Tag: ETV Kannada

  • Suvarna sets high hopes with Bigg Boss Kannada 2

    Suvarna sets high hopes with Bigg Boss Kannada 2

    BENGALURU: A few weeks ago, Indiantelevision.com had reported that Star Network’s Kannada general entertainment channel (GEC) Suvarna has bagged the rights of the second season of Bigg Boss Kannada (BBK) from ETV Kannada.

     

    And the channel is all set to start airing the 100 episode daily show starting 29 June hosted by Kannada actor Sudeep again.

     

    To keep the mystery alive, Suvarna claims that the names of the 14 contestants have been kept under wraps with the winner taking home a cash prize of Rs 50 lakh. Suvarna business head Anup Chandrasekharan says, “We have always brought in different and exciting content for our audience and we are delighted to bring to your screens yet another thrilling series. Bigg Boss Kannada promises to be an electrifying season in its second innings.”

     

    A key differentiator between the Kannada and Hindi editions is the set at Lonavala which is simpler and has fewer cameras (35 maximum).  

     

    Produced by Endemol India, BBK 2 is an hour long episode to be aired between 8 to 9 pm will see a three hour long premiere, inform sources at the channel.

     

    Endemol India COO Abhishek Rege adds, “Bigg Boss has captured the attention of Indian audiences all over! With a legacy of record breaking TRPs it has truly gained momentum on both national and regional television with the continuing success Bigg Boss Hindi and fantastic response received by Bigg Boss Kannada season 1.”

     

    The channel has roped in OLX.in as the title sponsor, CERA as the powered by sponsor, Dollar Bigg Boss as associate sponsor and many more are lined up. The channel says that it is selling ad spots at a 200 per cent premium. Chandrasekharan says that he is looking at a 70-30 (spot-buying) split, with 70 per cent advertisers and sponsors already booked.

     

    A 360 degree marketing plan has been designed for BBK 2, for which it has earmarked around Rs 8 crore. This includes 150 hoardings across Karnataka and on 50 bus shelters in Bengaluru, 100 branded buses and ad spots on three radio stations. It has also planned for print ads in all publications on the launch day as well as magazine. Other outdoor and BTL activities include multiplex activity at PVR and Inox, mall branding in Bengaluru, door to door activity and mobile van activity.

     

    The channel is promoting the programme heavily on the digital platform through its website and social networking sites. It also intends to have a sub domain for BBK. The channel will dedicate 70 per cent of its promo time on this show during the launch phase, as well as run spots on its sister channel, Suvarna Plus.

     

    Industry sources peg the production cost of the show at about Rs 16 crore to Rs 17 crore across the 100 episodes, with the total cost pegged at around Rs 30 crore to Rs 35 crore. “There is no such thing as inflation. This season will cost about the same as last season to produce the show,” reveals the source. About 800 technicians would be working in shifts behind the scenes.

     

    While Chandrasekharan claims non disclosure agreement (NDA) reasons for not disclosing the amount that the channel is paying for retaining host Sudeep, industry sources put the amount at between Rs 1.5 crore to Rs 2.5 crore.

     

     “Sudeep was the obvious choice for season 2 as well. If we had brought in someone else, it would be like re-inventing the wheel. So what if the show has switched channels?” says a source at Endemol India.

     

    Though the show did bring in ratings numbers for ETV Kannada during in season one, it did not rake in the money that was expected reveals an industry source. “This was probably the reason that the Star Network could take the show away from Viacom18,” explains the source.

  • Bates CHI&Partners to acquire Temple Advertising

    Bates CHI&Partners to acquire Temple Advertising

    MUMBAI: Bates CHI&Partners announces it has agreed to acquire the business and assets of Temple Advertising, a boutique advertising agency based in Bangalore.

     

    “Bates CHI&Partners defined business mission is to create big Ideas for ambitious brands,” said Bates CHI&Partners CEO David Mayo. “In developing our strategy in India we are building a creative network with scale,” he added. “Temple is a renowned creative agency with a strong reputation and a broad vision of the world and with them around the table, we will deliver on this promise.” 

