Tag: dance reality show

  • Zee TV begins pan-India auditions for ‘DID Super Moms: S3’

    Zee TV begins pan-India auditions for ‘DID Super Moms: S3’

    Mumbai: After receiving an overwhelming response to the previous two seasons that introduced audiences to some truly exceptional talent and gave a chance to all the ladies for becoming a ‘Super Mom,’ Zee TV is all set to launch the third edition of its popular non-fiction property – “DID Super Moms.” Well-known Bollywood choreographer Remo D’Souza will be seen as one of the three judges on the show.

    Before the show starts, “DID Super Moms” has kickstarted a country-wide talent hunt through online and on-ground auditions. “The online auditions of ‘DID Super Moms’ have already begun and to register yourself for this audition all you need to do is WhatsApp us two dancing videos of one-and-a-half-minute duration on 9137857810 or 9137857830 with your details like name, city, and age. Alternatively, you can also give a missed call on 8291829164 to receive the registration link,” said the channel in a statement.

    In the coming few weeks, Zee TV will also conduct on-ground auditions in Bhopal, Ahmedabad, Guwahati, Lucknow, and Chandigarh, said the statement.

    Meanwhile, after returning to the channel for “DID L’il Masters” this year, Remo D’Souza has also joined as a judge for “DID Super Moms.” “All the Super Moms, get ready as we are coming to your city for your auditions in order to give you a chance to showcase your talent and achieve your dreams through ‘DID Super Moms,’” said D’Souza.

    “DID Super Moms” new season is all set to premiere soon on Zee TV.

  • Colors to premiere new dance reality show ‘Dance Deewane Juniors’ on 23 April

    Colors to premiere new dance reality show ‘Dance Deewane Juniors’ on 23 April

    Mumbai: Colors has announced a new dance reality show called “Dance Deewane Juniors” that will see 4–14-year-olds performing solos, duos and groups and competing with each other. Produced by Frames Production, the show will premiere on 23 April and air every Saturday and Sunday at 9 p.m.

    The judges for the show will be Neetu Kapoor, Nora Fatehi, and Marzi Pestonji. Television actor Karan Kundrra will be the host of the show. 

    “At Colors, it has always been our endeavour to offer a wide variety of content to our viewers and encourage the best of talent from across the nation,” said Viacom18 head Hindi mass entertainment and Kids TV network Nina Elavia Jaipuria. “After the outstanding success of our flagship property ‘Dance Deewane,’ we now present Dance Deewane Juniors, a dance show dedicated to kids. With an extraordinary panel of judges and an outstanding lineup of contestants, the show will raise the bar of entertainment and strengthen our weekend offerings.”

    The show will feature the dance group ‘ABCD Little Angels’ including performers Rithyha, Navya, Janvi, Shanaya and Myra, the dancing duo of Urva and Ask and solo performers Geet Kaur Bagga, Aditya Vinod Patil and Anshika Dhara. The show will also have ace dancers such as Tushar Shetty, Pratik Utekar, and Sonali Kar as mentors training and nurturing the craft of the contestants.

    “Kids are a powerhouse of talent and passionate about dance,” said Viacom18 chief content officer Hindi mass entertainment Manisha Sharma. “With ‘Dance Deewane Juniors,’ we aim to celebrate their spirit and give them a larger-than-life platform. We have an array of performers and a promising line-up of contestants from different parts of the country who have given their heart and soul to their art form and ‘Dance Deewane Juniors’ will give flights to their dreams.”

    “’Dance Deewane Juniors’ is our promising new venture that will give a platform to young dancers that deserve to be recognised and lauded,” said Frame Production Company’s Ranjeet Thakur and Hemant Ruprell. “The juniors have packed a powerful punch with their jaw-dropping and astounding performances in the audition round itself. The viewers are in for a complete treat as we double the entertainment as the season progresses. We are certain that as we go along, these contestants will get the right nurturing and grooming under the guidance of our mentors and respected judges.”

