Tag: Mahesh Samat

  • Epic TV ropes in Aditya Pittie as director tv

    Epic TV ropes in Aditya Pittie as director tv

    MUMBAI: It’s an epic move. Aditya Pittie of the Pittie Group as has hopped on board Epic TV as a director. He will lead the day-to-day operations of the linear television channel, focusing on all the commercial functions of revenues and costs.

    He will be responsible for taking Epic to the next level with stronger monetisation and alliances with advertisers and MSOs.

    Epic channel founder & MD Mahesh Samat said, “Aditya will bring in a fresh energy and a new impetus behind Epic. As the channel moves from the first phase of launch to the next phase of consolidation and monetisation, we need leadership that will take Epic to this next key step of its long-term journey. With his drive, focus and result-orientation, Aditya is uniquely qualified to lead the linear television business into the future.”

    Samat will continue to be on the board of the company and will focus on the strategic and business development areas of the company with a focus on digital and non-linear opportunities.

    Apart from spearheading the Pittie group, he has had extensive experience in real estate, media and FMCG. He has successfully turned around Sanskar TV in the past and recently launched a bouquet of channels under the Shubh brand. He has also been responsible in making Patanjali consumer products the success story they are today in modern retail, becoming their biggest distributor.

    The channel has been well-received with viewers and met with critical acclaim for its distinctive content.

    Pittie adds, “Epic is a strong brand in the television space and it’s an honour for me to lead the team and fulfill its legacy. In this phase of the company, we will focus on monetisation and work with our customers very closely to help brands and businesses achieve their goals through unique partnerships, while continuing to grow Epic’s viewership.”

    Epic’s has close to 500 hours of unique and original content in Indian history, folklore and mythology using a very contemporary story-telling approach. The platform used to show case the content so far has been the linear television format. However, the landscape of video streaming is changing dramatically due to the increase in mobile Internet users which is expected to reach to 792 million users by 2018. This represents a huge opportunity to showcase great content to the urban viewer. The Indian diaspora of 27 million people also represent great potential for good quality content.

    Adds Samat, “Digital is the most significant opportunity for content creators and EPIC is uniquely positioned to take advantage of this opportunity with its strong and distinctive content. With the app and other syndication opportunities, we expect this to be a strong part of the business model in the coming years.”

  • Epic TV ropes in Aditya Pittie as director tv

    Epic TV ropes in Aditya Pittie as director tv

    MUMBAI: It’s an epic move. Aditya Pittie of the Pittie Group as has hopped on board Epic TV as a director. He will lead the day-to-day operations of the linear television channel, focusing on all the commercial functions of revenues and costs.

    He will be responsible for taking Epic to the next level with stronger monetisation and alliances with advertisers and MSOs.

    Epic channel founder & MD Mahesh Samat said, “Aditya will bring in a fresh energy and a new impetus behind Epic. As the channel moves from the first phase of launch to the next phase of consolidation and monetisation, we need leadership that will take Epic to this next key step of its long-term journey. With his drive, focus and result-orientation, Aditya is uniquely qualified to lead the linear television business into the future.”

    Samat will continue to be on the board of the company and will focus on the strategic and business development areas of the company with a focus on digital and non-linear opportunities.

    Apart from spearheading the Pittie group, he has had extensive experience in real estate, media and FMCG. He has successfully turned around Sanskar TV in the past and recently launched a bouquet of channels under the Shubh brand. He has also been responsible in making Patanjali consumer products the success story they are today in modern retail, becoming their biggest distributor.

    The channel has been well-received with viewers and met with critical acclaim for its distinctive content.

    Pittie adds, “Epic is a strong brand in the television space and it’s an honour for me to lead the team and fulfill its legacy. In this phase of the company, we will focus on monetisation and work with our customers very closely to help brands and businesses achieve their goals through unique partnerships, while continuing to grow Epic’s viewership.”