     

    Temple is a Bangalore-based advertising boutique agency co-founded in 2004 by Manmohan Anchan, Vidur Vohra and Srikanth VS.

     

    Srikanth VS will become CEO and Manmohan Anchan will become CCO of Bates CHI&Partners in India and they will jointly assume the role of managing partner of the group overseeing all five Bates CHI&Partners offices in Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata and Dhaka.

     

    Srikanth said, “We are incredibly excited to be part of a new agency set up in a new India environment and we hope to capture this new mood to build our business.”

     

    To underline the partnership and collaboration principles of this company, the agencies in Bangalore will merge and become Bates CHI&Temple, with the rest of the network retaining the original Bates CHI&Partners branding.

     

    Anchan said, “At Temple, we pride ourselves on our work. If it sells, it’s working. If it builds a brand, it’s working. We don’t create work for clients or juries, we create work that works. The time is right for a new agency in India to give variety to the current order of things.”

     

    Temple has worked with clients across diverse categories such as automotive, education, fashion and retail, FMCG, foods, media & entertainment, real estate and technology. Their clients include Embassy Group, eTV Kannada, Future Lifestyle Fashions (including Indigo Nation, Scullers, Manchester United, Jealous21), Pearson Education, Reliance Trends, Sumeru Frozen Foods, TVS Motors, Vaswani Group and Wipro Technologies.

  • FY-2014: Network18 Media operations segment reports operating profit of Rs 56 crore

    FY-2014: Network18 Media operations segment reports operating profit of Rs 56 crore

    BENGALURU:  Network18 Media and Investments Limited (Network18) Media Operations segment reported an operating profit of Rs 55.77 crore in FY-2014 as compared to a loss of Rs 151.09 crore in FY-2013. The segment reported a revenue of Rs 2,562.49 crore in FY-2014, 17.35 per cent more than the Rs 2,183.66 crore in FY-2013.

     

    Overall, in FY-2014, Network18 has reported a loss of Rs 36.77 crore, much lower than the loss of Rs 105.46 crore in FY-2013. Consolidated revenue in FY-2014 at Rs 2,682.39 crore was 13 per cent more than the Rs 2,382.69 crore in FY-2013.

     

    Note :  100,00,000=100 Lakh = 1 crore = 10 million.

     

    Network18 managing director Raghav Bahal said, “We are enthused by the turnaround performance of Network18 for this financial year. All our businesses have delivered strong  operating performances and contributed positively to achieve a new milestone in operating profits this year, despite the continued uncertainty in the macro-economic environment. We are confident of sustaining our growth trajectory, as we continue to extract value from our existing operations as well as profitably grow our newer initiatives.”

     

    Let us look at the FY-2014 and Q4-2014 numbers reported by Network18

     

    The company reported a 1.47 per cent growth in Total Income from Operations at Rs 738.32 crore in Q4-2014 as compared to the Rs 727.59 crore in the immediate trailing quarter and 8.66 per cent more than the Rs 679.49 crore in the year ago quarter Q4-2013.

     

    Network18 reported a consolidated loss of Rs 4.12 crore in Q4-2014, much lower than the loss of Rs 11.72 crore in Q3-2014 and as against a profit of Rs 0.47 crore in Q4-2013.

     

    The company’s Total Expense (Tot Exp) for FY-2014 at Rs 2695.58 crore (100.12 per cent of Total Income from operations) was 7.14 per cent more than the Rs 2515.98 crores (105.59 per cent of Total Income from operations) in FY-2014. Total Expenditure for Q4-2014 at Rs 726.07 crore (98.34 per cent of Total Income from operations) was 5.6 per cent more than the Rs 687.59 crore (94.5 per cent of Total Income from operations) in Q3-2014 and 6.25 per cent more than the Rs 683.35 crore in Q4-2013.

