Tag: Japanese

  • Toonz and 1st Place draw up anime alliance to counter Japan’s talent drought

    Toonz and 1st Place draw up anime alliance to counter Japan’s talent drought

    MUMBAI: India’s Toonz Media group and Japan’s 1st Place have sketched out a strategic partnership on the fringes of Hong Kong Filmart, aiming to quench the world’s thirst for anime content while addressing Japan’s creative talent crunch.

    The tie-up comes as streaming giants, gaming moguls and entertainment behemoths scramble for fresh anime fodder, leaving Japan’s traditional animation houses gasping for artistic air.

    “There is already a significant talent shortage in Japan for anime production,” admitted 1st Place founder and president Kumiko, without a hint of artistic licence. “This strategic partnership with Toonz will help us bridge that gap by expanding our production capacity.”

    The artistic marriage melds Toonz’s 25-year animation pedigree and production muscle with 1st Place’s flair for anime storytelling, music production and 3D computer-generated wizardry.

    “At Toonz, we continuously seek new creative frontiers,” expounded Toonz Media group CEO P. Jayakumar, whose past dalliances include teaming up with Marvel on Wolverine and the X-Men and with Lionsgate on Speed Racer: The Next Generation.

    The Indian animation outfit views the partnership as a chance to colour itself into the booming anime picture, while Tokyo-based 1st Place brings 20 years of developing original intellectual property to the drawing board. The Japanese firm has previously orchestrated theme songs and soundtracks for anime tearjerker Clannad After Story and supernatural romp Angel Beats!

    Both firms hope their cross-continental coupling will create a sustainable anime ecosystem capable of delivering eye-popping content to worldwide audiences without succumbing to the industry’s capacity constraints—a picture-perfect solution to a most animated problem.

  • JIB’s NHK World TV launches on Tata Sky in India

    JIB’s NHK World TV launches on Tata Sky in India

    MUMBAI: 24 hour English language news and entertainment channel NHK World TV from Japan International broadcasting has inked a deal to offer its channel on Tata Sky in India. Launched on May 6, the channel has so far seen four million Tata Sky subscribers watching it.

    “With the longstanding close cultural and economic ties shared between Japan and India, NHK World TV’s programs will further strengthen those bonds by offering subscribers a source of information from Japanese- Asian centric perspective. We are confident Indian viewers will find the channel useful as a first choice option for news from around Asia, and our lifestyle programs a source of quality entertainment,” said Japan International Broadcasting CEO and President Yoshihiko Shimizu.

  • JIB’s NHK World TV launches on Tata Sky in India

    JIB’s NHK World TV launches on Tata Sky in India

    MUMBAI: 24 hour English language news and entertainment channel NHK World TV from Japan International broadcasting has inked a deal to offer its channel on Tata Sky in India. Launched on May 6, the channel has so far seen four million Tata Sky subscribers watching it.

    “With the longstanding close cultural and economic ties shared between Japan and India, NHK World TV’s programs will further strengthen those bonds by offering subscribers a source of information from Japanese- Asian centric perspective. We are confident Indian viewers will find the channel useful as a first choice option for news from around Asia, and our lifestyle programs a source of quality entertainment,” said Japan International Broadcasting CEO and President Yoshihiko Shimizu.

  • Discovery to premiere special show on Pearl Harbor

    Discovery to premiere special show on Pearl Harbor

    MUMBAI: Discovery Channel will premiere a special programme titled Pearl Harbour Declassified on 6 December 2015 at 8 pm.

     

    The programme will provide viewers with a dramatic look at the first 15 minutes of the bombing in Pearl Harbor and its aftermath.

     

    The programme will showcase the images of the first wave of the attack, combining rare aerial film taken by Japanese attackers with home movie footage captured from the harbor by a navy doctor. The film will take viewers from the shocking arrival of the Japanese aircraft over the harbor on 7 December 1941 to when a single 1750-pound bomb destroyed the USS Arizona. 

