Tag: Filmy

  • HC’s U/A ok sees Sahara One, Filmy back on air

    HC’s U/A ok sees Sahara One, Filmy back on air

    MUMBAI: Sahara One and Filmy are back on the cable TV networks in Maharashtra while the ban on the other seven channels for showing adult movie content continues.

    “Sahara One and Filmy were banned due to a confusion on U/A certificate. We have certain movies with U/A certificate and mistakenly it was included in the A category. But yesterday’s High Court ruling brought the clarity that U/A certified movies don’t come under the purview of the ban. Hence, our two channels are now back on air,” says Sahara One Media & Entertainment CEO Shantonu Aditya.

    B’casters to meet I&B ministry to convey views
    Broadcasters are planning to meet the information and broadcasting (I&B) ministry to represent their views. They are willing to obtain certificate from the censor board before they air any movies. But they feel the entire process of certification of their movie library would require time. “The certification board needs to beef up its infrastructure to clear a huge pile of movies. We want to be given time for carrying out this process,” says a senior executive of a leading movie channel.

    The channels which are still to come on air are Star Gold, Star Movies, Star One, Max, Zee Cinema, AXN and HBO. These channels will continue to remain off air at least till the next hearing of the case.

    DTH providers continue to show banned channels
    Direct-to-home (DTH) service providers, however, continued to show these banned channels as they were yet to be served notice. Tata Sky Ltd and Dish TV executives were not available for comment. The Bombay High Court yesterday ruled that DTH service providers and broadcasters were bound by the 21 December, 2005 order banning the telecast of movies with `A’ certificates.
    “Nobody has received the High Court order as yet. This could be the reason for these channels being still available on DTH,” an industry observer says.

    Out of the list of 122 movies given to the High Court, 84 have U/A certification. “We are happy that the order includes broadcasters and DTH operators. If DTH is showing the channels today, that may be because the fine print of the High Court order has not reached anybody,” says Ravi Singh, a distributor of Wire and Wireless India Ltd (WWIL).

    The cable TV service in pockets of Malad and Borivli, located in the western suburbs of Mumbai, are yet to resume following the police raid and sealing of amplifiers. “We are taking up the matter with the court tomorrow for restoration of signals. Seven sub-operators are affected in this area,” says Singh.

    Broadcasters have recently been cautious in buying Hindi movies from producers. In acquiring new adult movies for telecast rights, they are insisting on re-censoring it for television. Sahara, for instance, acquired Gangster, an `A’-rated movie after asking the producer to re-censor it for TV viewing.

    “In case we buy A movies in future, we will re-censor it,” says Aditya.

    Film producers, however, feel that re-censoring is an unnecessary headache and will occupy bureaucratic procedures. The editing may also make it less attractive for TV viewing if the content is essential to the plot of the movie, they say.

    Meanwhile, the Film & Television Producers Guild Of India has sought clarity from the I&B minister Priya Ranjan Das Munshi over the confusion prevailing “in respect of film certification and broadcast content regulation.”

    Guild president Amit Khanna said the entire entertainment fraternity would be grateful if the I&B ministry could take issue of ‘censorship’ holistic in the spirit of a self-regulating code and take appropriate steps to make suitable legislative amendments in this regard at the earliest.

  • HC includes DTH operators, channels in adult movie ban ambit; slams cable blackout

    HC includes DTH operators, channels in adult movie ban ambit; slams cable blackout

    MUMBAI: The Bombay High Court today ruled that broadcasters, including direct-to-home (DTH) service providers, were bound by the 21 December, 2005 order banning the telecast of movies with ‘A’ certificates.

    The High Court bench, headed by Justice Lodha, pulled up the cable operators for their action of discontinuing transmission of all channels in the city. “The act was irresponsible,” the bench decreed, adding that cable operators could not charge subscribers for the two days when services was not available.

    The court also specified that the broadcasters have to obtain certificate from the censor board before they air any movies. Justice Lodha pointed out that the December 2005 order holds applicable to foreign channels.

