Tag: l murugan

  • Hindi cinema stars light up Ficci Frames’ silver jubilee

    Hindi cinema stars light up Ficci Frames’ silver jubilee

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera, silver jubilee! Ficci Frames, Asia’s leading media and entertainment conclave, is rolling out the red carpet for its 25th edition in Mumbai on 7–8 October 2025.

    The milestone gathering, themed “A silver jubilee of vision, voices & creativity”, will be inaugurated by minister of state for information & broadcasting L Murugan and Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis.

    Hindi cinema icons Anil Kapoor, Akshay Kumar, Smriti Irani and Ayushmann Khurrana will headline the two-day event, joining an impressive line-up of industry leaders including Aroon Purie, Sam Balsara, Sameer Nair, Ekta Kapoor, Siddharth Roy Kapur, and filmmakers Hansal Mehta, Shoojit Sircar and Kiran Rao.

    The conclave will host fireside chats, policy sessions and showcases, with global heavyweights such as Netflix’s Monika Shergill, Amazon Prime Video’s Gaurav Gandhi and Warner Bros Discovery’s Arjun Nohwar adding international clout.

    Adding a global spark, a Russian delegation led by Moskino and the Moscow export center will participate, opening new doors for co-productions and cultural partnerships.

    With states like Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Delhi and Jharkhand pitching in through policy and showcase sessions, this silver jubilee promises not just glitz but game-changing ideas for the next chapter of India’s media and entertainment story.
     

  • Indian govt presents Waves 2025 to 100 ambassadors and high commissioners

    Indian govt presents Waves 2025 to 100 ambassadors and high commissioners

    MUMBAI: In a glitzy push to make India the hotbed of global media action, the government rolled out the red carpet for its ambitious World Audio Visual & Entertainment Summit (Waves) 2025  today at Sushma Swaraj Bhawan in New Delhi in the presence of 100 ambassadors and high commissioners. MIB officials made a  hard sales pitch  to prod them and make them realise that the Indian government is extremely serious about Waves 2025 and they in turn should carry this message back to their national governments and ensure robust participation from their respective countries. 

    Waves 2025—set to make a splash in Mumbai from 1 to 4  May 2025—promises to be a star-studded affair that will see the worlds of tech, media and entertainment collide in spectacular fashion.

    Union minister for external affairs S. Jaishankar didn’t mince words about the summit’s significance: “Economic and political rebalancing is moving towards cultural balancing. We are not truly global if we are not truly local. Waves 2025 captures the spirit of this endeavour.”  

    He urged the ambassadors and high commissioners to familiarise their governments regarding the opportunities of global collaborations courtesy the Waves 2025 initiative.

    Meanwhile, information & broadcasting minister Ashwini Vaishnaw turned up the heat, declaring that “the intersection of creativity, media and technology is transforming the media landscape of the world and reaching a new level of convergence.” He teased that “some of the biggest names” in the industry would be gracing the Mumbai bash.

    Not to be outdone, Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis jumped into the fray, drumming up Mumbai’s credentials as the “financial and entertainment capital of India” that serves as the “perfect backdrop” for the summit.

    “Waves 2025 is a movement,” Fadnavis proclaimed, while welcoming the establishment of the Indian Institute of Creative Technology which the government has committed to set up in Mumbai with Rs 391 crore being allocated for it. He expressed hope that “media will continue to be a force for good,” in a world where technology and creativity are increasingly getting into bed together.

    Minister of state for information & broadcasting, L. Murugan effusively stepped up to say that Waves  2025 will open  the door  “to joint ventures, co-productions, and business expansion, enabling global media companies to engage with India’s creative sector.  We remain steadfast in creating a conducive environment for the M&E industry, supporting ease of doing business, content localisation, and infrastructure development.”