  • English GECs eye greater ad share with mass appeal formats

    English GECs eye greater ad share with mass appeal formats

    Mumbai: The English GEC genre accounted for less than one per cent of TV viewership and ad volumes in 2020, according to Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) India. TV broadcasters hoped that the genre might grow subscription revenues post the implementation of the new tariff order (NTO). However, the pandemic struck before the TV viewership stabilised. With OTT platforms luring away their core audience with original content, some channels are now looking at massy shows to attract new audiences.

    In 2020, popular English movie channels HBO and WB, GECs AXN and AXN HD, and infotainment FYI TV18 were shuttered. The viewership and advertiser support for the English GECs dwindled as global content pipelines were disrupted, stalling fresh programming. Most English GECs acquire pre-produced content which includes international sitcoms, reality TV, and even movies that are packaged for TV viewers in India.  

    “English general entertainment category has been impacted severely post NTO implementation which has resulted in multiple channels within the genre going off-air. All these factors, along with the regulatory changes, have been a double whammy for the English GEC in India, severely challenging its growth potential,” said Ormax Media, partner, Keerat Grewal.

    The content cost for English GECs was lower than other language GECs, as they did not have any original programming. However, that turned out to be an Achilles heel post-pandemic. When the production of English content resumed, much of it was distributed via OTT platforms that reached a global audience. These platforms paid a premium to acquire English content and thus producers were able to recoup their investment.

    “Competition for English GECs is mounting with the growing demand for OTT that makes premium English content more accessible to viewers in India. Consequently, English GECs have to dig deeper down the funnel to attract and interest viewers,” said Merren, chief operating officer, Monalisa Saxena.

    Experts also highlight that the audience for English GECs is primarily metro skewed, and that overlaps with the paid SVOD audience. Metro audiences are migrating to video on-demand platforms, following the lure of original content. Many of these audiences are unlikely to return to TV screens once they’ve formed a habit of on-demand content.

    Since subscription revenues were being claimed by OTTs, TV broadcasters looked at growing the advertising revenues for English GECs.

    Zee Café has launched massy show formats like “Chef vs. Fridge” and “Dance With Me” to grow viewership and advertising revenues. While these properties were launched on Zee Café they were also aired on other network channels to make it more attractive to advertisers.

    “English audience growth is linked to curation and creation of content that explores interest areas of the audience. Dance and cooking-based content are interest areas that Zee Cafe has explored. Across these formats, Zee Cafe has been able to drive sampling across more than 35 million audiences across the network,” said Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd, business head – premium channels, Karthik Mahadev.

    The strategy worked as the broadcaster was able to rope sponsors for both the shows. Brands like Haier, Lifebouy, Parle Platina Hide & Seek, Prestige, Catch Salt & Spices, The Gift Studio partnered with “Chef vs. Fridge” while Cetaphil Bright Healthy Radiance Range, Lifebuoy, L’Oreal Paris Total Repair 5, Jeevansaathi, Prestige and Yamaha Fascino 125Fi Hybrid partnered with “Dance With Me”.

    It is a win for the brands, Mahadev noted, “On English GEC SD, between 8 p.m to 9 p.m Sunday time band, 83 per cent viewership contribution comes from reality genre followed by sitcom at 8 per cent (BARC, Period Wk 1’21- Wk32’21 – Jan 2021 to YTD).”

    While these shows aired on an English GEC and were made for a premium audience, the hosts converse with the audience in Hindi or Hinglish increasing their mass appeal. This has also contributed to the popularity and reach of these shows.

    “In the longer run, regional markets undoubtedly will be the driver for growth for English entertainment. There is a whole set of audience moving from regional to English content as they become more comfortable with English as a professional, conversational language” remarked Mahadev.

  • ‘Dance With Me’ returns with season 2 on ZEE Café

    ‘Dance With Me’ returns with season 2 on ZEE Café

    Mumbai: English entertainment channel ZEE Café is returning with the second season of “Dance With Me” on 22 August. The reality dance show will be aired every Sunday at 8 p.m. 