    What this means is that the nine channels charged with showing adult content — Hindi and English movie channels (Zee Cinema, Star Movies, HBO, Filmy, Star Gold, AXN and Max), and Hindi entertainment channels Star One and Sahara One — will continue to remain off air at least till the next hearing of the case.

    Cable services were stalled on Monday evening after the Mumbai police raided cable TV control rooms and seized decoder boxes of the nine channels.

    It was in the December 2005 that the High Court had ordered the police to take action against cable operators and cable service providers who beamed movies without ‘A’ or ‘U/A’ certificates. This was in response to a public interest litigation filed by social activist Pratibha Nathani.

    However, today’s order made an important modification to the original order delivered last December. The court pointed out that movies with U/A (universal/adult) certification cannot be banned. These would be allowed to be screened but would have to run a cautionary scroll highlighting that the movies can be watched under parental guidance, the court ruled.
    The court also said that with this modification, if police have taken action against anybody for showing U/A movie in the past few days, such an action will have to be discharged, news agency Press Trust of India reported.

  • Cable blackout in Mumbai ends

    Cable blackout in Mumbai ends

    MUMBAI: Cable television is finally back in Mumbai after almost two days. However, movie channels, as well as Hindi entertainment channels Star One and Sahara One, remain on the blink.

    A compromise was reached late this evening after the Cable Operators and Distributors Association (Coda), which represents local cable ops, as well as representatives of the various multi-system operators, met Maharashtra home minister RR Patil.

    The cable fraternity’s contention has been that since they are only service providers, and not content producers, they require “clear cut regulation from the government for the telecast of movie channels.”

    According to a cable operator who preferred to remain anonymous, all the networks were restoring cable services barring those of the nine channels that triggered the imbroglio in the first place. “We will wait for the verdict, which will be heard tomorrow (Wednesday) by Justice Lohda (before deciding on the next course of action),” he said.
    Cable operators have filed an intervention petition in the Bombay High Court asking why broadcasters and direct-to-home operators were not being taken to task by the authorities. The petition is scheduled to come up for hearing tomorrow.

    Earlier in the day, cable operators were running a scroll informing viewers of the reasons behind the suspension of services. “Due to unprecedented raids on cable operators for carrying satellite movie and entertainment channels having adult content, all Maharashtra cable operators have shut down these channels till further directions from the High Court and commissioners. Kindly bear with us.” — Cable Operators and Distributors Association.

    The channel blackout was not total all over Maharastra though. Besides Mumbai, other parts of the state – such as Nasik, Pune, Thane and New Mumbai – were affected to varying degrees by the channel blackout. In Pune, for instance, the cable networks only discontinued the transmission of movie and music channels.

    Cable services were halted last evening after the Mumbai police raided cable TV control rooms and seized the decoder boxes of nine channels charged with showing adult content. Among these were Hindi and English movie channels (Zee Cinema, Star Movies, HBO, Filmy, Star Gold, AXN and Max), and Hindi entertainment channels Star One and Sahara One.

    Police said the operators were raided because they were showing adult films, despite there being a ban on them. At least three million homes were affected by the blackout.

  • Mumbai cable TV shut as operators protest police clampdown

    Mumbai cable TV shut as operators protest police clampdown

    MUMBAI: Cable operators across India’s entertainment capital Mumbai blacked out all channels on their networks on 21 August late evening. The reason: they were protesting against the move by the authorities to stop them from transmitting English and Hindi movie channels to their viewers.

    Earlier in the day, the Mumbai police had swooped down on cable TV control rooms and sealed decoder boxes of nine channels for showing adult content. Among these were Hindi and English movie channels (Zee Cinema, Star Movies, HBO, Filmy, Star Gold, AXN and Max), and Hindi entertainment channels Star One and Sahara One.

    At the time of writing, unconfirmed reports were that other cities across the western Indian state of Maharashtra had also been affected with cable TV services partially or completely shut down. For instance a major cable operator in Pune revealed that decoders of the above nine channels and also those of MTV and Channel V had been sealed.

    Additionally, certain cable TV networks had started scrolling that the agitation had spread through the rest of Maharashtra with services being shut down every where.