    Epic’s has close to 500 hours of unique and original content in Indian history, folklore and mythology using a very contemporary story-telling approach. The platform used to show case the content so far has been the linear television format. However, the landscape of video streaming is changing dramatically due to the increase in mobile Internet users which is expected to reach to 792 million users by 2018. This represents a huge opportunity to showcase great content to the urban viewer. The Indian diaspora of 27 million people also represent great potential for good quality content.

    Adds Samat, “Digital is the most significant opportunity for content creators and EPIC is uniquely positioned to take advantage of this opportunity with its strong and distinctive content. With the app and other syndication opportunities, we expect this to be a strong part of the business model in the coming years.”

  • Rangrez Films and the fine art of making TV food shows

    Rangrez Films and the fine art of making TV food shows

    MUMBAI: Step into Ashraf Abbas’ and Nidhi Tuli’s Rangrez Films’ and foodlooking’s studio-floor-cum-offices in Morya Classic building in Mumbai’s Andheri suburb, and you can gauge that a lot of thought has been put into the design. The office strikes you because of its open space, the clean lines, old wooden furniture, single seater cubicles 10 feet above the floor, each housing an FCP edit suite.

    On another floor what greets you is an ingeniously designed kitchen set with a window leading outside to the leafy exterior, lights rigged from the ceiling, scores of cups, saucers, ladles, spoons, pots and kettles with exotic designs, cameras, lenses, dishes, and bowls – all immaculately placed.  

    You feel you have been transported to a studio in a European location, not in a crowded office building in a bustling Mumbai suburb.

    “I have designed every inch of this office and studio,” says Ashraf, with a shy-yet-full of-pride toothed grin. “I am a carpenter. I scoured Chor Bazar (the flea market) in Mumbai, picked up wood and made the office in the exact image I wanted. I am very keen about getting the detailing right.”

    Ashraf is not just a carpenter, both he and his wife are absolute foodies – a habit they developed early on their career when they spent their time backpacking across India filming documentaries. And they are also the two individuals behind the award-winning production house Rangrez Films.

    public://Rangrez office.jpg

    The husband and wife duo are simply consumed with the passion to create quality content, so much so that often times profits are sacrificed totally at the altar of creating world class content.

    “We focus on the right content and its right presentation. To give justice to the content we are creating is our responsibility,” says Nidhi.

    “We are almost always making very slender margins, sometimes none at all,” shrugs Ashraf, adding matter-of-factly. “I am pretty anal about getting it right, to the standards I have set.”

    (Even as they are loathe to reveal any turnover figures, estimates are that the company notches up double digit crore in revenue annually.)

    The duo set up Rangrez Films in 2008. But throughout their journey they have been quite fixated on a couple of key areas while filming: the look and the composition of each frame. “We do not create our products, keeping TV in mind, we make it for the subject,” points out Nidhi. Hence, they take a lot of pains to make their sets look beautiful while creating and lighting them and also behind the framing of each shot. Whether they are filming a food show or a docu-drama, each shot is discussed threadbare with the director of photography.

    “It has to look beautiful and has to have the wow factor,” says Ashraf. “It has to look like a feature film production.”

    And it is this razor sharp focus on making each scene look beautiful that makes Rangrez’s  food productions stand out.“Food has to look exquisite,” says Ashraf. “And everyone of our productions has to feel right.”

    Hence, when Epic Television CEO Mahesh Samat and his creative head Ravina Kohli were looking for a studio to produce a food show for their high on production values channel in 2013, who did they approach? Well, it was indeed Rangrez Films.

    Ashraf and Nidhi suggested that the show could be on the history of Indian food. The Epic and Rangrez teams brainstormed and came up with the idea that the show could include food as made in kitchens of Indian maharajas and erstwhile kings over the centuries.

    Thus was born one of the shows the duo takes deep pride in: Raja Rasoi aur Anya Kahaniya . Both Ashraf and Nidhi deeply researched different kinds of food that emerged from palace kitchens and they showcased them on the show with a narrative story telling of the entire journey.

