same sex relationships, teenage pregnancy etc, which is a top rated show on the channel, Aga says, “You might question if conservative audiences are ready for it, but it is the top rated show. Obviously, a large bulk of people are liking it and they are all not living in the skyscrapers of Mumbai. There are people living in small towns who also watching it. People have access and you have to acknowledge that.”

     

    Apart from producing content, BBC has also licensed iconic properties like Sherlock to AXN in India. The production house has designated development teams for fiction and non-fiction. “For fiction, it is quite different not only in terms of a production scale but on a creative approach also. For a daily, you need to set a different kind of rhythm. Whereas for non-fiction, one needs a lot of resources in a short span of time,” reasons Aga.

     

    BBC also has a specific team for digital and branded content. “I believe the story is the same, but the way you tell it and the kind of skills you need to tell it are very much impacted by the format,” explains Aga.

     

    To ensure differentiation across categories, BBC works closely with broadcasters as they have more sophisticated tools to access information. “They have a good sense of what their audience wants and it is up to us as producers to take that information and deliver a good product,” says Aga.

     

    Re-invention leads to success

     

    BBC Worldwide, which tasted success with franchising Dancing With the Stars in India as Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa, has now set its sights higher.

     

    Aga believes that the franchise model can work in India if the show re-invents itself every season. “If you look outside India, you’ll see that if there’s a good formula, there’s no reason why shows can’t keep going on for multiple seasons,” says Aga.

     

    Citing Dancing With the Stars’ 20th season in the US and multiple seasons of Endemol’s reality show Big Brother as examples, Aga says, “Across the world if you get it right, you keep doing it. However, one needs to re-invent from season to season to keep the freshness alive,” says Aga.

     

    On the flip side, in India, Aga believes that currently the audience has reached its saturation point. “In India, there’s a mix of re-inventing in existing content as well as experiments with the reality format like scripted or constructive reality,” she says.

     

    BBC keeps certain factors in mind while producing or acquiring any format for Indian audiences. For example, it has to be entertaining, aspirational, and sufficiently different from things that have been already done. “There are a lot of formats in the market and the new offering should provide some kind of challenge to the audience,” opines Aga.

     

    Though, the BBC has bought third party formats from Shine TV and ITV Studios amongst others, it does not believe in acquiring a lot many of them given its own library. “We believe in creating and launching new formats every year,” Aga says. “If we see a particular gap in the current content offering in the market and feel that a particular format can fill that void, we might auction it. But we don’t do that a lot. We have a pretty strong catalogue within BBC itself and home-grown development is really working,” reasons Aga.

     

    Short pre-production cycles in India

     

    Pre-production stage is where the company is responsible to get on-board the best talent like directors, writers, producers, and creative heads to deliver a good product. Aga believes that India tends to have a very short pre-production cycle compared to other markets, which can be a disadvantage. “Except for development in India, we really do not spend enough time on pre-production. You spend a lot of time developing an idea by pitching and when you get a yes from a broadcaster, you have to be on-air in no time,” she says.

     

    The period between concept to on-air for a show in India is a short and an expensive one too, compared to other markets where Aga has worked. “And that is where you start making choices, which don’t necessarily do the best for the audience,” explains Aga.

     

    Throwing light on BBC UK’s historical programs like Blue Planet and Shark amongst others, which are in production stage for three-five years, Aga says, “These shows are in pre-production for a year. Of course, it is a totally different genre and ballgame but there is respect for the amount of time it takes to get ready so that when you are actually in production, you are completely prepared, and also completely prepared if things go wrong. When you are under prepared, you are less able to respond to things that may happen on a shoot,” laughs Aga.

     

    Depending on the type of show, in India the BBC has been in situations where the show’s pre-production is covered in a maximum time span of a year to a minimum of two weeks.

     

    Multi-genre and multi-budget company

     

    BBC has worked across genres and languages too. For example, it had launched Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa in Kannada, which received decent responses from the regional market consumers. Aga believes that people respond to the content and not the money that the makers pump in.

     

    When asked, is there was a huge budget difference between regional made shows and shows made for Hindi GECs, Aga says, “It’s just about what one chooses to spend money on.”

     

    She goes on to say that the version of Dancing with the Stars made in the US is significantly more expensive than it is made here. “I wouldn’t say that Jhalak is any less relevant or popular with Indian audiences but the budget as compared to DWS is completely different. The absolute same logic applies for regional content to India. Yes, the budget over here is significantly less because the cost of production is less, but you can deliver a good product at any budget level,” responds Aga.

     

    Future roadmap

     

    This year, the company is going to focus on areas like fiction and digital content. Aga believes that digital is increasingly present and is user generated. She states the best examples are Netflix and Amazon.com, which are like TV studios but have digital as their primary mode of sharing content.

     

    “For me digital is not only user generated but also web produced high-end content and everything in between from ad-funded to short bytes that are a part of bigger properties. If you are making something for television, how do you make iterations of it so that they have their own voice on digital, living beyond the television property,” she opines.