    “Police have sealed the decoder boxes of nine channels. We had to sign a bond that we wouldn’t be telecasting these channels till the High Court ruling,” says a senior executive of a leading multi system operator (MSO).

    The Bombay High Court had last week pulled up the Maharashtra police chief for not acting against cable operators who were violating its earlier order banning adult movies on TV. In December 2005, the High Court had ordered the police to take action against cable operators and cable service providers who beamed movies with ‘A’ or ‘U/A’ certificates. This was in response to a public interest litigation filed by social activist Pratibha Nathani.

    In Mumbai, cable operators have blacked out their service. “There was too much confusion and we didn’t receive a definite list of which channels to block. Movie channels like Pix and Zee Studio, for instance, are spared. It is only late in the day that the police has come to our control rooms and sealed the decoders of nine channels. To avoid all this chaos, the three control rooms of Siticable in Mumbai have switched off their service,” says Ravi Singh, a distributor of Siticable.

    Adds a cable operator, “They should have told us early in the day which channels we are not to telecast. There would have been no need for the police to visit all the control rooms in Mumbai as we would have blocked these channels. We are not broadcasters and we can’t be expected to act as the censors of content.”

    The Bombay High court had on 16 August directed Director General of Police Dr P S Pasricha to file an additional affidavit within a week to explain whether any action has been taken against erring cable operators.

    MSOs are deciding what course of action they should take. “We may move the court,” says Wire and Wireless India Ltd. (WWIL) CEO Jagjit Kohli.

    When contacted, a Star India spokesperson did not wish to comment on the issue.

  • Filmy: Six months and beyond

    Big movies. More wrap-around programming. Heavy marketing. That is the course Filmy, the Hindi movie channel from the Sahara stable, will take as it gears up to double its audience base over the next six months.

    The initial period, as Filmy business head Ashutosh puts it, is “more than satisfactory.”

    “We have grown against established channels like Zee Cinema, Max and Star Gold. They have been in existence longer and have built a library over the period. We had to also combat against a tough distribution environment,” says Ashutosh.

    He adds: “Over the next six months, Filmy could break the 50 GRP-mark. Filmy has also broken the myth that Hindi movie channel space has no space for a fourth player.”

    Indiantelevision.com takes a look at the six-month evolution of the movie channel and the ideas that have worked for it.

    Content Strategy: Wrap-around Programming

    To break into the competitive market, Filmy adopted an innovative programming approach. The executives at Filmy fondly call it ‘Wraparound Programming’ and this phrase meant a lot of stress on non-movie programming.

    “We worked on an image, which is filmy, fun, original and progressing. This original plan of creating a different channel, with a different look and feel, was then driven by all the other innovations, such as our characters and the off-beat film news content,” says Filmy marketing and content head Shailesh Kapoor.

    The original plan: The channel will have a daily dose of three movies at 10 am, 3 pm and 8 pm. A big movie will be telecast on Sundays in the 3 pm slot.

    Then, it will also have a variety of wraparound programming; four anchors will provide a whole new experience of seeing cinema at home. While other movie channels are mere telecasters, Filmy wanted to be the mouthpiece of Bollywood.

    The flagship set of four characters are integral to the channel‘s programming formats.

    Lallan (a rustic who has migrated to Mumbai from a small town in Uttar Pradesh), Lal Gulab (a typical villain as seen in all movies), Rokkky (who has the air of a Bollywood superstar and is played by Hindi film actor Chunky Pandey) and Ruchi Reporter (who is like a sting journalist and is interested in exposing the private lives of stars).

    “We knew that, we were not anywhere near our competitors in terms of library. Hence, we wanted to score in the other areas,” says Ashutosh.

    When Filmy started, the main concern was not about the third party content (commercials or movies), which was anyway there for a start.

    “Our focus was to create our own content such as interstials and station IDs. We wanted to create a space for ourselves in the market. Otherwise, there was no point in being a fourth channel,” explains Ashutosh.

    Research goes to prove that Filmy’s strategy reaped good fortunes.

    According to channel executives, the anchor characters are doing very well in the markets they have been targeted as per the research findings.