    “It was the best way to treat the subject,” confesses Ashraf. “Indian royalty is the custodian of ancient culinary traditions. “

    Samat had informally and unintentionally given a pat on the back to Rangrez when he had told indiantelevision.com a couple of years ago that the channel was working with TV producers who were “master craftsmen.”

    In the same year, Samat and Ravina commissioned Asraf and Nidhi to produce a series on Indian spies titled Adrishya, with each episode documenting a single spy. 13 iconic Indian spies right from the times of the Mahabharata to post-independence India had their lives unravel on screen in an absorbing and well shot narrative.

    public://Art Room Production Still.jpg

    Epic once again commissioned Rangrez Films for another production entitled The Great Escape – about the greatest escapes ever made into India or by Indians.

    “For the first time on television we told the story of the escape of His Holiness the Dalai Lama from Tibet into India in 1959 and the brave story of Rezang La’s escape from Indo China was 1962. In many ways this is our biggest production, because these are all individual films and shot on a very large canvas,” exalt Ashraf and Nidhi.

    Ravina explains why she keeps going back to the duo. Says she: “The production quality is very high. Extremely dedicated and sincere team, they make no compromise on the content they create. Even though they exactly know what they want, they are very good collaborators. they understand what the channel wants and deliver a high quality production. Abbas and Nidhi are gifted with a visual sense.”

    Rangrez’s production slate, while not expansive like other GEC producers, is  nonetheless impressive. It has produced shows for Living Foodz, ZeeQ and Fox Life.  Among its ZeeQ  programmes figure Teenovation, Engineer This, and Art Room. For Teenovation, Ashraf and Nidhi and team scoured the length and breath of the rural heartlands to uncover unique inventions from young innovators.  And they showcased them on the show.

    Khaata Rahe Mera Dil is a travel and street food show that the company produced for FoodFood in 2011. Then, Vickypedia with chef Vickey Ratnani is a Living Foodz commission, while Serve it like Sarah was produced for FoxLife. Featuring Sarah Todd (a former Masterchef Australia contestan) it tracks her as she discovers her new home Goa through its food and people.

    Zee Entertainment Enterprises’ Subhadarshi Tripathi has also repeated them for several seasons of when he headed ZeeQ and is now working with them at Living Foodz and the Living Network where he is the chief content officer.  Says he: “The work quality of Rangrez is commendable. There are other people also who deliver quality, what stands out with them are other factors from commitment to delivery time, everything falls in place. The team is extremely hard working, that’s what gives them superiority.”

    Ashraf confesses that the obsession to make the creative product look good – not just good, actually gorgeous – comes courtesy the nine years he spent making ad films and TV commercials for demanding brands like Maruti Suzuki, Honda, Toyota, Gul Oil, and Reliance among many others in the mid-nineties. He worked as an executive producer, production designer, then as creative director for Mumbai-based Lock, Stock and Barrel Films.

    Even as Ashraf was honing the craft of TVC making, wife Nidhi was capturing subjects that interested her in documentaries and even being recognized for them. She helmed the much acclaimed documentary film, Ladies Special in 2003 which won the John Abraham National Award two years later, and the George Ragot love the train award at the Cine Rail Paris in 2009. Nidhi has other acclaimed films to her credit: Art In Exile, TIPA, Of Friendship films and swords,  The Saint of Chitrakoot, and The Saroj Khan Story (yes the choreographer). The last was awarded the best documentary featurette at the Fiji Film Festival in 2013.

    Ashraf points out that Nidhi is the key script and content person at Rangrez and works with all the writers and also directs key projects for the company. Rangrez has a core team of eight to 10 professionals, including producers, researchers and post producers. “Because of our documentary training our crew sizes have always been small,” says Ashraf.

