Tag: Ekaant

  • Epic set to build 10 pm slot with second phase of programming

    Epic set to build 10 pm slot with second phase of programming

    MUMBAI: “Given the kind of content we are doing, we are never going to be at the level of a general entertainment channel (GEC), but a segmented one,” says Epic Television Networks managing director Mahesh Samat.

     

    Launched on 19 November, 2014, the channel offers content set against the backdrop of Indian history, folklore and mythology, in a contemporary format.

     

    Mukesh Ambani, Anand Mahindra and Rohit Khattar are the three promoters of the company.

     

    Mahindra & Mahindra chairman and managing director Anand Mahindra, during the launch of the channel had said, “The landscape of Hindi entertainment is undergoing a dramatic transformation and in order to appeal to an evolved audience, and to sustain their engagement, there is a need for a revolution in the broadcast space.”

     

    The pay channel, available in down-scaled SD version, aimed to change the way entertainment is currently categorised.

     

    After successfully running the first phase of programming with new-breed of producers like Bolt Media, Green Light Production and Pride Rock Television among others giving their take on the contemporary age-old stories, the channel is now set to roll out its second phase of new programming.

     

    Epic launched with shows like Dariba Diaries, Siyaasat, Dharmakshetra, Yam Kisi Se Kam Nahin, Ekaant and Raja Rasoi Aur Anya Kahaniyaan among others.

     

    A journey with highs & lows

     

    According to Samat, the seven months journey while has been through its ups and downs but is satisfactory. He says that when he started Epic, the objective was to set up a segmented channel in the space of history and mythology to make viewers believe that there is an alternative in television that they could include in the basket of their favourite channels.

     

    It can be noted that Epic garnered 1,240 GVTs in its debut week (ratings of four days) and later saw an improvement till a few weeks but then started dipping in viewership.

     

    However, the social media has attracted good eyeballs with close to 165,000 likes on Facebook and Twitter with close to 4,000 followers.

     

    “To a fair degree we have achieved that because we have a core group of users and viewers who are fans of the channel. The nice thing is if you see the social chatter, the amount of support and likes we are getting is sometimes overwhelming,” says Samat.

     

    The ascending social media traction has however failed to make the same impact on ratings. “It’s not yet reflected in the ratings because our awareness level is still low but we hope to correct that with this campaign and we hope the awareness level goes up.”

     

    At the time of the launch, the channel had set a target to reach 35 million homes and to go up to 45-50 million homes in a few months and it is pretty much on target.

     

    According to Samat, distribution has not been an issue. “Distribution platforms have been very supportive and they see the differentiation. They see in Epic an opportunity to grow their Average Revenue Per User (ARPUs) which is really important for them and we also recognise that,” he informs.  

     

    The channel aims to launch its High Definition (HD) version soon. “We feel that the quality of what we have done does full justice in HD. But we understand that there are bandwidth constraints and as soon as those constraints are over, we will be happy to show the product in HD,” reasons Samat.

     

    Building 10 pm slot

     

    Sticking to its two-hour original programming per day, the channel is set to launch close to eight new shows in the second phase and will stay with its positioning of producing history and mythology content.

     

    This new season of programming is more relevant and connected as it talks about topics which are culturally in the mainstream like Bollywood, cricket and old stories of Tagore.

     

    To start with, India has two religion- Bollywood and cricket. When these two collide, magic fills up the stage. With this in mind, the channel is set to launch Mid-Wicket Tales with Naseeruddin Shah as the host. The show will launch on 10 July and will air every Friday at 10 pm.

     

    This 26 episode series will focus on the yesteryears of the game- match highlights, sportsmanship within the game, stadiums, hits and misses and much more, attempting to re-visit all the wonderful memories of the nation’s first love.

     

    The show recounts the cricketing saga that begins in the dusty fields of colonial 19th century India and ends with India as the epicenter of cricket in the world through old footage, witnesses and newspaper archives. It even talks about the torch that was first carried by Maharaja Ranjitsinghji to present-day hero Mahendra Singh Dhoni.

     

    “We felt that here is an opportunity to expand our awareness, expand the understanding of Epic through these celebrities who are either anchors or producing these shows,” informs Samat.

     

    Secondly, veteran Bollywood scriptwriter and lyricist Javed Akhtar will be hosting the new show, Jaane Pehchaane with Javed Akhtar. It is slated to launch on 8 July and will be aired every Wednesday and Thursday at 10 pm.