    For example, Lallan is a huge hit in the Hindi belt, while Rokkky has caught the attention of urban India. Inspired by the findings, Filmy has decided to give new roles to both the characters now.

    “Lallan will now also drive the marketing and promotional initiatives of the channel. The channel has decided to reduce the duration of the 30-minute show anchored by Rokkky to increase the footage of the character through various other capsules,” says Ashutosh.

    Responding to the feedback received, Lal Gulab, the video parlor owner who doubles up as a don in the nights, will now be given one single avtar.

    “This character, has been very well-accepted by urban centres, while rural viewers have found difficulty in understanding the double-act. Hence we have decided to simplify the character with some modifications,” adds Ashutosh.

    Keeping in mind that the break in TVRs are high, filmy makes it a point to spend a significant amount on wraparound production.

    Without actually divulging the figures, Ashutosh claims that, the average production budget of a 30-minute wrap-around-programme on Filmy is much higher than the average budget of a normal 30-minute television programme. “You can call it cutting-edge programming,” he says.

    The push for Filmy also came from some of the innovative tools it employed to enhance movie viewing on television. Ashutosh names Recap as one such key innovation.

    Recap was targeted at viewers who drop in mid-way. As the name suggests, it presented a capsule of the exhausted part. Then we had Aunty Break Fail, which acted as a link between commercial breaks and the movie shown,” says Ashutosh.

    The average television viewing period of an individual is about 27 minutes and hence, Recap was a key innovation. Filmy capitalised on these types of small issues, which competitors “ignored.”

    In the six-month period, Filmy also claims to have re-written few market theories. Ashutosh says the channel has gave a new dimension to the 7 am – 10 am time band, which was otherwise perceived as a non-scorer.

    “The market was skeptical about Filmy introducing a 7 am to 10 am movie band. But the band has delivered for us. We found that, it was not as bad as people thought. Then our strategy of branding slots also got acknowledged,” says Ashutosh.

    Movie Content

    Filmy has expanded its library to about 450 movies from a base tally of about 300 in the six month period.

    Apart from the Sahara One Motion Pictures productions, the channel is now also looking at other producers for acquisition, according to Ashutosh.

    “We have the advantage of being part of a leading Bollywood producer with Sahara One Motion Pictures being our constant source of good movies. To explore the space further, we are now targeting non-Sahara movies also,” he says.

    Filmy is basically looking at movies, which make good business sense. Instead of acquiring all the movies coming its way, it has adopted a strategy of buying utility movies.

    Filmy, which started its innings with Sahara titles such as No Entry, Page Three and Sarkar, has now Malaamaal Weekly, Gangster and the upcoming Katputhli tucked under its belt. As the festival season approaches, the channel is gearing up for more big ticket acquisitions, according to Kapoor.

    “Filmy is getting aggressive on the acquisition front. We are looking to buy two to three big ticket properties and then a lot of other latest movies,” he reveals.

    A key initiative forward for Filmy will be taking in the August-September period when it would be introducing Hollywood dubbed movie block.

    As already reported by Indiantelevision.com, Sahara is in talks with at least three international studios, including Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, for acquiring international titles.

    “We have conducted a research on what sorts of movies would work in Hindi language, and accordingly we have set our preferences,” says Kapoor.

    Marketing

    On the marketing front, Filmy is following the strategy of taking its lead anchors off air and positioning amidst the public.

    The channel recently associated with Rakesh Roshan for his latest release Krrish and had Lallan performing in the respective theatres. Similarly, Lallan will be doing a Shahrukh act in theatres where Kabhi Alvida Na Kehna would be releasing.

    Though Filmy has a full-fledged on-air promotion strategy, the channel is yet to hit the outdoors in a big way in terms of product promotions. However, in the next phase, this may change. And driving the initiatives will be the slew of new properties the channel is about to launch.

    “Filmy may go outdoors to promote our big movie properties. Then we will be launching at least three big ticket properties in the September 2006 – March 2007 period and this would also require good amount of promotion across all media,” says Kapoor.

    Distribution

    The channel, which was to be encrypted right from the start, faced initial hiccups as it had to swap the position for sister channel Sahara One.