    He has been a producer almost all his life. But he had a dalliance with being part of a broadcasting venture when chef-entrepreneur Sanjeev Kapoor’s office called him in early 2010.  “I met them and found out that they were going to launch a 24×7 food channel and they were looking for the core team,” he recollects with a smile. “Since I had no prior experience in broadcast, it took them nine meetings/interviews (with different people) to decide on me. I guess it was my pure passion for food and interest in the subject that got me selected.”

    He went on to join the channel, which was branded FoodFood as a creative director.  “What we managed to do at FoodFood and we take a lot of pride in, is that we gave a brand new look to instructional cooking shows,” he once again interjects. I designed kitchen sets which were realistic and inline with the personality of our chefs/cooks. Kitchens are  always an extension of the homemakers personality. And so I personally handpicked each and every item on every set we made. And that made all the difference, that year we won the award for the best cooking show and also the packaging of the channel was awarded. “

    Today, Ashraf and Nidhi are bringing all the cumulative experience to bear as they are going about building their own homegrown in-house funded venture foodlooking, which seeks to set up a food-oriented digital programming platform with some unique shows.

    The tagline of foodlooking is: learn, buy, cook.  “It will allow the viewer to immerse himself with the cooking experience like never before, providing him with instructional videos, recipes, and DIY guides,” explains Ashraf.  The tagline of foodlooking is: learn, buy, cook.

    Filming and testing has been going on for it for the past year – some 400 clips have been shot so far. Around 50 hours of content has been filmed in 4K and three shows are on the floors right now.  Some 250 to 300 hours of food content is expected to be canned.

    The idea according to Ashraf is to fund it through internal accruals for the next year before reaching out to outside investors or partners.  The launch date for foodlooking has been set for end this year.  

    Even as foodlooking is being cooked, Rangrez and he are continuing with their pitches for other shows to keep the home fires burning. Ashraf’s visits to markets such as MipCom and MipTV in Cannes over the past two years where he has had held meetings with other producers in other countries and global food television majors such as the Food Network has got them interested in working with him. A commission or a co-production is on the anvil, sooner, than later.

    public://FOODLooking Set.jpg

    Meanwhile back home, the kitchen in the foodlooking workplace more often than not turns into a playground. Ashraf, Nidhi and the team of 10 key professionals, including DOP Ankit Trived, production & operations head Akash Thakkar tinker around, experimenting and creating cuisines with expert chefs.  Which will then make it on to one of the programmes on television or onto their digital platform.  And as Ashraf says when “the office has free time, they end up baking a cake.”

  • Rangrez Films and the fine art of making TV food shows

    Rangrez Films and the fine art of making TV food shows

    MUMBAI: Step into Ashraf Abbas’ and Nidhi Tuli’s Rangrez Films’ and foodlooking’s studio-floor-cum-offices in Morya Classic building in Mumbai’s Andheri suburb, and you can gauge that a lot of thought has been put into the design. The office strikes you because of its open space, the clean lines, old wooden furniture, single seater cubicles 10 feet above the floor, each housing an FCP edit suite.

    On another floor what greets you is an ingeniously designed kitchen set with a window leading outside to the leafy exterior, lights rigged from the ceiling, scores of cups, saucers, ladles, spoons, pots and kettles with exotic designs, cameras, lenses, dishes, and bowls – all immaculately placed.  

    You feel you have been transported to a studio in a European location, not in a crowded office building in a bustling Mumbai suburb.

    “I have designed every inch of this office and studio,” says Ashraf, with a shy-yet-full of-pride toothed grin. “I am a carpenter. I scoured Chor Bazar (the flea market) in Mumbai, picked up wood and made the office in the exact image I wanted. I am very keen about getting the detailing right.”

    Ashraf is not just a carpenter, both he and his wife are absolute foodies – a habit they developed early on their career when they spent their time backpacking across India filming documentaries. And they are also the two individuals behind the award-winning production house Rangrez Films.

    public://Rangrez office.jpg

    The husband and wife duo are simply consumed with the passion to create quality content, so much so that often times profits are sacrificed totally at the altar of creating world class content.