    The show has roped six sponsors including Cetaphil Bright Healthy Radiance Range, Lifebuoy and L’Oreal Paris Total Repair 5 as ‘co-powered by’ sponsors and Jeevansaathi.com, Prestige Svachh Pressure Cooker and Yamaha Fascino 125Fi Hybrid as ‘special’ partners. 

    The show will also air across 13 ZEE channels including Zee Café HD, Zee TV SD and HD, &TV HD, Zee Zest SD and HD, Big Magic, Big Ganga, Zing, Zee Tamil HD, Zee Kannada HD, Zee Marathi HD, and stream on ZEE5.

    The launch of the new season is accompanied by a promo campaign that features Shakti and Mukti Mohan performing extraordinary dance acts and setting the tone for the season. The second season of the show will showcase 50 stellar dance performances, said the channel.

    The first season of “Dance With Me” garnered more than 23 million cumulative reach across ZEE Café and ZEE TV and the show’s hook step challenges thrown by celebrity dance experts received over 8.7 million impressions, shared the channel. “Combined with the unique interactive experience via TV and social, the show offered deep integrations for the brands who partnered with ZEE Café for the festive offering,” it added.

    “With a strong legacy of over 20 years of creating we-time moments with latest international content, the focus on ZEE Café is to equally build a formidable originals content slate,” said Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd, business head, premium channels, Kartik Mahadev. “Customer centricity being at the core of the brand’s design thinking, ZEE Café’s originals have always tapped into themes that are trending, be it dance or food. Season one of Dance With Me is the first original production met with an overwhelming response from fans and saw great sponsor interest as well. Raising the bar, we are delighted to announce the second season that brings fifty talented performers on one stage to delight our discerning audience.”

    Each episode is designed around an interesting theme and features unique talent such as a girl who has mastered dancing with a Hula Hoop, that too in a saree, or a male performer who has found a confluence of Bharatnatyam and Hip Hop. With fifty such performances, this show is sure to astonish viewers with many things that have never been seen before on TV and the interactive format combining the reach of broadcast and social is sure to offer deep integrations to the brand partners, the channel said.

    “I feel thrilled to return to the stage yet again with the second season of one of the most unique dance reality shows, Dance With Me,” said reality TV superstar and dance maestro, Shakti Mohan. “Dance has been an integral part of the family and our childhood so when my sister and I heard about a new season, we just couldn’t contain the excitement thinking of all the moments I shared with Mukti in the previous season. It’s a privilege to be a part of a show that provides a platform for promising artistes across the nation who each come with a rare talent.”

    “Dance With Me has been my first stint as the host and dance expert and it’s surely been a fun affair shooting with Chiku didi. Our chemistry on the show received a lot of love across the internet all through the last season and we have much more in store for the second season,” said Mukti Mohan. “In our journey as dancers, we’ve been fortunate to come across countless talented artists who yearn for that one opportunity.”

  • Zee to bring bachchagiri with DID L’il Masters

    Zee to bring bachchagiri with DID L’il Masters

    MUMBAI: Dancing isn’t just about mean moves; it’s also about attitude. This is the reason why Zee TV is all set to bring back DID (Dance India Dance) L’il Masters, now in its third season, to replace the ongoing DID season four.

     

    Starting 1 March, children aged five to 12 years will mesmerise audiences with their awe-inspiring performances every weekend at 9 pm. This time round, the show positioning is: ‘from dadagiri to bachchagiri’.

     

    Zeel content head (Hindi GECs) Ajay Bhalwankar, who recently resigned from his post, explains: “Though the world is heavily borrowed from dadagiribachchagiri in no way gives any leeway to over-smartness or cockiness. Kids aren’t show-offs but they do have a ‘don’t mess with me’ attitude when it comes to dance. They aren’t afraid of a little competition and stage fear means nothing to them.”

     

    Says Nitin Keni of Essel Vision Productions, producer of the show: “These are genuinely gifted children and little powerhouses of talent who astonished us with their unimaginable talent. Along with entertainment, Zee and Essel Vision have always endeavored to become the most coveted platform for aspiring youth and women in the country and with the third season of DID L’il masters, we only hope to strengthen that conviction of ours.”

