Tag: Myleeta Aga

  • Myleeta Aga quits Netflix

    Myleeta Aga quits Netflix

    KOLKATA: Following an internal realignment of the southeast Asia and Australia content teams, Myleeta Aga has moved on from Netflix. Aga joined the streaming service in 2019 after a decade-long stint at BBC Studios.

    She was mandated to head content operations for southeast Asia and Australia. “It’s been an amazing year! I am proud of the work that our team has done, putting Southeast Asia and Australia on the map for Netflix, and showcasing the phenomenal potential of the creative community across these countries to audiences at home and around the world. I believe in the power of great stories, and I am confident in the success that lies ahead,” she said as quoted by Variety.

    According to the report, Seoul-based Kim Minyoung will oversee content planning in the region. Aga’s departure is a result of Netflix’s country-specific focus in the region, rather than having a centralised control. The platform has also thanked Aga for her contributions.

  • BBC Studios India appoints Sameer Gogate as Business Head, Productions

    BBC Studios India appoints Sameer Gogate as Business Head, Productions

    Mumbai: BBC Studios announces the appointment of Sameer Gogate as Business Head for India’s production business.  Gogate, joins BBC Studios from the 1st of July, 2019. In his new role, he will lead India’s production business and report to Myleeta Aga, based in Singapore.

    Gogate comes with a rich background in content, having worked across the TV and Film Industry with Eros International, Endemol and Viacom in various functions – including Business Planning, Commercial and Production Management for TV and Films. At Vuclip, he has been Head of Revenue and Business Development since 2017. He will be overseeing existing series in production, development of new concepts, format adaptations and branded content in his new role.

  • Sony BBC Earth shakes up factual entertainment space

    Sony BBC Earth shakes up factual entertainment space

    MUMBAI: Within a year of its launch, factual entertainment channel Sony BBC Earth has emerged as the leader in the metros as per the latest week 11 of BARC ratings.

    From the sixth position to the top, the ride has been quick for the channel. Sony BBC Earth stood at 5 per cent market share a year ago and now takes up 22 per cent backed by a strong distribution network, strategic content line-up and strong marketing innovations.

    Sony Pictures Networks India EVP and business head English cluster Tushar Shah said that this one year has been a period full of learning. “It is gratifying that in a span of one year, despite the channel having been launched as the eighth channel, we are on top today. All our efforts have paid off,” he exults.

    Shah adds that the infotainment genre has a slight entertainment edge which created a better opportunity. Research told them that people wanted pure, factual and full of life content. “The kind of content that Sony BBC Earth provides is real, factual and with grand visual effect. We are not driven by what competitors show, we believe in what we have and we are very confident that in the long run it will pay us rich dividends,” he says.

    Commenting on the same, BBC Worldwide south and south-east Asia SVP and GM Myleeta Aga said that Sony BBC Earth team’s consistent work on building reach and fine-tuning the programming and marketing mix has paid off. She further adds that series like Spy in the Wild and Fishing Impossible have performed well for the channel.

    The channel is celebrating its achievement with British TV presenter and medical journalist Michael Mosley. He conducts experiments on himself to give definitive answers to health-related questions and has busted many myths related to food, fitness and health. Trust me I’m a Doctor, Meet the Humans, The Truth About Exercise are some of the shows aired exclusively in India on Sony BBC Earth.

    Earlier in February 2018, to bridge the gap between urban lifestyle and the natural world, Sony BBC Earth had taken its brand proposition of ‘Feel Alive’ on-ground by introducing an annual property called feel-alive hours.

    The channel started with schools so that students can feel alive and refreshed ahead of their annual exams in March. The activity covered 300 schools, 2 lakh students across four cities of Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore and Kolkata

    Also Read :

    Sony BBC Earth makes children ‘Feel Alive’ with its exclusive school contact program

    Sony BBC Earth reveals Republic Day programming plans

  • BBC Worldwide India announces partnership with Applause Entertainment

    BBC Worldwide India announces partnership with Applause Entertainment

    MUMBAI:  BBC Worldwide India has announced a partnership with Aditya Birla Group’s Applause Entertainment that will see the two organisations working together to develop and produce Indian versions of iconic BBC formats. 

    Kicking off the partnership, BBC Worldwide and Applause Entertainment will work together to develop Indian versions of acclaimed BBC formats, Criminal Justice and The Office to bring to online audiences throughout India.