     

    It is a show about the trajectory of characters within films and not the history of actors or other film personalities. In this, Javed Akhtar explores iconic themes of Bollywood cinema, from vamps to villains, friends to family and their relations, and more.  Akhtar known to create magic with his play of words, shares insightful opinions, anecdotes as well as his experience about the most powerful characters of Indian cinema on the show.

     

    Thirdly, it will launch Stories By Rabindranath Tagore directed by Anurag Basu that will launch on 6 July and will air every Monday and Tuesday at 10 pm. The series will depict the literary, somewhat imagined world of Tagore’s novels and short stories. It is set in a politically volatile period, constantly shifting social world of the early twentieth century undivided.  The novels will be approximately two-three episodes and the short stories will be of a single episode. Each story will follow the other in a seamless way, before one story ends the other will begin from the narration of the previous story itself.

     

    Samat reveals that it took 18 months from planning to execute of Rabindranath Tagore show. The other two series mentioned above, were developed in close to six months.

     

    Samat believes it is a very organic way of using celebrities. The channel during the research realised that while there is a large chunk of audience available at the 10 pm slot, they are very experimental. “The 10 pm slot is the most experimental slot, so we decided to take serious note of that. We are trying to get consumers through our actions, making them aware of programming and positioning of Epic and directing them to the 10 pm slot.”

     

    Moreover, it will be launching second season of three of its successful shows, Ekaant, Raja Rasoi Aur Anya Kahaniyaan and Epic Ke Dus. It is also launching Time Machine, a show where three invitees living on the wrong side of the law, find themselves being blackmailed by a mysterious genius. It starts from 8 July, airing every Wednesday at 9 pm.

     

    The channel has also locked a concept with dancer-actor Javed Jafrey. Christened Back to Flashback, Jafrey will be seen giving his take on the songs of 90s.

     

    For Samat, it was two like-minded groups meeting which ensured there were no challenges in getting the celebrities on-board. “They all were interested in the subject. In fact, Basu was wanting to do Rabindranath Tagore stories for a long time on television and Epic gave him the platform to do it,” says Samat.

     

    On the other hand, he strongly believes that there is an advantage in doing limited number of episodes. “This made getting great talents on-board even easier,” he adds.  

     

    According to Samat, television in India is a mass medium and as makers one needs to create content that caters to the entire family. But for this segmented channel, it the secondary level of filter: audience aged between 24-44 years, which is important.

     

    “A lot of research was done when we launched. What we found was that we are very emotionally attached to our history and mythology and that’s unique to us as Indians. This is why when we put up these stories, there is a pride which comes with it and that’s what our mission is– to deliver pride through our storytelling,” asserts Samat.

     

    The idea for the channel is to provide an alternative form of entertainment. According to Samat, consumers are not watching only one or two channels, but a basket of channels; some are appointment viewing, while some come when they are in the mood to watch. “For us, it is really important to be in that basket of channels,” states Samat.  

     

    GECs have a ‘soapification’ of mythology

     

    Samat feels that historical and mythological shows have always been a part of the general entertainment channels offering. Even four-five years ago, one-sixth of the shows were historical and mythological ones. So, he believes the genre is here to stay and is not going anywhere.

     

    He feels that the GECs’ take on the genre is quite different than that of a segmented one. “Their take is still in the realms of relationships or what one can call as ‘soapification’ of mythology. What we are trying to do is using a different kind of storytelling with limited number of episodes which by definition therefore will be narrative rhythm.”

     

    The reality is that people like soaps. He feels that urban India is walking away from television as a concept because they see sameness.

     

    Samat believes that digitisation in television is like the multiplexing of cinemas. “With digitisation, we are also going to see an expansion in the kind of television channels and content that can be shown. I feel that while soaps are liked by a large majority of Indians, the same people don’t always want to see only soaps,” opines Samat.

     

    Multi-dimensional campaign

     

    To promote the second run of the programming, the channel has used digital medium aggressively. With the #DoThe10, it generated decent responses and a lot of involvement from the users. Apart from this, promos of the shows have hit the television screens.

     

    As was first reported by Indiantelevision.com, the channel an app to cater to international markets. “There’s lot of discussion around it, we don’t know how things will fall out. Through the app, we are pointing out to the Indian diaspora, living abroad. Our broadband infrastructure is still limited and so the focus we will have of our app will be for outside India.”

     

    A lot of the channel’s content has a great library value. For example, Epic ran the repeat episodes of Raja Rasoi and Ekaant and kept repeating the episodes for the result. “Every single time, the channel aired repeats of these shows, it garnered a better viewership than previous telecast. While that helped increase our reach, we also understood that people don’t mind watching it again and again. For a lot of content we do, we keep in mind the importance of our library value. It should be like show today and not worth tomorrow, which is why, none of our content is available on YouTube,’ says Samat.  