    Information & broadcasting secretary Sanjay Jaju revealed that the four-day extravaganza will feature multiple tracks designed to make waves across the industry:
    * A global media dialogue featuring ministers and policymakers
    * Thought leaders Track with knowledge-sharing sessions
    * Waves exhibition showcasing storytelling innovations
    * Bharat pavilion highlighting India’s media heritage
    * Waves  Bazaar to facilitate business networking
    * WaveXcelerator to back media startups with mentorship and moolah
    * Waves Culturals featuring performances that blend Indian and international talent

    Also present was  Maharashtra government chief secretary Sujata Sauni who exchanged a memorandum of understanding relating to Waves 2025 with Jaju. 

    The organisers are also playing up Waves 2025’s integration with the orange economy, positioning the summit as a catalyst for economic growth and job creation through creative industries.

    With Mumbai ready to throw open its doors to thought leaders grappling with issues from AI to streaming revolutions, intellectual property rights, misinformation, and media sustainability, Waves 2025 is gearing up to be the first summit of its kind to tackle these hot-button issues by promoting cultural diversity, innovation, and equitable access to media platforms.

    As the countdown begins, all eyes are now on whether this media matrimony can truly deliver on its lofty promise of becoming “the biggest unifying factor between country to country, people to people and culture to culture in the digital age.”

  • MIB  & the business of TV channel licensing in 2024

    MIB & the business of TV channel licensing in 2024

    MUMBAI: The Indian government has rejected more than half the number of licence applications it has approved  in 2024. This was revealed by the information & broadcasting minister of state L. Murugan in the Rajya Sabha on 20 December 2024.  This was in response to a question posed in the upper house of parliament. 

    According to him,the  I&B ministry rejected 13 applications for channel licences in 2024, the highest number in the past five years. It has approved 22 applications for licences and renewed 34 of them in 2024. 

    The number of channel licence applications approved in 2024 was twice the number that were given the green light in 2023. .

    2024 is also the year when the MIB cancelled the least number of TV channels in the past five years. The figure for 2024 is only one, while in 2021 it cancelled 24 TV licences.

    Since, 2020 the government has rejected 34 applications for channel licences, of which 13 are accounted for by the rejections in 2024. 110 new channel licence applications have been approved since 2020, while 269 channel licence renewal applications were approved.  

    The list of channel licence applications approved, renewed, rejected and cancelled. as given by L. Murugan in the Rajya Sabha is in the table below:: 
     

    Status of tV channel licence applications

  • The state of vulgar ads on TV, according to I&B minister of state L. Murugan

    The state of vulgar ads on TV, according to I&B minister of state L. Murugan

    MUMBAI: Marketing professionals continue to cross the line as far as ads are concerned on TV. But there are enough  built-in regulatory checks  to reign them in. At least that’s what appears to be, the case, considering  the written reply given to the Rajya Sabha by minister of state for information & broadcasting L. Murugan on 7 November. . 

    Some 73 complaints were  received by regulatory bodies against vulgar and obscene TV advertisements on TV channels over the past three years, he said. But all  violations were addressed through  a three step grievance redressal  process.   The first, self-regulation by broadcasters. The second step being self-regulation by self-regulating bodies of the channels. The final level is an oversight mechanism of the government through the I&B ministry. 

    The measures taken at the central government level include the issuance of advisories, warnings, apologies and off air orders against guilty parties. 

  • L. Murugan joins I&B as minister of state

    L. Murugan joins I&B as minister of state

    MUMBI: Even as all attention has been  focused on MeITy and railways minister Ashwini Vasihnaw getting additional oversight of the ministry of information & broadcasting (MIB),  what has been under-reported is the   handing over  of the minister of state  position to L. Murugan in the same ministry. Murugan was earlier appointed as minister of state in 2021, prior to which he was the state president of the BJP IN Tamil Nadu.

    The 47 year old is a law graduate and a doctorate holder from the University of Madras who has been practising law for more than 15 years. He has been associated with the RSS since 1997, having served as the standing counsel to the Indian government at the Madras high court

    Murugan’s appointment should work well in favour of both the industry and Vaishnaw as a whole lot of regulations and decisions are pending with the ministry.