     

    The company is also planning to strengthen its website bbc.com by adding exclusive digital content. “Last year, we wanted to build and stabilise our fiction business and now our main focus is going to go strong on digital,” reveals Aga.

  • Puthu Yugam goes Korean, network launches mobile apps

    Puthu Yugam goes Korean, network launches mobile apps

    MUMBAI: They were late entrants into a market that was dominated by the Marans’ Sun group. Nearing three years into its foray in broadcast television media space with a News channel  ‘Puthiya Thalaimurai TV’ (PT), besides running the successful Tamil magazine of the same name, the New Generation Media Corporation owned by the Sri Ramaswamy Memorial (SRM)  group had launched a general entertainment channel (GEC) Puthu Yugum (PY) on 23 October 2013.

     

    Targeting the Tamil youth during prime time, Puthu Yugum has brought in south Korean shows to its programming mix. On offer are dubbed versions of south Korean dramas acquired from broadcasters MBC and KBS such as Boys over Flowers (KBS2), The Greatest Love (MBC), Playful Kiss (MBC), Moon Embracing the Sun (MBC), Iris (KBS2), Pasta (MBC)and A Hundred Year Legacy (MBC).The shows originally broadcast in south Korea from 2009 onwards, are aired between 7 pm to 8 pm Monday to Thursday with repeats at 10:30 pm, along with a marathon run on Saturday at 9 pm on Puthu Yugam. Show rights are with the channel for approximately one to three years.

     

    “Since Puthu Yugam is from the SRM group that also runs the SRM University, our president Dr Sathyanaranan had an opportunity to observe the trend of the students. He noted that they are obsessed with Korean (K) series. He suggested us to bring them to Puthu Yugam.  K series has brought lot of young blood into the channel,” says New Gen Media Corporation CEO RBU Shyam Kumar.

     

    PY is also in talks with channels in Turkey, UK and US to acquire some of their shows. Shyam says that the culture, storytelling as well as sentiments which seem to match with those in Tamil culture, is appealing to the audience they cater to. This apart, he adds that several Tamil directors are inspired from Korean films and series.

     

    Nearly 25 fresh dubbing artists are being employed to lend their voices to the Korean characters. A specialist Sanjay Mohan, who has worked for Star Vijay and NGC, and is well versed with both Tamil and Korean languages, has been roped in to monitor the content translation.

     

    Advertisers such as Poomex, Head & Shoulders, White Tone, Harpic, Lizol 10X, Vodafone, Wheat naturals and Prestige have been brought onboard for the Korean shows. The channel refuses to declare the acquisition cost but says that although it differs from channel to channel, it is equivalent to acquiring a “mega show from a Hindi GEC for Tamil dubbing.”

     

    The two channel group also considers the digital space important. New Gen Media Corp convergence head K Manikandaboopathi says, “Digital is all about convenience.  Smartphones/apps are the way people seek information these days and the audience growth is unlimited. It’s an untapped market with unlimited potential. Positioning our brand via handsets and tabs is the way forward for us and has more option for audience engagement.”

      

    Manikandaboopathi says that rather than invest in advertising the app, cross promotion is done via Facebook, TV and the website. 74 per cent of app downloads are from India itself. The PT app has had 240,000 downloads on Android since its launch in November 2013 with about 1.25 lakh downloads happening during the recently concluded elections. The group has invested Rs 50 lakh on the PT live, PPY live, PT VOD, PY VOD and PT Tickr appsTwo of the group’s shows have special apps- Chinna Chinna Cinema (Puthu Yugam) and Nerpada Pesu (Puthiya Thalaimurai). Some of the apps are free while some are paid.

     

    However, the Korean dramas are not available on the apps, since the channel has not acquired the digital rights for them. The apps are the group’s way to reach out to younger audiences in India, between the age group of 18 to 40, specifically. 

     

    The company says that the PT application seems to have become quite popular, while, on the PY front, more work needs to be done as yet. It has had 30,000 downloads in six months. “We need to focus on increasing the visibility as this is mostly demanded by the non-resident Tamil diaspora. We have witnessed that the audience prefers catch-up TV via the app. So, a new and free video on demand app has just been launched last week on iOS and will soon launch on Android,” informs Manikandaboopathi.

     

    While the News channel has made a mark among Tamilians with its claims of having overtaken Sun News and Jaya News within 60 days of launch in August 2011, the GEC is yet to firm up against the big guns that rule the Tamil TV GEC roost – Sun TV, Star Vijay, Jaya TV and Kalaignar. The Sun Network and Jaya Networks are connected to the political heavyweights in the country – the DMK and AIADMK families respectively, while the Star Network has a major stake in Star Vijay. While PT claims to be the only News channel without any political affiliation, SRM Group founder TR Pachamuthu had contested the recent Lok Sabha elections under a BJP ticket, but lost to the AIADMK’s RP Marutharajaa.