     

    Overall, between the advertisers and media agencies, Samat says that while all have liked the channel, they are now waiting to see the viewership pattern with the second phase of programming. “We are currently not approaching advertisers heavily, because we want our numbers to improve so that we get better advertising rates,” he informs.

     

    With digitisation, he feels there will be more transparency, which is important for an independent channel like Epic. “We don’t have any analogue distribution. We are focused only on digital and as digital grows, we will grow. The channels that are on analogue won’t see much growth but only transparency, we will see both,” concludes Samat. 

  • Epic awaits BARC rollout; to launch new programming

    Epic awaits BARC rollout; to launch new programming

    MUMBAI: The media and entertainment industry will now have to get used to a new ratings system, which is scheduled to begin by the end of this month. And as Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) gears up to roll out its ratings data, Epic has a treat in store for audiences with a fresh programming line-up.  

     

    A lot of speculation and anxiety over the new television rating system came to rest last week when BARC announced that the new ratings system would be out every Wednesday by April end.

     

    In order to launch its new shows the “segmented” Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) Epic is waiting for the new ratings rollout.

     

    A source close to the development tells Indiantelevision.com, “The channel is now four months old and has gone through its initial run. We are waiting for the BARC ratings to roll out and then put the new programmes on-air so that we know how the shows are doing in terms of numbers. Moreover, with that we will also have a clearer picture to show to advertisers.”

     

    Though the content is kept under wraps, a show which has already created a lot of buzz before its release is Anurag Basu’s adaptation of Rabindranath Tagore’s Chokher Bali.

     

    Additionally, veteran Bollywood scriptwriter and poet Javed Akhtar has also been roped for a show called Jaane Pehchaane on the channel. The series is slated to go on air in June and will have Akhtar as a narrator reminiscing about films, actors and famous dialogues of yesteryears.

     

    Positioned as the first ‘segmented’ channel on Indian television, Epic currently airs only four shows throughout the day  – two fiction series titled Dharmakshetra and Siyaasat and two non-fiction shows – Kahi Suni and Ekaant.

     

    Founded by former Disney India managing director Mahesh Samat, Epic clocked around 1,246 GVTs in its debut week when it launched in November last year.

     

    Wanting viewers to step in and out as per their convenience, all the shows on the channel were designed for a finite period. Epic began airing content pertaining to Indian history, folklore and mythology, in a contemporary storytelling format.

     

    The channel started with around 13-15 weekly shows, most of which were hour-long. On weekends, the channel airs films that are in sync with its core proposition, Kahaniyaan Hindustan Ki (Hindi for fables of India), chosen from the channel’s library of 20 movies. On weekdays, Epic airs around two-and-a-half hours of original content starting at 8 pm.

  • “We know we have to work on awareness level,” says Epic’s Mahesh Samat

    “We know we have to work on awareness level,” says Epic’s Mahesh Samat

    One of the newest entrant in the Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) space, Mahesh Samat’s Epic, which was launched on 19 November, 2014 has been gaining momentum on the rating chart ever since.

    “I would want my kid to watch Epic,” says a media planner when contacted to know how the channel has been performing.

    The news of the former Disney executive launching Epic Television Network had first broken in 2012. Labeled as India’s first genre-specific Hindi entertainment channel, it was supposed  to be launched by August 2013. However, due to the delay in getting the licence from the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, the venture backed by Anand Mahindra, Mukesh Ambani and Rohit Khattar, focusing on Indian history, folklore and mythology, had to wait a long time to entertain the audiences.

    Nonetheless, Samat is happy with the progress and the pace in which the channel is moving. “Ratings wise we are somewhat on track. And there is market for segmented content,” he says.

    The channel, which shows finite weeklies, aims to change the way “entertainment” is categorised today. Samat believes that there are enough people in urban India who want to watch mythology and know about the historical aspects of the country. The channel, though slightly male skewed, while conventional GECs are heavily female skewed, aims to entertain the whole family.

    With an array of fiction and non-fiction shows, all enlightening the viewer of the history gone by, the channel has got on board a new breed of producers and changed the way a story is told. Face Entertainment’s Monia Pinto, who has worked on numerous lifestyle shows, is producing non-fiction shows like Sanrachna and Lost Recipes for the channel.