     

    Season three will follow a similar format with 16 contestants divided into four teams led by skippers including Sanam Johar, Raghav (Crockroaz) and Swarali Karulkar (DID 4 contender) with the fourth name still under consideration. Masters Geeta Kapoor, Ahmad Khan and Mudassar Khan will judge the performances while veteran actor Mithun Chakraborty (Mithun Da) will once again lend his characteristic wit to the platform. Hosting the show would be popular television actor Jay Bhanushali.

     

    So what’s the talking point of this season? “We, as a channel, don’t have to do anything new. Of course, we have plans to think about new dance forms, acts and visuals but what is really new is a fresher mind, fresher and more original talent. Kids are typically very informal; they have a mind of their own and when they perform, they completely rock the stage,” says Bhalwankar before adding, “I couldn’t have imagined some of the steps they ended up doing during the auditions.”

     

    He lavishes praise on the talent possessed by these kids. “They can change the format and mould it; they can mould their performance… We have to give them a format which allows them freedom. Bachchagiri is a format for us, and the entire control has been given to the kids,” he says.

     

    According to Zeel new programming head Namit Sharma, who assumed responsibility only yesterday, season three is a lot about evolution. “Lil masters is a very unique show. It is fun, engaging, heartwarming and at the same time, inspirational, because you are watching these kids doing all the fantastic moves. This year, we are keen on seeing the kids grow and evolve rather than just contestants in a reality show,” he says.

     

    Already, dancing fever has gripped the nation with auditions being held in 15 cities including Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Vadodara, Jaipur, Raipur, Indore, Bhubaneswar, Guwahati, Dehradun, Chandigarh, Ranchi, Patna, Jammu and Lucknow. The number of participants has risen 25 per cent from last year’s one lakh contestants. After more than four months of auditioning, 100 children have been selected, of which, 16 finalists will be selected in mega auditions being held this week.

     

    Speaking of her experience, Kapoor said: “Judging kids was a tough call. We had to be easy with them. However, each and every child is a winner for us. We don’t treat them as contestants but as normal kids.”

     

    While Khan felt their main job was to console the kids who’d been rejected in the auditions phase.  “Somewhere down the line, they are conditioned to the fact that they are here to get popularity. They don’t come with a positive mind that they will get selected,” he said.  

     

    On their part, the skippers said they enjoyed choreographing the ‘patakas’

     

    Johar, a contestant of DID season three, said: “It’s very interesting to choreograph kids. After becoming a skipper, you can’t show or teach them moves which are repetitive; we have to do something new. Instead of getting scared, we have to be prepared to do something innovative.” Raghav, who is famous for his slo-mo style said: “It is all in nature. You get to learn a lot from your surroundings. We don’t have to teach anything to the kids creatively. Get them on stage, and they will burn the dance floor. They are very smart. Plus, they come prepared.”

     

    Industry sources say the channel is looking at anything between Rs 180 and Rs 190 crore from DID L’il Masters season three with anything between Rs 1,20,000 and Rs 1,80,000 for every 10 seconds.

     

    Marketing and promotion

     

    A 360-degree marketing plan is on the anvil comprising outdoor, print, television and radio to sustain audience interest in the property. As part of on-ground, children will form special ‘Dhating Naach Tolis’ and visit various housing societies in Mumbai and Delhi to play Holi with the residents as a mark of the festival.

     

    Vignettes have been created for television where kids will sometimes be seen talking about a show before it starts and encouraging the audience to see it. On the digital side, there are plans to create a hashtag #DIDLM for greater engagement with the viewers.

     

    No doubt the show will face tough competition from the ongoing India’s Got Talent on Colors and the upcoming Mad in India on Star Plus. While Mad in India is a 75,000 per 10 sec slot, IGT is 1.25 lakh. But with the last season having opened at 5.8 TVR, Bhalwankar remains unfazed. “When kids come to the show, they have a ball. I don’t think we will need masala to get ratings or eyeballs. Other people can worry,” he laughs.