     

    Network18’s programming cost in FY-2014 at Rs 522.47 crore (19.41 per cent of Total Income from operations) was 7.81 per cent more than the Rs 484.63 crore (20.34 per cent of Total Income from operations) in FY-2013. Programming cost in Q4-2014 at Rs133.82 crore (18.13 per cent of Total Income from operations) was 14.18 per cent lower than the Rs 155.94 crore (21.43 per cent of Total Income from operations) in Q3-2014 and 25.08 per cent more than the Rs 106.99 crore (15.75 per cent of Total Income from operations) in Q4-2013.

     

    The company has brought down its finance costs to less than half (by 54.97 per cent) in FY-2014 at Rs122.47 crore (4.55 per cent of Total Income from operations) as compared to the Rs 271.98 crore (11.41 per cent of Total Income from operations) in FY-2013. Finance cost in Q4-2014 at Rs 32.08 crore (4.35 per cent of Total Income from operations) was 3.94 per cent more than the Rs 30.87 crore (4.24 per cent of Total Income from operations) in Q3-014 and 17.6 per cent lower than the Rs 38.93 crore (5.73 per cent of Total Income from operations) in Q4-2013.

     

    The company’s Film Production and Distribution (Film) segment reported a fall in revenue of 41.32 per cent to Rs101.77 crore in FY-2014 from Rs 173.43 crore in FY-2013. Network18’s film segment reported a negative revenue of Rs 14.61 crore in Q4-2014 as compared to Rs 35.53 crore in Q3-2014 and Rs 38.93 crore in Q4-2013.

     

    Film segment reported an operating loss of Rs 24.30 crore in FY-2014 as compared to a minor loss of Rs 0.42 crore in FY-2013. The loss in Q4-2014 at Rs 4.59 crore was much lower than the loss of Rs 14.28 crore in Q3-2014. Film segment had reported an operating profit of Rs 6.16 crore in Q4-2013.

     

    Here is what the company has to say:

     

    Note:  Reported results are inclusive of the financial consolidation of ETV News (100 per cent) and ETV Entertainment (50 per cent) from 22 Jan 2014 till 31 March 2014. On 22 Jan 2014, post receipt of required regulatory approvals, TV18 completed the acquisition of the ETV channels – 100 per cent of ETV News, 50 per cent of ETV Entertainment and 24.5 per cent of ETV Telugu. In accordance with the accounting policies, ETV News and ETV Entertainment have been consolidated at 100 per cent on a line by line basis (Refer Note No. 7 in the Notes section).

     

    Operating profits (EBITDA) turned around from a loss of Rs 39.3 crore in FY-2013 to a profit of Rs 87.2 crore in FY-2014, led by a consistent increase in profits generated by the television operations and reduction  in operating losses of the digital businesses.

     

    PBT for the year turned around from a loss of Rs 136.9 crore last year to Rs 16 crore this year led by a strong operating performance and a sharp reduction in interest cost from Rs 272 crore last year to Rs 122.5 crore this year.

     

    Reported operating revenue in Q4-2014 was Rs 738.3 crore, up 8.7 per cent YOY. Reported operating profit (EBITDA) in Q4FY14 was Rs 42.3 crores, up from Rs 12.7 crores last year.

     

    Television and Motion Pictures

     

    Reported annual revenues on a consolidated basis are up 15.8 per cent to Rs 1,968.1 crore and operating profits (EBITDA) have nearly doubled to Rs 210.5 crore.

     

    On a consolidated basis, annual advertising revenues grew 11 per cent year on year. Net Distribution Income (NDI) continued its steady climb to close at Rs 178 crores, up from Rs 15.7 crores in FY-2013.

     

    In this financial year, operating profits from our television operations doubled from Rs 114.2 crore to Rs 233.6 crore. General News delivered a 6.9x growth in annual operating profits and grew to Rs 22 crore.

     

    Business News remained stable despite a downturn in the markets and the absence of the Union Budget.

     

    Infotainment broke into positive territory and our Entertainment television business registered a 2.9x growth in operating profits (EBITDA) which stood at Rs108.4 crore.

     

    In Q4-2014, the company successfully launched MTV Indies and Rishtey in the entertainment segment and ETV Bangla, ETV Kannada and ETV Haryana in the regional news segment.