    “We focus on the right content and its right presentation. To give justice to the content we are creating is our responsibility,” says Nidhi.

    “We are almost always making very slender margins, sometimes none at all,” shrugs Ashraf, adding matter-of-factly. “I am pretty anal about getting it right, to the standards I have set.”

    (Even as they are loathe to reveal any turnover figures, estimates are that the company notches up double digit crore in revenue annually.)

    The duo set up Rangrez Films in 2008. But throughout their journey they have been quite fixated on a couple of key areas while filming: the look and the composition of each frame. “We do not create our products, keeping TV in mind, we make it for the subject,” points out Nidhi. Hence, they take a lot of pains to make their sets look beautiful while creating and lighting them and also behind the framing of each shot. Whether they are filming a food show or a docu-drama, each shot is discussed threadbare with the director of photography.

    “It has to look beautiful and has to have the wow factor,” says Ashraf. “It has to look like a feature film production.”

    And it is this razor sharp focus on making each scene look beautiful that makes Rangrez’s  food productions stand out.“Food has to look exquisite,” says Ashraf. “And everyone of our productions has to feel right.”

    Hence, when Epic Television CEO Mahesh Samat and his creative head Ravina Kohli were looking for a studio to produce a food show for their high on production values channel in 2013, who did they approach? Well, it was indeed Rangrez Films.

    Ashraf and Nidhi suggested that the show could be on the history of Indian food. The Epic and Rangrez teams brainstormed and came up with the idea that the show could include food as made in kitchens of Indian maharajas and erstwhile kings over the centuries.

    Thus was born one of the shows the duo takes deep pride in: Raja Rasoi aur Anya Kahaniya . Both Ashraf and Nidhi deeply researched different kinds of food that emerged from palace kitchens and they showcased them on the show with a narrative story telling of the entire journey.

    “It was the best way to treat the subject,” confesses Ashraf. “Indian royalty is the custodian of ancient culinary traditions. “

    Samat had informally and unintentionally given a pat on the back to Rangrez when he had told indiantelevision.com a couple of years ago that the channel was working with TV producers who were “master craftsmen.”

    In the same year, Samat and Ravina commissioned Asraf and Nidhi to produce a series on Indian spies titled Adrishya, with each episode documenting a single spy. 13 iconic Indian spies right from the times of the Mahabharata to post-independence India had their lives unravel on screen in an absorbing and well shot narrative.

    public://Art Room Production Still.jpg

    Epic once again commissioned Rangrez Films for another production entitled The Great Escape – about the greatest escapes ever made into India or by Indians.

    “For the first time on television we told the story of the escape of His Holiness the Dalai Lama from Tibet into India in 1959 and the brave story of Rezang La’s escape from Indo China was 1962. In many ways this is our biggest production, because these are all individual films and shot on a very large canvas,” exalt Ashraf and Nidhi.

    Ravina explains why she keeps going back to the duo. Says she: “The production quality is very high. Extremely dedicated and sincere team, they make no compromise on the content they create. Even though they exactly know what they want, they are very good collaborators. they understand what the channel wants and deliver a high quality production. Abbas and Nidhi are gifted with a visual sense.”

    Rangrez’s production slate, while not expansive like other GEC producers, is  nonetheless impressive. It has produced shows for Living Foodz, ZeeQ and Fox Life.  Among its ZeeQ  programmes figure Teenovation, Engineer This, and Art Room. For Teenovation, Ashraf and Nidhi and team scoured the length and breath of the rural heartlands to uncover unique inventions from young innovators.  And they showcased them on the show.

    Khaata Rahe Mera Dil is a travel and street food show that the company produced for FoodFood in 2011. Then, Vickypedia with chef Vickey Ratnani is a Living Foodz commission, while Serve it like Sarah was produced for FoxLife. Featuring Sarah Todd (a former Masterchef Australia contestan) it tracks her as she discovers her new home Goa through its food and people.