    Having won live cricket content, Sahara One – the general entertainment channel – decided to encrypt the channel in a short span of time. The only way to speed up distribution was to keep Filmy on the unencrypted mode while seeding decoder boxes for Sahara One.

    Filmy then waited a longer time to regain the status of an encrypted channel. Reason: It wanted to ensure the fool-proof distribution of the boxes across the market.

    “We went encrypted on 6 August. The transition has been seamless as we had to ensure that we protect our existing reach. We are now available in 79 per cent of the TAM market,” says Ashutosh.

    Though he would not spell out the carriage fee to ensure a widespread reach of the newly-launched channel, market sources put it at Rs 100 million. The focus now is to ensure better space on the cable networks.

    A separate team has been put in place with former Sony hand Sameer Ganapathy as the head. Earlier, Sahara News and the entertainment channels were handled by the same team.

    Performance

    This month, Filmy shocked its elder sibling Sahara One by overtaking the general entertainment channel in terms of GRPs.

    An average GRP of 50 at the completion of six months has boosted the morale of the channel tremendously, says Ashutosh.

    “When we began, it was a ‘by chance’ channel, rather than a ‘by choice’ one. Keeping the tough competition in mind, it was important for us to nurture that ‘force of habit’ and the Tam data validates our success. People now watch the channel by choice,” he says.

    Filmy had opened its innings with a channel share of 4 per cent against Zee Cinema’s 34 per cent, Max’s 35 per cent and Star Gold’s 26 per cent for Week 7 (12 February), as per Tam (CS4+ HSM).

    The channel kept an average market share of 6 per cent in the next 22 weeks before shooting to the double figure of 12 per cent for week 30 (29 July). The feat was powered by the telecast of movie Hanuman, which helped the channel to garner some significant numbers in the slot.

    As per Tam data, for the period of 12 February to 29 July (HSM CS4+), Filmy holds an average market share of 7 per cent against Zee Cinema (35 per cent), Max (32 per cent) and Star Gold (25 per cent). The data reveals that, the Hindi movie genre has recorded a marginal expansion with the entry of Filmy, from 14.35 per cent to 16 per cent during this period.

    “As per our knowledge, cannibalisation from other channels has been minimal. Our entry has expanded the market to a small extent,” says Ashutosh.

    “Filmy has become a channel, which you can’t ignore. It has turned out to be a visually better looking and consumer-focussed player. We are giving a lot of stress on individual addressability. We are not taking the viewers for granted,” Kapoor sums up.

  • Filmy to launch Hollywood dubbed movie block; revamps programming

    Filmy to launch Hollywood dubbed movie block; revamps programming

    MUMBAI: Sahara One Media & Entertainment Ltd’s Hindi movie channel Filmy is entering the second half of its first year with a slew of new initiatives. One key move on the programming front would be the launch of a Hollywood dubbed movie segment.

    “We want to explore the Hollywood action movie genre for Filmy. For this, we are planning to have a dubbed movie block. Filmy will be unveiling the segment very soon and we are working on the slots. At present we are in talks with a couple of foreign players for movie acquisition,” says Filmy business head Ashutosh, while not divulging further details.

    According to market sources, Sahara is in talks with at least three international studios for acquiring the international titles. The list includes Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, the motion picture and television feature distribution company owned by The Walt Disney Company.

    This move will see Filmy joining rival channels Max and Star Gold, which are already into telecasting dubbed versions of popular Hollywood movies. However, Zee Cinema has been distancing itself from the strategy of telecasting Hollywood movies dubbed in Hindi.

    As part of the programming revamp, Filmy is also increasing the footage of its wrap-around content, which includes film-based shows and spoofs. The channel’s anchors Rokki, Lal Gulab, Lallan and Ruchi Reporter will now do more shows on the channel during the breaks.

    The decision to up the wrap-around programming was taken on the basis of an audience study Filmy conducted after completing three months, according to Filmy marketing and content head Shailesh Kapoor.