    Criminal Justice is a British television drama series produced by the BBC. The original UK version was written by Peter Moffat, with each series following an individual on a gut wrenching journey through the criminal justice system. The series won multiple TV awards including BAFTA, RTS and International Emmys. It was also adapted in the US as The Night Of and starred John Turturro and Riz Ahmed who won an Emmy for his performance in the series.

    BBC Worldwide South East Asia and South Asia SVP and GM Myleeta Aga said: “We are very excited to be working with Applause Entertainment, and are assembling an A-list cast of talent to ensure the highest standards of execution. We see Criminal Justice and The Office as just the first step in a long and fruitful partnership with Applause.  We are confident this partnership will be result in many more incredibly popular and well-loved Indian adaptations of BBC formats.”

    The original UK version of The Office won numerous TV awards and has spawned eight international versions in Europe. The UK version, written by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant is set in a nondescript paper office company in a nondescript industrial town and features narcissistic, childish and egotistical middle manager, David Brent (played by Ricky Gervais) and the psychological car wreck that is his life. The US version which starred Steve Carell in the lead role won numerous Emmys and went on for nine seasons. 

    Applause Entertainment CEO Sameer Nair said, “Applause is looking to create premium content for Indian viewers to watch online, delivered on the back of the big digital highways that have been built through telecom and all other platforms that exist. We feel that BBC Worldwide,with its high quality content library and formidable reputation for making premium content in India, is the ideal partner to work with. Together, we are pulling expertise and resources to adapt popular BBC formats here. We have picked shows that have been global successes and we believe that the Indian adaptations will meet the viewing needs of the Indian market.” 

    This will be the first time both Criminal Justice and The Office formats will be developed in Asia, with India being the first in Asia to launch Indian versions of the shows.

    Also Read:

    2017 for infotainment and lifestyle channels

    Sony BBC Earth reveals Republic Day programming plans

  • Voot brings BBC’s famed non-scripted original about social media madness today

    Voot brings BBC’s famed non-scripted original about social media madness today

    MUMBAI: Scaling a treacherous mountain pass, battling wildlife and river rapids in the forests and beating the gruelling desert sun – Can you survive and stay alive in these harsh, uninhabited terrains with the help of just a Smartphone and a data strong network?

    Viacom 18’s video-on-demand streaming service Voot is all set to answer this question with the launch of India’s first-ever ‘Digital Survival Series’ and its newest original – Vodafone presents “Stupid Man Smart Phone” powered by Motorola.

    Produced by BBC Worldwide Productions and hosted by the acclaimed actor and digital star Sumeet Vyas, the show will introduce the audience to a never seen before format in the history of Indian entertainment where a smart phone and a super network is the only means of survival.

    This unique and engaging show is all set to premiere exclusively on 20 September on Voot .

    Viacom18 Digital Ventures’ COO Gaurav Gandhi said: “Voot continues to take the leadership mantle on innovation with many pioneering initiatives across both content and technology. The latest Voot original, a category first, is one such initiative, that will offer a completely differentiated and engaging experience to our audience.”

    Voot head of content Monika Shergill said “For the first time, an internationally recognised non-scripted format of this scale is being produced as a streaming original series. The show is unique with today’s social media madness at the heart of it. It’s the only show where followers of Sumeet and his partners participate and aid in their survival choices. This unique concept with its social engagement potential, grandeur and edgy humour is sure to provide an immersive entertainment experience to all.”

    A winner of the ‘Best Multi-Platform Format’ at the 2017 International Format Awards in Cannes earlier, this Indian adaptation of the BBC Worldwide format features Vyas and a celebrity guest travelling across three unforgiving terrains, trying to complete the mission at hand while being aided by their smartphones and their legions of social media followers.

    BBC Worldwide SVP and GM – south-east Asia and south Asia Myleeta Aga said: “India is the first country in Asia that will air the Indian version of this BBC format and we will be producing it for our long-standing partners at Viacom.”

    Vodafone EVP – marketing Siddharth Banerjee said,“Vodafone is happy to partner with content that is new-age and digital. It’s is a show with connectivity at the heart of the storytelling. The format enables the protagonists to #MakeMostOfNow with the Vodafone Data Strong Network™ and navigate challenges as they traverse diverse geographies across India in the Voot show.”

    Motorola India head of marketing Rachna Lather said, “The viewers will see how much fun Sumeet and his friends have using the Moto Z2 play with Moto mods while performing the tough challenges”.

    Along with their inimitable personality, each celebrity guest also brings to the show their extensive social media fan base which coupled with Vyas’s massive internet following makes for relevant and often crucial interactions through all the episodes.