    Unlike the other shows she has worked on, the series on Epic intellectually stimulates her and her team, thanks to the research which goes into creating them. “We invest a lot of time in research so basically we have to study the subject thoroughly. The team at Epic also does its homework well on a subject so when we go back to them, we merge the ideas and studies to come up with a brilliant piece of work,” she says.

    Speaking on Ekaant, which takes one through abandoned roads, alleys of some of India’s historic locations, Pinto highlights that two researchers work on a project and visit the place, speak to historians to get the facts and story right. “Sometimes it takes us even a month to just study about 2 or 3 monuments,” she says while adding that things have fasten as they are more adjusted with the work as compared to when the production house started off work for the channel. The most difficult part is to get the right people to talk about on the subject as everything has to be very authentic.

    Happy with most production houses working with the channel, Samat believes the work which has been produced is better than what is already out there. Considering the shows are finite, Samat believes it is very difficult to tell a tale in limited episodes as the genre is vast. “There has to be passion for the work and the story else we won’t be able to differentiate from the rest,” he opines.

    Shot on sets as well as on locations, the channel is not worried about the cost which has gone in producing the shows. “Both fiction and non-fiction have worked for us and for us the channel is a long term project as we have invested anything from six months to two years on the programmes,” states Samat.

    Siyaasat which is based on Indu Sundaresan’s novel, ‘The Twentieth Wife,’ is the story of a pawn that charted Mehrunissa’s way to power to become Nur Jahan, the Mallikaa of Hindustan and was shot in Bikaner as well as sets in Mumbai. “Adoptions need research too; but for us the main approach lies in telling the story without being melodramatic,” says Green Light Productions Rishabh Sheth on what differentiates historical shows on Epic from the rest of the channels.

    “Unlike other dailies, we are weekly which gives us enough time to work on pre and post production of an episode,” states Sheth who believes sometimes in a historical show liberties can be taken to make a character glossy to become more liked by the audience.

    At the launch of Chakravartin Ashoka Samrat, Colors CEO Raj Nayak had said that historical and mythology as a genre has great potential. “One can tell a story from various perspectives and still not lose the essence of it if treated well,” he had said on the growth in the genre. For instance, Dharmakshetra, a courtroom drama, unearths the buried questions and allows the legendary characters of Mahabharata to justify their actions for the very first time.

    Though all the blocks are fitting well for the channel, there is still a few missing links. “The content is good, but how many know of it is the question,” points out a media planner and adds, “The channel is not for family viewing as they prefer to watch dramas. It caters to a niche audience, which is interested in the content.”

    Samat too agrees with the fact and says, “Yes, for us the fundamental issue is awareness as it is lower than what we would expect it to be.” With new shows coming up, the channel will start a massive second phase of marketing.

    “Content is conventional and has created a lot of buzz for the channel on the social media, hence, again the focus of marketing will be digital,” says Samat and adds that unconventional route will also be taken. It is planning to launch school programmes across the country soon.

    As for the inventory, the channel is still taking it slow. “The industry has given us positive response but we still want to give them a little more time. Another six months and I guess we should be able to talk on the subject,” answers Samat when asked about the response from the advertisers. The channel currently has Aquaguard, HP, Tata Motors and Foodpanda on board.

    He, just like the others, is waiting for Broadcast Audience Research Council India (BARC) to start releasing data. “Things will change once BARC comes into play,” he opines.
    Nonetheless, it will follow the two minute ad-cap. On Information and Broadcast Minister Arun Jailtey comment of not being in favour of ad cap, Samat says that which way the regulations go, the channel will follow them. However, for him, the audience will be the judge as he doesn’t want to spoil the television viewing for them.

    Monetising through digital is also on Samat’s plan of action. “Our content is for the future and whenever we are ready for it, we will opt for digital subscription model,” says Samat, who is optimistic about the growth of the medium in the country with 4G coming in soon. That’s not all; he also believes that the content will be so rich and unique that it can be sold to the world.

    With a reach of 35 million+ homes, the HD pay channel, also available in down-scaled SD version comes with a subscription rate of Rs 55 while SD is available at Rs 10.5. For planners, the cost is too much especially when audience is used to getting a number of channels at a very minimal rate. “In a country where one TV home still outdoes homes where there are more screens and popular GECs available on nominal cost, why would one pay that much?” asks a media analyst.

    The analyst isn’t convinced that the channel will be able to monetise well on the digital platform.  

    Listening to all the suggestions and working on the same, Samat believes that the channel has a long way to go and things will alter depending on the future.  The channel with the primetime slot of 8:30 pm to 11 pm, currently is focusing on the awareness of it in the Hindi speaking market (HSM).