     

    The analysis of the film will utilise new stabilisation techniques to provide a frame by frame timeline of events that builds into a mosaic of chaos, courage and inspiration, telling the real behind the scene story of the incident which has never been told before. 

     

    The programme will intertwine interviews with the survivors of the attack aboard the historic battleships, recalling their personal horror of that day of infamy. The programme will also provide a guided underwater tour by the National Park Service revealing the secrets of the USS Arizona as it lays to rest in the harbor.

  • Santa Claus Is Coming to Town!

    Santa Claus Is Coming to Town!

    MUMBAI: Christmas traditions are practiced in many different ways. For some, it’s reading Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” or Clement Clarke Moore’s “The Night Before Christmas”. While others enjoy watching “The Nutcracker” ballet or “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” on television.

    Yet, others maybe prefer tracking Santa’s Christmas Eve journey, compliments of the North American Aerospace Command, Verizon and the rest of the NORAD Tracks Santa team. For the 11th consecutive year Verizon employees will again join more than 1,250 Christmas Eve volunteers – including military personnel, their families and friends, and other corporate contributors – in answering calls and e-mails to the NORAD Tracks Santa hotline and operations center.

    To enable children around the world track Santa’s progress, Verizon is providing the toll-free hotline – 1877-HI-NORAD (1-877-446-6723). The hotline will be in operation from 4:00 a.m. on Dec. 24 until 3:00 a.m. (Mountain Standard Time) on Dec. 25. (Callers outside North America can reach the hotline by dialing the local Colorado Springs number at 719-556-5211 using the applicable country code. International calling charges may apply.)

    In addition, Verizon is providing call-handling technology, as well as its 4G LTE wireless network to help volunteers respond to e-mails and track Santa’s progress online.

    Beginning at 12:01 a.m. MST on Dec. 24, children can visit the NORAD Tracks Santa website to see real-time information, including radar maps and streaming “SantaCam” video. Information will be available in English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Japanese, Brazilian Portuguese, and Chinese.

    Also starting on Dec. 24, children can send an e-mail to noradtrackssanta@outlook.com to find Santa’s whereabouts. For children (and adults) who are more tech savvy, a free downloadable NORAD Tracks Santa mobile app (iOS, Android, Windows) is available. Santa can also be tracked via Facebook, Google+, Twitter (@noradsanta) and YouTube.

    “The holiday season is a powerful reminder of the importance of giving back,” said Michael Maiorana, senior vice president of public sector markets, Verizon Enterprise Solutions. “For over a decade, Verizon has been a part of the NORAD Tracks Santa team, donating a range of services that brings Santa alive to children around the globe by enabling them to speak with Santa’s helpers and track his travels online and via their mobile devices. This is a part of our Christmas tradition.”

    In 2012, more than 114,000 phone calls and nearly 7,000 e-mails were received and answered. The NORAD Tracks Santa website had over 22.3 million unique visitors from 235 countries and territories during December 2012.

    NORAD, the binational U.S.-Canadian military organization responsible for defending the aerospace of both countries, has tracked Santa for the past 58 years. The NORAD Tracks Santa tradition began in 1955 after a misprinted advertisement directed children to call the Continental Air Defense Command (NORAD’s predecessor organization) instead of a retailer’s special Santa hotline.

  • GSAT signs new capacity on SES satellites NSS-11 and SES-9

    GSAT signs new capacity on SES satellites NSS-11 and SES-9

    MUMBAI: SES has announced that the Philippine direct-to-home (DTH) satellite TV provider Global Satellite (GSAT) has contracted its fourth transponder on NSS-11, cementing SES’ orbital position of 108.2 degrees east as one of Asia’s leading video neighbourhoods.

    The multi-year deal will see the transfer of current capacity usage by GSAT from NSS-11 to SES-9, currently scheduled for launch in 2015. When launched, SES-9 will be the largest SES satellite dedicated to the Asia-Pacific region. The new spacecraft will be providing expansion capacity for DTH, enterprise, mobility and government services across the region.