     

     Reported revenues for Q4-2014 stood at Rs 563.3 crore, up 18.7 per cent and operating profits (EBITDA) in Q4-2014 stood at Rs 69.7 crore, up 101 per cent YOY.

     

    Digital content and eCommerce

     

    FY-2014 revenues from the digital content and eCommerce business grew by 32 per cent from Rs 400.9 crore last  year to Rs 530.8 crore this year. Operating losses (EBITDA) of our digital business were steadily  reduced in this financial year from Rs 125.4 crore to Rs 80.6 crore.

     

    In Q4-2014, the company successfully launched ‘FirstBiz’, a business news portal under the ‘FirstPost’ stable and ‘News18.com’, a web, mobile and tablet service which focuses on local news at the state and city level.

     

    Q4-2014 revenues from the digital businesses stood at Rs 149.4 crore and grew by 35 per cent over the last year.

     

    Network18 CEO B Saikumar said, “All our broadcast operations continued to show improvement in margins. IndiaCast has delivered a stellar swing in net distribution income. Our General news operations have turned around this year, due to a strong focus on operational efficiency. Infotainment operations at A+E Networks I TV18 broke into positive territory. Our broadcast entertainment business at Viacom18 grew profitably. Our digital businesses displayed encouraging revenue growth, successfully launched FirstBiz and News18.com and narrowed operating losses. We are focused on sustaining our strong performance in the coming year.”

  • We are neither threatened by Hindi nor do we ignore it: Ravish Kumar

    We are neither threatened by Hindi nor do we ignore it: Ravish Kumar

    Certainly not his maiden stint at handling regional, Ravish Kumar was earlier with Star, managing Star Pravah and Star Jalsha for two years. While he originally got on-board Viacom 18 to head the network’s proposed movie channel which did not materialise for some reason, he quickly rose to the challenge of reviving three regional territories.

    Today, as Viacom 18 executive vice president and business head – regional channels, ETV Kannada, ETV Bangla and ETV Odiya, Kumar is close to completing three years with the network even as the regional market continues to grow from strength to strength.

    On any given day, Kumar is running from pillar to post, what with three different portfolios to handle. However, on a rare day that he was able to find some time, indiantelevision.com’s Vishaka Chakrapani sat him down to understand the business of regional channels. Excerpts…

    How has your experience been with working on regional channels?

    To take up these channels and turn them around is a huge task. Regional channels involve a lot of experimenting and risk-taking. These are vibrant channels in vibrant markets and are full of ideas.  We have started seeing results on some of the channels and on others we have built a solid foundation.

    What makes each market different from the other?

    All states are unique and have a varied cultural background, literature, heritage, theatre etc. This gives a tremendous canvas to paint from.  There is a strong sense of expectation and a strong sense of progressiveness from the people, which means there is a lot of place for us to introduce discontinuities in content.

    After the acquisition by Network 18, one of the first things you did was to get Bigg Boss on the Kannada and Bangla channels. How has it worked and how are the formats working for regional?

    In all three markets, we changed the primetime slot within one year and have reinvented the entire portfolio of fiction and non-fiction. We’ve experimented with established formats like Bigg Boss and Jhalak Dikhlaja and also created our own IP with a show called Indian.  The base of the show is that while you are a Kannadiga, do you understand the nuances of being an Indian. We took a team of 18 to 22 people and took them across the country, where they had to adapt to the local way of life. This is our own format, which gave us more or less the same ratings as Bigg Boss.

    We did Indian in Kannada last year and we intend to renew it but we are looking at reinventing as well. Season one is done and it is of no use to do it a second time. The IP is the fundamental guts of the show which takes you out of your comfort zone and gives you experiences that you haven’t had before to make you a more confident person.  We go for the emotional hook that makes you stronger and exposes you to a life as never seen before.

    So last year, we experimented with big-ticket formats and right now, we are doing a hybrid of Jhalak Dikhlaja called TakadhimithaDancing Stars in which we have licensed the version from BBC Productions and are producing it on our own. We have worked successfully in all three models. International formats, our own IPs, and a hybrid model.