    In the lush rainforests of South India, Vyas teams up with the vibrant Evelyn Sharma while the harsh Rajasthan desert sun beats down upon YouTube funny man Sahil Khattar and TV hearthrob Karan Kundra keeps Sumeet company in the untouched mountains of Arunachal Pradesh.

  • BBC Worldwide India ramps up prod biz, reorganises team

    BBC Worldwide India ramps up prod biz, reorganises team

    MUMBAI: BBC Worldwide India has announced two personnel changes to up the ante of its production business.

    Soniya Kulkarni, in addition to her creative head position has been tasked with the job of business development. In her newly minted role of Creative and business head, productions, India, she will lead the charge in winning new business while continuing to oversee the productions and creative teams.

    Deepali Handa has been promoted to Commercial Head, Productions, India. She continues to oversee BBC Worldwide India’s non-fiction production and production accounts as well as operational performance.

    Soniya and Deepali will continue to report to Myleeta Aga, SVP and GM, South & South East Asia.

    “BBC Worldwide already enjoys a reputation as a leading producer in India, making high quality and popular fiction and non-scripted content,” said Myleeta Aga, SVP and GM, South and Southeast Asia. “I am confident that their efforts, vision and creative force will enhance BBC Worldwide’s strategic growth and business here.”

    BBC Worldwide in India recently won awards for its production of Jhalak Dikkhla Jaa (BBC Worldwide format of Dancing with the Stars), Aaj Ki Raat Hai Zindagi (BBC Worldwide format of Tonight’s the Night) and Star Parivaar Awards. It also recently produced India Banega Manch, 2MAD, MTV’s Girls on Top, Taste Match and Spell Bee.

  • BBC Earth will help grow nascent factual entertainment space in India, feels Beebs

    With over 20+ years of experience across the media business in multiple countries and functions, BBC Worldwide SVP and GM SE and South Asia Myleeta Aga is the mastermind behind driving content, format and digital sales of the commercial arm. David Weiland, as EVP, BBC Worldwide Asia, is responsible for all of BBC’s businesses in Asia, stretching from India to Japan and China to Indonesia. Together, the duo is responsible for all the various businesses of BBC Worldwide in Asia.

    Soon after the launch of its BBC Earth channel in India in partnership with Sony Pictures Networks India, the two Beebs execs, in a tete-a-tete with Indiantelevision.com’s Megha Parmar in Mumbai, discussed at length the future strategies of BBC Worldwide in Asia, Sony BBC Earth channel, infotainment genre and the digital eco-system in India, apart from other aspects of the business. Edited excerpts from the interview:

    As SVP and GM SE and South Asia at BBC Worldwide, what are the various challenges in these diverse markets, Myleeta?

    It’s a great opportunity. BBC Worldwide is a content company and we look for different ways to share our content based on what our market and the consumers within it want. So, in this market, our primary business happens in production, in content sales and, of course, the JV with Sony Pictures Networks India (SPNI). But, in South-East Asia (SEA), our primary business is in our linear channels and the BBC Player. These are both new areas for me. I am looking at some of the channels but not all across the markets. At the moment, I know some of the markets but about others I am still learning. So, there is a good mix of things that I have not done and am familiar with. However, I feel, I can hit the ground running. Every market in SEA is also different and unique.

    What is BBC Worldwide strategy for India and Asia?

    Myleeta: We have always taken a content approach in whatever we do. We have some iconic TV content that we sell to platforms and are increasingly selling more to digital OTT platforms. I am very much looking at that and building fan bases, maintaining them for our key program brands like `Doctor Who’ and `Sherlock’. Our production side too is doing very well. We have a full raft of productions in progress over the next one year. We are doing fiction, non-fiction, digital and branded content. So, we are working on building a full circuit production house and all of it is through a team that is built within the company. We are producing fiction, non-fiction, drama, etc and I think we have an expertise in all these genres now. Our production is very stable.

    David: We have made a change in the SEA market in the last 18 months where we launched BBC Earth, which effectively added to our portfolio. In terms of linear channels, we have BBC News, CBeebies, BBC Sport and we shut down BBC Entertainment. Certainly, in SEA we have launched a drama channel BBC First and a factual entertainment channel BBC Brit Digital. We have also launched BBC Player. I am a strong believer of linear channels. They are going to stay here and India is a proof of that. In this market you have linear channel launches all the time and there is still lot of space for growth. We want to continue in that way and also have a digital service that compliments and adds to it.

    As you have launched BBC Earth in India, what do you think about the infotainment genre here and what will the likely response to such a product?