    “We have received feedback from our viewers, asking us to increase the participation of our anchors in our programming. They want to watch more of the film-based content. Accordingly, We have a new segment ‘Filmy Hot Break’, which will be of the duration of 60 to 90 seconds. Our anchors will be presenting various forms of content, based on the particular movie on air at that time, during these breaks. This segment comes in 21 movies a week, in each time slot of 10 am, 3 pm and 8 pm,” says Kapoor.

    The learnings have inspired Filmy to take a re-look at its film news programming as well. Accepting the demand for the latest film news updates, the channel has now started airing 60 second capsules of film news throughout the day, Monday to Friday. In the weekends, the channel continues telecasting its 30 minutes film news programme Aaj Ka Filmy Khabar. “The effort is to break stories and offer our viewers live updates on the happenings in the entertainment industry,” reasons Kapoor.

    The Filmy Short Film Festival contest, which is positioned as one of its big ideas of 2006, will start rolling from the third week of August. Filmy will be telecasting the shortlisted entries Monday to Friday and during the weekends, it will air some of the best entries handpicked by the jury head Madhur Bhandarkar. The channel will be announcing the final winner in September.

    On the marketing front, Filmy is following the strategy of taking its lead anchors off air and positioning amidst the public. The channel recently associated with Rakesh Roshan for his latest release Krrish and had Lallan performing in the respective theatres. Similarly, Lallan will be doing a Shahrukh act in theatres where Kabhi Alvida Na Kehna would be releasing.

  • FILMY Flashback 2006

    MUMBAI: As FILMY faces its first year end, it’s putting on display for the viewers the best and worst of Bollywood 2006, with its special three part series FILMY Flashback 2006 from Dec 29 – 31, 8 PM onwards.

    FILMY Flashback 2006, will feature the biggest box office hits of 2006, along with which films FILMY feels were the best films of the year. The year also saw its share of some painfully bad movies, which will get listed in the worst movies of the year section. Another interesting feature of the series will be the listing of the most popular ‘characters’ in films of 2006.

    The show will also take the viewers on a journey of what made news in Bollywood in 2006. Hosted by the glamorous and effervescent TV host Shweta Salve, FILMY Flashback will be a treat for Bollywood fans.

    FILMY Flashback 2006 is a continuation in the efforts of the channel to provide meaningful, unique and entertaining film content to its viewers along with showcasing some of the biggest hits of the year like Khosla Ka Ghosla, Gangster, Malamaal Weekly etc.

    Shailesh Kapoor, Head Marketing and Content, FILMY says, “2006 has been an extremely eventful year for Indian cinema. As a part of FILMY’s continuing efforts to showcase the highs and lows of the film industry, the channel will present its take on the year in FILMY flashback 2006”.

    FILMY is more than just a Hindi film channel. Currently the channel also launched the FILMY Person of the Year 2006, which has five of the most successful individuals of Bollywood – Aamir, Shah Rukh, Hrithik, Himesh and Abhishek, contending for the title, with the deciding factor being viewer votes. Other innovative launches over the year have been FILMY Stock Exchange, Firangy FILMY, Short films on FILMY and FILMY Hot Breaks.

    So enjoy the FILMY year-end treat, all the happenings of Bollywood, only on FILMY starting December 29 to year end at 8 PM.

  • Filmy’s ‘Aaj Ki Fimly Khabar’ features Raveena Tandon

    Filmy’s ‘Aaj Ki Fimly Khabar’ features Raveena Tandon

    Astonished by a direct query about the incident where she poured wine on somebody’s head in a party, Raveena Tandon replied that the person was her husband’s ex-wife, she enjoyed doing it, and it was not at all impulsive. To enforce her point she said that she had decided two years back how she would react on seeing her husband’s ex-wife. Watch the entire episode of Aaj Ki Filmy Khabar (AKFK), India’s first authentic filmy news show, which airs this Wednesday, 10th May 2006 at 7:30 pm, only on FILMY.

    Raveena used this opportunity to reveal the true story & defend all allegations levied on her. The ex- wife was bad mouthing Raveena and her husband Anil Thadani, and taking undue advantage of her husband’s good and dignified nature. Why she did not take the legal route? Asked, Mayank. “I did not have proof, had I gone legal, the person would have been trapped badly. My objective was to publicly humiliate and teach her a lesson and not spoil her life,” said Raveena.