    Adaptation is a misused word. You have to look at whether a show is relevant for the market. Whether the practice or the theme of the show is prevalent in that region.

    If you are doing a huge international format show like Bigg Boss or India’s Got Talent, the scale of production is huge. You have to pay format fee, licence fee that takes the cost to a different level. So there is a certain expectation with what you can do and what you cannot and there is an expectation that people also have which is hard to meet.

    But reinventing for a show every year is a difficult task. It is a challenge because it’s not easy to reinvent. But in a regional market, there is so much more to do. I can be as creative as I want. We don’t care about ratings; what we care about is making sure people like what we put there. We have upped the quality and variety of content in the three channels. So deliver a product and keep your faith in it.

    But big formats have not yet entered Odisha yet? What kind of a market is it?

    Odisha is a smaller market for us and not as well developed or monetised as the others.  There is a limit on the amount we can spend in this market. But what works here is dubbed shows. And we also have six to seven of our own shows. The weekend property is song and dance-based as opposed to big shows due to budget restrictions.

    In Odisha, we are in the process of adapting shows from Tamil and Telugu and from our sister channel, Colors, too. In terms of content, people want soaps, drama, aspirational and progressive shows. In the regional market, you also have the responsibility to educate people. For viewers such as housewives, television is their window to the world. Their ecosystem is very limited. When they watch a serial like Balika Vadhu, which is followed by a learning section, that is what they are really interested in.

    Colors manages to make money out of Bigg Boss by balancing its PnL and not by money earned through the show. Do you also work in a similar manner for regional adaptations of Bigg Boss?

    We are far more sensitive to PnL. There is a limit to the amount of money I can put, even though I want to do a big-ticket show. So that confines or prevents me from taking on more than I can chew. You need to be sensitive to costs in these markets because the cost Hindi can afford is not necessarily the cost we can work with in the regional space and we don’t want to compromise on quality.

    What are the kind of fiction shows that you have on your Kannada channel?

    We have done adaptations of Balika Vadhu and Madhubala called Puttagowri Maduve and Ashwini Nakshatra, respectively. We also have three of our own original shows: Agnisakshi, which is recently launched; Lakshmi Baramma and Charanadasi. Everything has worked for us. So we seek to provide quality and outstanding stories. Madhubala and Ashwini Nakshatra may have started out similarly but now, their stories are extremely divergent.

    How has the market evolved in these three states?

    I think regional continues to grow faster than Hindi. Earlier in Bangla and Kannada, you would pull in GRPs by pulling in people to watch. The market now has stabilised at a level and now you are taking share from each other. The TV penetration and coverage continues to grow. We are going to have a new method of looking at data, which might lead to some redefinition of universe. TV hasn’t reached saturation. We are now seeing increasing penetration of second TV households.

    ETV has a slightly older audience due to its long existence. How do you ensure your fiction shows reach out to the right TG, especially the youth?

    In fiction, our stories are very mainstream and we are giving newer talent a chance. We are supplementing it a lot with our non-fiction shows. Non-fiction is what draws the youth to the channel.  But we ensure that whatever we put out is not excluding any particular group. We are realising that great content works across the board. The definition that we have to tailor content to fit an age group is a myth.

    Would it have been possible for the ETV group to make such investments prior to acquisition by Network 18?

    These channels, according to my understanding, had been on the selling block for quite some time. So, they were managing bottom lines carefully and not looking at growth. They were actually managing for profit. Would they have actually turned around and put this kind of money in the shows? Probably not, but it is hard to answer.

    How do you manage competition with the Hindi market?

    Anyone who wants to watch Hindi is welcome to do that. We don’t fight Hindi.  We continue with our strategy, irrespective of what Hindi is doing. Let me put it this way – we are not threatened by them but we don’t even ignore them and if there is any learning to be had, we are constantly monitoring Hindi to see what we could be doing bigger and better. I have a canvas that is beautiful. It allows me to pick and choose from Hindi and international as well.

    What is your viewership share in each state?