    Myleeta: Unless we had seen a big opportunity for BBC earth, we would have not entered into a partnership with Sony. I think the factual entertainment genre has been very stagnant. I have seen Discovery’s growth 20 years ago from now when I was a part of it and there has been nothing disruptive, distinctive in the factual space for a really long time. So, I think BBC Earth will be welcomed by the audiences in India. The content is spectacular. The factual entertainment space in India is very nascent and there is a lot of room for it to grow.

    But, is it profitable in India? Do you see there is space for more players in the factual entertainment genre in India and how will BBC Earth differentiate itself from others?

    Myleeta: Yes, I think so. The genre is profitable in India. I am sure Sony will do a brilliant job in making our channel to profitability. There is still place for few more players in the space. Quality of storytelling is our biggest strength.

    David: We have launched this brand in a number of other markets and what we have observed is that the infotainment genre describes it quite well. What I think is that people are migrating towards reality-type genre and the premium factual entertainment space is being left behind a bit. I think we are filling that. And, when we look at the new type of technology that we are bringing into the genre, accompanied with new types of storytelling, it is really interesting. The other thing, particularly about young people, is that they are becoming more urban citizens obsessed with technology and have lost touch with what is happening here. Interestingly, the millennials are concerned about the Earth, state of the planet, science, and actually want to find a place where they can understand or connect emotionally with everything— but in a different way. BBC Earth’s content will be positive, young and will build an emotional connect to open people’s eyes.

    How is the channel fairing in 39 other markets?

    David: We have BBC Earth channels in South-East and North Asia. We launched it a year ago. We have been number one in four of the 12 months and in the other months we have been number two or three. The day we launched the channel was when we articulated our desire to be in the top three in the factual set and we are certainly doing it around the world. I think we have found that the brand and the content connect with the viewers.

    What’s the next launch about and when?

    David: We don’t have any concrete plans in the short term, but we are always looking at opportunities. Having this partnership in India will make us talk with Sony and others to figure out if there is anything else we need to do. We are quite agnostic in terms of our route to a market. It could be through licensing our content to one company or launching our own services or creating our services in partnerships. We look at all those opportunities, while remaining focused on our key brands. We have leadership abilities in three or four genres — premium factual, premium drama to some degree, pre-school kids and mass scale factual entertainment. We are focused and I think one should be in this global media environment.

    Content is crucial for any platform or channel’s success. Do you think that broadcasters in India are too content-driven?

    Myleeta: Yes, I do. I think the interpretations of content and perhaps the way they look at it maybe is different. They are all looking to win audiences through their content mix. I don’t think it’s a market where, for example, a brand like Star Plus will be able to attract audience, if they don’t have a hit show running.

    What do you think about the digital eco-system in India? How different is it in the global market?

    David: Digital space in India is certainly evolving. It is a challenge in terms of making money in SVoD service because you have to look at people’s desire and willingness to pay, apart from other issues like the level of piracy, price points in the Indian market and the fact that consumers are habitual to a single service that is not comprehensive. What might happen is that the market will get to the level where pay TV is today wherein you pay one bill and get a range of channels in the linear space. Why can’t it happen in the digital space? You pay one person and get a variety of apps. There are some interesting developments going on in this space. The model of Amazon channels in the US is worth looking at. On top of your (Amazon) Prime membership, you can add on additional services.

    Does BBC plan to launch an OTT platform in India?

    David: In the short term, no. But we don’t want to rule out anything. We have launched BBC Player in SEA. It is an authenticated on-demand service, which we have launched with our pay TV partners in Singapore and now in Malaysia. It offers linear channels and is downloadable for 30 days. We have also launched several other brands on the service. BBC First and Brit are now available on digital only. In the US, we have partnered with ITV to launch a British-focused SVoD OTT service called BritBox. In the UK, we have the BBC iPlayer, which is the longest catch-up service and is constantly being developed. There are many more markets in the world where we can completely run a payment-led OTT direct consumer service.

    I think there are opportunities where we can partner with telcos or platforms and we are open to that. India is a market we are looking at and studying, but don’t think we will ever launch a pure direct to consumer OTT in India due to several reasons. There are not many who have done it in India. There are technological issues — broadband roll-out is not that advanced and mobile network is not strong enough. Video and downloading content is a challenge except in certain metros. Still, BBC will be much more interested in doing a partnership with someone.

    As a production house, what is a more profitable business — pushing your content through different platforms or starting something of your own and put all the content there?

    Myleeta: We do both in SEA. We have content on our Player in Malaysia and Singapore but that does not mean we are not selling it to other digital OTT platforms.