    GSAT, the satellite division of First United Broadcasting Corp (FUBC), launched its DTH service in 2008 on the NSS-11 Ku-band satellite, providing subscribers with access to an improved mix of international programmes including English, Mandarin, Korean, Tagalog, Japanese and Spanish channels. With this additional capacity, GSAT will be offering 12 high definition (HD) channels and 47 standard definition (SD) channels to more than 200,000 subscribers across the Philippine archipelago.

    FUBC president and CEO Philip J. Chien said, “Our ability to offer highly reliable DTH satellite TV to our growing base of subscribers in the Philippines is largely due to the comprehensive footprints of NSS-11, and, from 2015, SES-9. We are confident that SES’ expertise will enable us to grow in our market and increase both the quality and quantity of channels in our pay-TV offerings.”

    SES Asia-Pacific and the Middle East sr. VP commercial Deepak Mathur said, “We are delighted to confirm that GSAT, our long-term customer on NSS-11, will become a key anchor customer on SES-9. At SES, we are investing in new satellites to make sure that our customers enjoy business continuity, as well as delivering vital capacity to support their growth in some of the most dynamic media markets in the world.”

  • Japanese director Nagisa Oshima leaves for eternity

    Japanese director Nagisa Oshima leaves for eternity

    MUMBAI: Japanese film director Nagisa Oshima, best known for his sexually explicit film In the Realm of the Senses and Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence died of pneumonia in Fujisawa, south of Tokyo yesterday (Tuesday).

    The British Film Institute described Oshima as one of the important directors of the new wave of Japanese cinema in the 1960s, whose politically charged films were well acclaimed by the audience.

    A law graduate, Oshima started his filmmaking career at the age of 26 with the 1959 film A Town of Love and Hope. But fame came to him internationally with the 1976-made film In the Realm of the Senses that was a graphic portrayal of insatiable sexual desire between a hotel owner and one of his maids in Japan of the 1930s.

    Oshima won the best director award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1978 for his film Empire of Passion, another erotic tale.

    He later associated with British actor,singer David Bowie for the 1983 made film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence that was based on author Laurens van der Post‘s experiences as a prisoner of war in Japan during the second World War.

    In 1996, Oshima suffered a stroke but recovered soon to return briefly to filmmaking when he made his last film Taboo in 1999.

  • Film about puffer fish seeks sponsor

    Film about puffer fish seeks sponsor

    MUMBAI: A short film about a man who turns into a puffer fish is looking for a sponsor with a view to be turned into a series. Directed by Ben West, coming from a visual effects background, the film follows the fortunes of a Japanese salary man who turns into a puffer fish after eating a live one in a restaurant.
     
    West‘s production company @Radicalmedia, islooking out for a distributor and is also considering looking for a sponsorship tie-up.
     
    “It‘s a film with edge, and is probably not for mainstream audiences. But there‘s potential for the film to become a branded entertainment series if we get a sponsor,” West has been quoted to have said.
     
    Earlier, West used to work at post house named Animal Logic on visual effects before he moved to directing films. Commercials he has directed include work for 5 Seeds and the Australian Directors‘ Guild.

  • ‘We want to become the GEC for young India’ : Zarina Metha – Bindass CEO

    ‘We want to become the GEC for young India’ : Zarina Metha – Bindass CEO

     She waits with baited breath, jittery to unlock her next treasure. Bindass CEO Zarina Mehta is bubbling with energy as she talks about her second baby Bindass. This time round, Mehta is casting her magic wand over the Indian youth segment, but with a mammoth approach as she navigates across multiple media platforms to capture her target audience. Some question whether she will rewrite the Hungama TV story and the impact it had on the Indian kid’s space. However, in this case she looking to unveil a quartette of four Bindass television channels by April 2008.

    With the backing of Malaysia based media company Astro, she seems geared up to take on competition with other broadcasters also foraying into the youth general entertainment segment. As this television space is heating up, Mehta is leaving no stone unturned to capture what she calls the “sweet spot.” In an exclusive t?te-?-t?te with Indiantelevision.com’s Renelle Snelleksz, Zarina Mehta exudes the excitement and the anxiety before she breathes life into her next creation.