    On being asked why there is so much disparity between the life span of an actor vis-?-vis an actress she said, “an actor is accepted as a superstar at the age of 64 whereas actresses are written off as early as 30”. On her plans of getting back to mainstream cinema or television, Raveena said she is hearing scripts but still enjoys her sabbatical.

    Aaj Ki Filmy Khabar (AKFK) is India’s first authentic filmi news program aired Monday to Friday at 7:30pm, only on “FILMY”. Every Wednesday AKFK has a non-interrogative session hosted by Mayank Shekhar – a platform for a celebrity to express his or her opinion on any controversy – this week’s episode will feature Raveena Tandon.

  • Eurasia Cup telecast to be split between SaharaOne, Filmy

    Eurasia Cup telecast to be split between SaharaOne, Filmy

    MUMBAI: Looks like Sahara is not about to let go the foothold it has got into the India cricket telecast game. After having aired the recently concluded series between India and England, SaharaOne has now acquired the rights for the next five years to a new offshore cricket event — the EurAsia Cricket series.

    The first edition of the event will be held in the Gulf Emirate of Abu Dhabi from 22 April to 5 May 2006 and is the result of an alliance between the Jawaharlal Nehru Sports Trust and the Abu Dhabi Cricket Council.

    SaharaOne CEO Shantonu Aditya says, “We are delighted to partner with Creative Eye (from whom Sahara got the rights) in promoting the EurAsia Cricket Series 2006.” Creative Eye had earlier acquired the rights for this VK Sports Management Group.

    BSNL is Sahara’s title sponsor for the event which will feature the A teams of India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Making up the numbers for this six-nation event are cricket “minnows” Holland, Ireland and UAE. The teams are divided into two groups. Sahara will simulcast the 14 day-night ODIs on SaharaOne and and recently launched movie channel Filmy. SaharaOne though will take a break between 8:30-10:30 pm to protect its prime time shows while Filmy will air the matches uninterrupted.

    The big question of course is what benefits Sahara expects to get out of a series at a time of serious cricket overload what with the national team literally ending one series and getting into another with barely a break in between. More so since Aditya confirmed that Sahara had no plans to launch a sports channel in the near future.

    According to Sahara One Television COO Purnendu Bose, the Subrato Roy-promoted network sees three clear opportunities that it would be exploiting from this property, for which it holds the global satellite rights as well as in stadia rights.

    First of course is the composition of the Indian team, captained by Venugopala Rao, which includes the latest star in the making and opener Robin Uthappa, pacemen RP Singh and VRV Singh, leg-spinner Piyush Chawla, all-rounder Reetinder Singh Sodhi, and wicketkeeper batsman Dinesh Kaarthick, all of whom have played for India. Opener Vidyut Sivaramakrishnan and middle-order batsman S. Badrinath also find a place.

    The team composition allows for Sahara’s marketing pitch for this series, which is that the network will be showcasing “today’s heroes” or the “Young Tigers” who will have a significant role to play in the Indian cricket scheme of things with the mantra being so much on youth. According to Bose, this event going forward had the potential to become a major property in itself.

    Explaining the programming strategy, Bose states that the event will “get me additional ratings during my graveyard shift (2:30 pm to 7:30 pm)”. The telecast on SaharaOne, in much the same way as national broadcaster Doordarshan does with its main channel DD1 when it telecasts India cricket, will pull away from cricket at 7:30 pm and hook back in at 10:30 pm to get in the “final hour of action”.

    Thirdly, says Bose, “whatever additional sampling that happens because of the cricket is good for the channel.”

    One wonders though that with the Rahul Dravid and the gang playing so much cricket whether there will be any interest left in watching an India A team. No matter how good India A is, the coverage devoted to it in the press indicates that there is a huge question mark over just how much interest the average cricket watcher will have in it.

    Having said that, cricket that does not feature the main eleven has generally been given step motherly treatment in this country. So it is encouraging to see SaharaOne at least try and push the cause of the sport beyond just the main eleven.