    TAM data for the four-week average ending week 12, shows that in Kannada, we are 25 per cent; Udaya is 31 per cent; Suvarna is 22 per cent; and Zee Kannada is 12 per cent.  We used to be number four or five in this market and now we are a strong number two. In Odisha, Tarang has 40 per cent, Sarthak has 30 per cent and we are at 14 per cent. In Bangla, Star Jalsha is 49 per cent, Zee Bangla is 37 per cent, and we have 10 per cent.

  • ETV Kannada and ETV Bangla to launch new shows

    ETV Kannada and ETV Bangla to launch new shows

    MUMBAI: Ringing in the new financial year are two regional general entertainment channels (GECs) under the belt of Network18 – ETV Kannada and ETV Bangla.

     

    Treating its audience on the Bengali New Year is ETV Bangla. The channel has come up with a dedicated afternoon time band called ‘Duronto Dupur’ which goes on air from 15 April.

     

    Four new shows will feature in the time band between 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm from Monday to Saturday. This includes two fiction shows Gouridaan– a remake of Balika Vadhu and  Shesh Theke Shuru. Two non- fiction lineup includes a mythological show Durgesh Nandini and a neighbourhood based game show Parar Shera Bouthan hosted by Bigg Boss Bangla winner Anik Dar. Prior to this, the slot had reruns of the evening programmes.

     

    Marketing for these shows have already begun in West Bengal. The channel is banking heavily on OOH, by putting hoardings and banners in markets, railway stations, bus back panels, rickshaw back panels, ferry branding and bus shelters. Also a 15 day radio campaign with an average of 72 slots across four channels has been devised.

     

    On the other hand, viewers of ETV Kannada will be treated to a buffet of five new shows in the next three months.  This includes two fiction and three non-fiction shows, of which one will be a mythological programme, named Srinivasa Kalyana, which is based on the tale of Lord Balaji.

     

     “Kannada is a good market for us to introduce this show. We wanted to make the show perfect and which is why we delayed it a bit. It is looking brilliant,” says Viacom 18 executive vice president Ravish Kumar who handles ETV Kannada, Bangla and Oriya.

     

    The timings and launch dates for the Kannada shows are still undecided but will be within three months.

  • TV 18 completes ETV channel acquisition

    TV 18 completes ETV channel acquisition

    MUMBAI: A year ago, one of India’s leading media companies announced that it was acquiring the regional broadcast network; yesterday it informed the stock exchange that it had completed the transaction. We are referring to  TV18 Broadcast, a subsidiary of Network 18, which sent a note out to the Bombay stock exchange that it had successfully completed the acquisition of the Ramoji Rao promoted  ETV network with effect from 22 January 2014.

     

    The channels  were acquired at a price of Rs 2,053 crore according to the Share Purchase Agreement which is well within the budget of Rs 2,100 crore that was approved by its board last year. The deal resulted in it acquiring 100 per cent of regional Hindi news channels ETV Uttar Pradesh, ETV Madhya  Pradesh,  ETV Rajasthan, ETV Bihar and ETV Urdu and 50 per cent in ETV Marathi, ETV Kannada, ETV Bangla, ETV Gujarati and ETV Oriya. The Telugu news and GEC channels ETV Telugu and ETV Telugu News will, however, see TV18 owning only 24.50 per cent equity. 

     

    Excepting for the two Telugu channels, TV18 will have complete board and management control over all the other channels. Additionally, it will be holding the 50 per cent stake in the five regional GECs as an asset held for sale. The interest in these channels, its filing with the BSE states, will transferred to an associate company. Sources indicate that the channels are most likely  going to  be added to its Viacom18 joint venture or another company in the group. This will help it keep separate identities for TV18 Broadcast as a news channel enterprise, and GECs under Viacom18, if  the transfer does happen under it.

     

    The deal cements TV 18 and Viacom 18’s presence in the regional space. When contacted, Network 18 group CEO B Sai Kumar, he said that the deal had been waiting to come through and more details would have to wait a while.