    Excerpts:

    Why have you decided to change your TG positioning by extending the demographic beyond the 15-24 year olds even before launching Bindass?
    When we initally conceived the channnel, we were looking at the 15 – 24 year olds, but further research urged us to redefine our target audience as 15-34 year olds. The median age for India has dropped by two years to 24 years since the 2001 census.

    But how do you manage to make one brand appeal to this wide audience? It is all about targeting what we call our “sweet spot” or the 17 -21 year olds. We realized that if we target our sweet spot, then we will automatically attract the larger segment of 15 – 34. This is because the 15 year olds long to belong, while the 34 year olds just do not want to grow up. This ‘down aging’ phenomena is a sensational find because if I get my 17 – 21 year olds correct (which I pray I do, she laughs), then I will capture this larger segment as well.

    What opportunities does this segment offer?
    Between the 15 – 34 age group we have got 379 million Indians (All India) and in the C&S homes 95 million Indians. But who is currently engaging this audience? Star One did it in its old avatar, Sab is making a good attempt, there are also one off shows from GECs and some niche channels. But there is definitely a gap.

    The 15 -34 year olds comprise 42 per cent of all TV viewing. This is a fantastic opportunity for us. The viewership patterns from 2005 till now are also changing, which shows the decline of the GECs as viewers are moving away from their traditional consumption and trying new things. There is thus a gap in the general entertainment space on television and we want to cater to this segment. We want to become the GEC for young India.

    The concept behind Bindass has largely been supported by research. Are there any significant findings that have helped give shape to your upcoming channel?
    We did three and a half months of solid research, we have a proprietary name test which we had done for Hungama TV, Ceria and for Bindass. Secondly, we did an ethnographic qualitative study, followed by a quantitative study based on attitudes conducted by Synovate across six Indian cities and 2500 samples. Our research is invaluable and the key finding stated that our sweet spot (core TG 17- 21 year olds) have a ‘duality’ but are very comfortable with having a traditional heart with a cool exterior. This forms the core brand value of Bindass.

    The ‘Bindass’ name is imbued with certain brand properties that resonate with factors like chilled out, edgy, sexy and young. But as the creators of brand Bindass these values were not sufficient to create a 360 degree long term brand. So we added values that will further energize the brand and came up with the following propositions. If you are not “yo dude” and you are not “saas bahu” then you are Bindass. We are the reality of young India that consists of the four F’s – Fun, Frank, Fearless and Freedom.

    Our logo has been designed by BDA and is exactly what we represent, completely Indian with a cool exterior, that is what we believe will work.

    On the programming front, what’s your strategy?
    The channel will have no music, no soaps, no gadget shows, no lifestyle shows and no VJ’s. So what are we left with? It is going to have a lot of comedy. We will have action thrillers, Hollywood blockbusters and the best of local and International shows, accompanied by late night horror, International movies and extreme sports.

    Our daily driver primetime shows include a stand up comedy Lagegi that is shot 24 to 48 hours prior to telecast from Monday to Thursday. We will have seven BIA’s – Bindass Intellegent Agents from the top cities giving us reports on what is happening across India. Then there is Shakira, a dark angel fighting for justice, every man’s fantasy, while another daily comedy is Sun Yaar Chill Maar. We also have a street magician show by Ugesh Sarcar.

    Our programming is tailored to fit our research findings which show that the 15 -24 age group watches two and half hours of TV a week and movie channels are consumed for six hours a week by this TG.

    In the highly cluttered TV environment, have you identified what your primetime is going to be?
    Our primetime is definitely going to be the normal primetime 7.30 – 11.30 pm. But what is interesting is that this audience will be consuming TV across the day, so we will be discovering new primetimes. There will probably be the regular primetime and two other primetimes, which we have also identified and we are pushing your programmes at that time as well. This will be a learning curve for us.