    Zee Entertainment Enterprises’ Subhadarshi Tripathi has also repeated them for several seasons of when he headed ZeeQ and is now working with them at Living Foodz and the Living Network where he is the chief content officer.  Says he: “The work quality of Rangrez is commendable. There are other people also who deliver quality, what stands out with them are other factors from commitment to delivery time, everything falls in place. The team is extremely hard working, that’s what gives them superiority.”

    Ashraf confesses that the obsession to make the creative product look good – not just good, actually gorgeous – comes courtesy the nine years he spent making ad films and TV commercials for demanding brands like Maruti Suzuki, Honda, Toyota, Gul Oil, and Reliance among many others in the mid-nineties. He worked as an executive producer, production designer, then as creative director for Mumbai-based Lock, Stock and Barrel Films.

    Even as Ashraf was honing the craft of TVC making, wife Nidhi was capturing subjects that interested her in documentaries and even being recognized for them. She helmed the much acclaimed documentary film, Ladies Special in 2003 which won the John Abraham National Award two years later, and the George Ragot love the train award at the Cine Rail Paris in 2009. Nidhi has other acclaimed films to her credit: Art In Exile, TIPA, Of Friendship films and swords,  The Saint of Chitrakoot, and The Saroj Khan Story (yes the choreographer). The last was awarded the best documentary featurette at the Fiji Film Festival in 2013.

    Ashraf points out that Nidhi is the key script and content person at Rangrez and works with all the writers and also directs key projects for the company. Rangrez has a core team of eight to 10 professionals, including producers, researchers and post producers. “Because of our documentary training our crew sizes have always been small,” says Ashraf.

    He has been a producer almost all his life. But he had a dalliance with being part of a broadcasting venture when chef-entrepreneur Sanjeev Kapoor’s office called him in early 2010.  “I met them and found out that they were going to launch a 24×7 food channel and they were looking for the core team,” he recollects with a smile. “Since I had no prior experience in broadcast, it took them nine meetings/interviews (with different people) to decide on me. I guess it was my pure passion for food and interest in the subject that got me selected.”

    He went on to join the channel, which was branded FoodFood as a creative director.  “What we managed to do at FoodFood and we take a lot of pride in, is that we gave a brand new look to instructional cooking shows,” he once again interjects. I designed kitchen sets which were realistic and inline with the personality of our chefs/cooks. Kitchens are  always an extension of the homemakers personality. And so I personally handpicked each and every item on every set we made. And that made all the difference, that year we won the award for the best cooking show and also the packaging of the channel was awarded. “

    Today, Ashraf and Nidhi are bringing all the cumulative experience to bear as they are going about building their own homegrown in-house funded venture foodlooking, which seeks to set up a food-oriented digital programming platform with some unique shows.

    The tagline of foodlooking is: learn, buy, cook.  “It will allow the viewer to immerse himself with the cooking experience like never before, providing him with instructional videos, recipes, and DIY guides,” explains Ashraf.  The tagline of foodlooking is: learn, buy, cook.

    Filming and testing has been going on for it for the past year – some 400 clips have been shot so far. Around 50 hours of content has been filmed in 4K and three shows are on the floors right now.  Some 250 to 300 hours of food content is expected to be canned.

    The idea according to Ashraf is to fund it through internal accruals for the next year before reaching out to outside investors or partners.  The launch date for foodlooking has been set for end this year.  

    Even as foodlooking is being cooked, Rangrez and he are continuing with their pitches for other shows to keep the home fires burning. Ashraf’s visits to markets such as MipCom and MipTV in Cannes over the past two years where he has had held meetings with other producers in other countries and global food television majors such as the Food Network has got them interested in working with him. A commission or a co-production is on the anvil, sooner, than later.

    public://FOODLooking Set.jpg

    Meanwhile back home, the kitchen in the foodlooking workplace more often than not turns into a playground. Ashraf, Nidhi and the team of 10 key professionals, including DOP Ankit Trived, production & operations head Akash Thakkar tinker around, experimenting and creating cuisines with expert chefs.  Which will then make it on to one of the programmes on television or onto their digital platform.  And as Ashraf says when “the office has free time, they end up baking a cake.”