     

    With one more transaction out of the way, Network18 can now focus on expanding its portfolio further through a Gujarati business news channel in the next few months as announced by Sai Kumar barely a week ago, clearly signalling that things are turning around at the group which was once ailing, thanks to its heavy debt burden.

  • Writer locks horns with ETV Kannada over Akka

    Writer locks horns with ETV Kannada over Akka

    MUMBAI: We’ve heard of instances where writers have been unable to stand up to errant television channels that have produced shows based on their scripts without informing them, let alone involving them.

    However, having such a writer drag the channel to court and succeed in getting a stay order against the concerned show is a rarity in the television industry.

    One such is Akka, the story of twin sisters, which was to air on ETV Kannada at 8.30pm starting Monday. As soon as Kannada writer-producer Rekha Rani got wind of the show being a replica of the draft copy she had submitted to the channel some months ago, she raised a stink. When ETV Kannada didn’t pay any heed to her allegations, she approached the Bangalore civil court which passed a stay order restraining the channel from airing the show from Monday.

    When contacted, Rekha Rani told  indiantelevision.com: “It is my story and idea that they have copied. The channel also came to me for monetary settlement but that’s not what I’m after. I want my story back.”                                         

    Rekha Rani says she only wants her story back, not money

    “I had given the story to the channel and they seemed interested but I had no idea they had taken it ahead without my involvement.” Rani claims she has audio recordings of programming head of the channel Parameshwar Gundkal, asking her to come to a monetary settlement as well as recordings of the show crew describing the show which she says she has produced in court. When contacted, Guntakal refused to comment on the matter.     

    Promos of Akka are already on air and a larger promotional campaign amounting to Rs 10 lakh is running across the state.

    When contacted, Viacom18 EVP Ravish Kumar who heads ETV Kannada, Oriya and Bangla refused to comment saying the matter is subjudice. Asked about the replacement for Akka, he simply said: “Wait and watch what we do on Monday.”

    “This is totally unethical. How can a writer now approach him? This is a clear signal to channels not to mess around with creative professionals. We need to safeguard the interest of writers,” says a senior executive from a rival channel.

    Meanwhile, ETV Kannada lawyer Shyamsundar has this afternoon submitted a reply to the court to vacate the stay on Akka. Coming to Rekha Rani, it’s now a fight to the finish…

  • NGC, ETV announce content partnership

    NGC, ETV announce content partnership

    MUMBAI: The National Geographic Channel (NGC) and regional network ETV have announced a content partnership.

    NGC will provide content to ETV, which will air five days a week (Monday-Friday) in a half hour evening slot. From today 13 November viewers of ETV Telugu, ETV Oriya, ETV Kannada, ETV Bangla, ETV Gujarati, ETV Marathi, ETV UP, ETV MP, ETV Rajasthan and ETV Bihar will be able to catch NGC’s programmes in their native language. The regional language versions of the programs will be provided by NGC to ETV Network.

    The new partnership with ETV is a step further in NGC’s strategy to reach out to a wider audience across the country. The programmes being aired on ETV will cover a wide range of topics. The alliance will be kick started with NGC’s series Most Amazing Moments” that will premier across the ETV network from today. This partnership also underlines ETV’s mission to provide its viewers with quality international programming to enhance the viewer experience.

    NGC India VP marketing Rajesh Sheshadri, “National Geographic Channel is synonym for smart, innovative and interesting programmes that invite viewers to Think again. Reaching a wider audience to expose them to our superior content has been a goal we have been constantly working towards.

    “Partnership with a leading channel like ETV that reaches to millions of viewers through their bouquet of regional channels is an excellent opportunity to further our reach. I am confident that viewers in these states will appreciate our unique programmes and will look forward to their daily dose of the best of National Geographic Channel programmes in their native language.”

    ETV Network VP – operations Bapineedu said, “Quality entertainment in the language of our viewer’s choice is one of the key contributors to our success. Our programs depict the culture with which our viewers are able to connect and it is this spirit of empathy with individual cultures/languages that has helped us to reach to millions of viewers. Through this partnership with National Geographic Channel we endeavor to further enhance our viewer’s experience by exposing them to never before seen international programmes in their native language.”