    But won’t this interfere with GEC primetime, especially in the reality of a single TV household?
    Yes, we will, thus, be discovering our own primetime. Is our TG going to be able to snatch the remote or not? We believe that within this primetime they will snatch the remote. But basically there are two time slots within primetime that we are gunning for. Apart from that, we do believe there will emerge other primetimes which will be a morning and afternoon one. We are looking to garner ratings right through the day.

    We will be discovering our own primetime, but there are two slots within 7.30 – 11.30 pm that we are gunning for

    You are also looking to have a strong movie line up on Bindass?
    We have top of the line Hollywood blockbusters that we will dub, along with Japanese and Chinese films as well. It is important that the movie is ‘bindass.’ Even if I know a movie will rate well but if it does not qualify as a bindass film, then I won’t put it on the channel.

    We are not going to have Hindi movies on our channel, for the same reason that we are not having music, because it is ‘undifferentiated viewing.’ The way Hindi movies are bought in bulk, you are not allowed to pick and choose, thus you cannot build your brand, but in case of international films you can do this.

    Will this mean that you will not have any films from the UTV stable?
    We may have them eventually, but only if it’s a Bindass movie. It also depends on whether we can afford it. At the moment, I am only looking at international movies from Asia and the West.

    What is your movie strategy for the channel?
    Primetime movies will be for the weekends, but we will also showcase two movies a day largely off primetime.

    What about animated content on the channel?
    I personally love animation but unfortunately in India animation is perceived as being for kids. I can’t afford to have that on Bindass when we launch. Maybe after the brand has settled and people have realized that it’s a 15+ brand, then I can put it on. But this will definitely not happen in the first year.

    Are all the Bindass shows produced in-house?
    Two have been produced in house i.e. Shakira and Sun Yaar Chill Maar but Lagegi has been done by the production house Encompass. However, all the concept ideas have come from us.

    How many locally produced shows will be on the channel?
    At the moment we have three shows. But we will have six original hours of content per day which includes a mix of locally produced shows, dubbed acquired content and movies.

    Will the mix be largely skewed towards local content? What is the proportion of local versus acquired content?
    We will just have to wait and watch although I believe local content is very vital. Our primetime will be completely local. But we have also learnt from our experience with the kid’s channel Hungama TV that acquired content can also do very well.

    Local programming will consist of 45 per cent and acquired 55 per cent. But we have to first see what works and then decide eventually.

    What are the plans to introduce other Bindass channels in India?
    By April 2008 we will have four channels which will be variations of Bindass. We are currently exploring what those will be and are even exploring whether it will be a regional channel or maybe even another genre within this youth audience space. We have, however, decided to launch a movie channel called Bindass Movies by early October. We have acquired a huge library consisting of about 150 movies to start with.

    By April 2008 we will have 4 channels which will be variations of Bindass

    Will this new channel also have only international movies dubbed in Hindi or are you also looking to infuse some Bollywood content?
    Not when we launch, but eventually we may consider infusing some Hindi movies into the channel. What was an eye opener for us was that our analysis of over a year’s ratings indicated that a dubbed Hollywood movie gets three times the ratings of the non-dubbed version of the same movie, while a Bollywood film gets only double of that. So as a cost benefit analysis, this is the way to go.

    Will this also be a pay channel like Bindass?
    Yes, I only believe in the pay channel model. All our channels will be pay from day one.

    What will Bindass across the mobile and online platform be like?
    For our mobile platform we have tied up with all the telecom operators in India and our own short code is 5995 to showcase both Bindass and acquired content. There are two kinds of content we are working on. One is popular content which accounts for 95 per cent of revenues. The other five per cent is high-end content which people rarely use but is the future. Popular content consists of wallpapers, ring tones, gaming and contests. We are going to prepare ourselves for what we believe is going to come on mobile, the high technology stuff which includes mobisodes, television clippings, online chat and blogs for which we are talking to people.

    All this is an opportunity to get the content of my brand across all touch points. We don’t see it as competition to TV, we see online and mobile as fantastic opportunities to communicate with our audience. So by taking our content across platforms we will kick off with Lagegi.com an online comedy portal having Lagegi content and other content including user generated content and clips not aired on the show. We will also have Bindass.com which will showcase the brand and the shows.