  • The Epic Channel introduces Illusion videos for Facebook and Twitter

    The Epic Channel introduces Illusion videos for Facebook and Twitter

    MUMBAI: With the vision of strengthening their innovative digital content, the Epic Channel has launched an ‘llusion’ video feature on their Facebook and Twitter accounts.

    In fact, Epic is one of the first broadcasters to launch such a feature with their recent show, Khwaabon Ka Safar with Mahesh Bhatt.

    TV networks are increasingly using social media as an extended platform to capture content, encourage opinions and connect with their viewers. The Epic channel uses digital innovations to extend the experience of their shows with features like this. The channel created a series of digital activities beginning with the Epic at 10 campaigns across their social media assets to drive tune-ins for the show at 10 pm.

    The #EPICat10hashtag trended nationally during the campaign. The channel also pioneered one of the first Twitter alarm for India and planned a tie-up with QuizUp, a real-time trivia game. It is the only Indian brand to have its collection on the app. On Quizup, users compete against another over an interest led topic.

    The Epic channel MD Mahesh Samat said, “Innovation is the crux of our channel. The digital age has proved that content has to be platform agnostic and by creating these Illusion videos, we hope to move one step closer to our viewers. There’s quite a few more innovations lined up so keep watching our social media pages.”

    The Epic channel has successfully embarked its one year journey, introducing path-breaking innovations to keep the audience engaged. The channel offers a diverse variety of shows which are rooted with brilliant and captivating stories from Indian history.

  • The Epic Channel goes HD on Tata Sky

    The Epic Channel goes HD on Tata Sky

    MUMBAI: With increasing penetration of High Definition (HD) television sets, more and more channels are now adding the HD feed for a better consumer experience.

     

    The Epic Channel, which focuses on the Indian history, folklore and mythology genre, recently launched its HD version on Tata Sky. 

     

    The Epic Channel HD will be available on the direct-to-home (DTH) platform’s channel no 133.

     

    The Epic Channel will shoots all its content in HD so viewers can experience the shows on Indian history and mythology in HD.

     

    The Epic Channel managing director Mahesh Samat said, “Since the inception of the channel, Epic has stood out for its unique and unparalleled content offering. We have grown considerably and built a loyal viewer base over the course of the year and with the channel now being available in High Definition on Tata Sky, the viewer’s experience is only going to get enhanced. This makes it a complete viewing experience for Tata Sky subscribers, letting them watch the best in Indian history and mythology.”

     

    Tata Sky chief contend and business development officer Paolo Agostinelli added, “High definition content truly does justice to the intriguing historic and mythological story telling that Epic channel brings to the viewers. We continue to bring the best viewing technology for our Tata Sky subscribers and this is one of the biggest reasons why we have a growing subscriber base.”

     

    The channel’s standard definition (SD) feed is currently available across key DTH players like Tata Sky, Airtel, Videocon d2h, Dish TV, and Reliance Digital TV along with major cable players like Hathway, Den and more.

  • Epic & Culture Machine join hands to launch short format non-fiction content

    Epic & Culture Machine join hands to launch short format non-fiction content

    MUMBAI: With an aim to strengthen its position as industry leaders in Indian historic and mythological content on television, the Epic Channel and digital video entertainment company Culture Machine have launched ‘Epified.’

     

    Starting 15 August, ‘Epified’ is a collection of short format non-fiction content related to Indian history and mythology, which includes works inspired by the writings of renowned mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik and many more. Epified’s programming includes a plethora of series like the Mahabharata, Dharma Explained, Gods-Masters-Heroes and more.

     

    The Epic Channel founder and MD Mahesh Samat said, “It has been our constant endeavour to bring to Indian audiences, some of the great stories of Indian history and mythology. With Epified, and its innovative unique animated format, we found great resonance with the channel and we’re sure the audiences will love it.”

     

    Culture Machine CEO Sameer Pitalwalla added, “Our vision with Epified was to marry great storytelling around Indian history and mythology with great art. We have had a great run thus far growing our community across digital platforms and it’s heartening to see the Epic Channel’s belief in this format and their conviction in making it part of the programming line-up. It’s a landmark deal for digital video content and brands.”

  • Epic Channel launches India’s first Twitter alarm to drive viewership

    Epic Channel launches India’s first Twitter alarm to drive viewership

    MUMBAI: TV channels are leaving no stone unturned to engage with the Twitter world. Now, Epic channel has executed a unique innovation for its new campaign – #EPICat10. 

     

    The channel is the first broadcaster to use the Twitter Alarm that lets followers set a reminder for the 10 pm shows. The Twitter alarm was conceptualised by Grey Group India and executed in collaboration with Twitter. 

     

    The Twitter application was created as part of Epic Channel’s ongoing campaign. The objective of the campaign is to drive viewing to the 10 pm slot.

     

    The mechanism is simple. After following the Epic Channel on Twitter, a follower can set the reminder from a specially created tweet. Once the reminder is set, the Twitter application sends the follower a reminder tweet at 9.45 pm to watch the 10 pm shows. The activity was launched on 6 July, 2015. 

     

    Epic MD Mahesh Samat said, “When Grey suggested the idea as part of the ‘Epic at 10’ campaign, we were instantly sold and excited to get it activated. We are proud to announce ‘The Epic Channel Twitter Alarm’ for the first time in India. Twitter has been excellent in facilitating the innovation. The core idea of our campaign is to drive tune-ins to the 10 pm time slot on the channel. The Twitter Alarm fits in perfectly with the campaign.”

     

    Grey Group India chairman and MD Sunil Lulla added, “At Grey Group, we are constantly looking at creating, ‘Famous & Effective’ campaigns for our clients. This makes it imperative to step beyond the boundaries and create – even if it is something as simple as a ‘Twitter Alarm’. We hope that soon enough, India will need no reminder to tune into The Epic Channel at 10 pm.”

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

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

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

    A journey with highs & lows

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

    Building 10 pm slot

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

    GECs have a ‘soapification’ of mythology

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

    Multi-dimensional campaign

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

     

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

  • Epic widens reach; launches on Dish TV

    Epic widens reach; launches on Dish TV

    MUMBAI: With a view to broaden its reach, segmented Hindi entertainment channel Epic has now hopped on to the Dish TV direct to home (DTH) platform.

     

    Epic will be available on Dish TV on channel no. 121. The channel will be available to all Dish TV subscribers on free preview till 1 July, 2015. Epic specializes across genres such as action, drama, comedy, supernatural and narrative non-fiction content, set against Indian historic and mythological eras.

     

    Dish TV India COO Salil Kapoor said, “Being a pioneer and market leader, Dish TV has always stood up to its promise of providing maximum entertainment to its customers. We are delighted to add Epic to our bouquet of channels. With this addition, Dish TV maintains its leadership in Hindi entertainment with maximum Hindi GEC in the industry. The Epic channel’s offering will enable our consumers to watch the very best of the segmented Hindi entertainment in the space of Indian history and mythology.”

     

    Epic founder and managing director Mahesh Samat added, “We are happy to announce our availability on Dish TV, which is Asia’s largest DTH brand. It will extend our reach to a wide spectrum of Dish TV users and will allow them to experience high quality stories on Indian history and mythology.”

     

    With this, Epic is now available across key DTH players such as Tata Sky, Airtel, Videocon, Dish TV, and Reliance Digital TV along with major cable players like Hathway and Den Networks amongst others.