    Are the retail and merchandising plans for Bindass already underway?
    I am going to start focusing on our retail ventures post the launch of the channel. I have given myself 12 months before I launch two cafés in Mumbai and Delhi. These will be brand extensions of Bindass to create a touch and feel of our brand. We are still in the process of conducting research to arrive at the right representations of the brand. But we have zeroed in on gaming consoles, web zones and merchandising counters that will be a part of the ambience along with some other big ideas. These café’s will be unique to an entertainment brand.

    With the first two café’s, I would like to see how these concepts click with our TG and then we will roll out completely. I don’t want to push it.

    Are you considering roping in a partner for this initiative? The investments for this are outside the Rs two billion that was declared earlier. So what are the investments for this?
    No, not at the moment I am not considering a partner. Maybe I will kick off on my own and get a partner later.

    Yes, the investments are outside the JV and are very high. The investments from the JV alone are Rs 2.7 billion which will be largely dedicated to the four channels.

    What is the marketing push that you have planned to get Bindass off the ground?
    For the media plan, we will start with a big push for Lagegi on TV and with the website in August. This will be followed by Space Yatra which is a contest that will kick off in September giving seven Bindass people across the country the opportunity to go into space.

    With several players now eyeing the youth demographic, how do you see the television space shaping up this year?
    We love competition, without competition we are dead. I am so happy that many people have announced their plans to enter this space. You don’t want to be alone, you want competition to grow the space, to come up with better ideas, you keep going one up and the space grows. I know this sector is going to hot up, in fact it already has. In the Rs 65 billion market there is Rs 18 billion targeting our “sweet spot” – the college going kids. The opportunity is huge as 72 per cent of India is below the age of 34 years.

    What about your plans to take a prototype of the channel overseas (Southeast Asia) like you did with Hungama TV in Malaysia?
    Absolutely, but first it is important to make the mother brand successful at home and then duplicate it. We are looking to extend the brand not only to Southeast Asia but also to take it to the Middle East and East Asia by late 2008 or early 2009.

  • LCDs, cameras allow Sony to post a better than expected quarterly result

    LCDs, cameras allow Sony to post a better than expected quarterly result

    MUMBAI: Japanese consumer electronics conglomerate Sony has reported better than expected results for the first-quarter ended 30 June 2006.

    Net income was ¥32.3 billion with a loss of ¥7.3 billion a year earlier. Media reports indicate that analysts had expected the company to report lower income. Sony got a boost from sales of its Bravia brand LCD televisions and Cybershot digital cameras.

    For the full year to next March, Sony revised up its operating profit forecast by 30 per cent to 130 billion yen as it started booking patent-related income as recurring revenue rather than miscellaneous income. It kept unchanged its net profit forecast of 130 billion yen.

    Sales rose 11 per cent to ¥1.74 trillion from a year earlier. Operating profit, or sales minus the cost of goods sold and administrative expenses, was ¥27 billion for the period, compared with a restated ¥6.6 billion loss a year earlier.

    Profit from the electronics division, which accounts for more than 70 per cent of the company’s sales, was ¥47.4 billion, from a loss of ¥26.7 billion a year earlier. Sales of electronics including Bravia TVs, Cyber-shot cameras and Vaio personal computers increased by 14 per cent to ¥1.28 trillion.

    Sales of its TVs rose by 75 per cent to ¥262 billion. Sony joins rivals Sharp and Matsushita Electric Industrial in reporting higher profit because of TV sales.

    It looks like Sony CEO Howard Stringer’s cost cutting measures are starting to pay dividends. In September Stringer had outlined a plan to axe 10,000 jobs and shut down 11 factories. Stringer also stopped paying 44 retired executives, sold two corporate jets and some retail businesses, including a cosmetics maker and a restaurant chain.

    On the film front Sony benfited from The Da Vinci Code. This helped the company increase sales by 42 per cent in the quarter. However, higher marketing costs meant that the film division suffered an overall loss.