    David: In some markets, it’s more profitable to do business to business deals, while in some others, it’s more profitable to license content to third parties. We are a content company with a difference — different from some of our global and US competitors. For them it becomes more challenging to think in a different way. We have always been a diversified business. We have different teams. The TV licensing team says `I must sell the show to a third party platform’. But, I have my BBC Player too. That team says `No, I want to put the show on the service too’. Now, I have to decide which one makes more sense. It’s good to have such choices.

    How important is audience measurement data for BBC?

    Myleeta: A small group of broad audience entertainment channels anywhere in the world are driven by numbers. That is because of the advertising revenue they depend on, which in return is dependent on eyeballs. As you get into more specialist areas, the brand becomes important as well. It’s not that you don’t need the numbers. But you can also look at the new segment of audience you are serving and how the brand resonates with that segment to attract advertisers that want a slice of that specific segment. I think our brand does resonate with advertisers of premium categories. So, I think the BARC numbers will be important for us, but won’t be everything.

    Digital rollout of Indian cable TV services is scheduled to be completed this March-end. Do you think this will boost the TV business in India?

    Myleeta: It will deliver more addressability. We are talking about being able to measure and recover revenues that get lost in the eco-system. So, will it suddenly change the ratings structure? No. But, will it increase revenue for platforms, which in turn will ease the burden of carriage fees on broadcasters? Yes.

    David: It’s a unique market and this (digital addressable services) serves it very well. There is nowhere TV is more entrenched than in India. Businesses here have liked it (digitization). But, I think, overtime it is going to get more in line with the rest of the world.

    BBC is like an old warhorse. What, according to you, does audience in India perceive BBC as?

    Myleeta: BBC Worldwide is the commercial arm of the BBC, a public service organization. The news channels and the journalistic organizations within the news channels are totally independent. BBC Worldwide only commercializes the channels, which is sales and distribution functions for the channel. But the channel is run independently. When we see BBC in this market and outside of the UK, one of the markets where the BBC brand resonates most is India. I think we all remember listening to World Service radio. So, we have been around for a long time. When people think of BBC, they think of news, both radio and TV. BBC Worldwide operates much more on the commercial side.

  • BBC Worldwide to provide 600 hours of content to Amazon India

    BBC Worldwide to provide 600 hours of content to Amazon India

    MUMBAI: BBC Worldwide announced a licensing deal with Amazon that will give Amazon Prime members in India access to over 600 hours of factual and pre-school content from BBC.

    “In the last year or so, we have seen digital consumption in India increase exponentially. We are very excited to be partnering with Amazon Prime Video India to satisfy viewers’ demands for quality, premium programmes from the BBC,” said BBC Worldwide SVP and GM Myleeta Aga.

    Indian subscribers to Amazon Prime Video now have access to CBeebies programs, which have never been broadcast before in India, including Clangers, the pink, long-nosed, inventive and lovable mouse-shaped creatures who live on a little blue planet, out in the starry stretches of space, not far from Earth; Dinopaws, an animation series about the delightful adventures of a trio of very young, inquisitive dinos; and Hey Duggee, the animated series narrated by award-winning comedian Alexander Armstrongo.

    Subscribers to the service will also able to watch award-winning and highly-rated BBC factual programs such as Gandhi, The World’s Weirdest Weapons, and The Genius of Inventions.

    Amazon Prime Video India director and country head Nitesh Kripalani added, “We are pleased to work with BBC Worldwide to avail premium quality pre-school and documentary programmes to our Prime Video customers. We are very humbled by the positive response from customers to Prime Video and we are confident that the BBC’s programmes will resonate with customers. We look forward to a long and fruitful relationship with BBC Worldwide.”

  • BBC Worldwide to provide 600 hours of content to Amazon India

    BBC Worldwide to provide 600 hours of content to Amazon India

    MUMBAI: BBC Worldwide announced a licensing deal with Amazon that will give Amazon Prime members in India access to over 600 hours of factual and pre-school content from BBC.

    “In the last year or so, we have seen digital consumption in India increase exponentially. We are very excited to be partnering with Amazon Prime Video India to satisfy viewers’ demands for quality, premium programmes from the BBC,” said BBC Worldwide SVP and GM Myleeta Aga.

    Indian subscribers to Amazon Prime Video now have access to CBeebies programs, which have never been broadcast before in India, including Clangers, the pink, long-nosed, inventive and lovable mouse-shaped creatures who live on a little blue planet, out in the starry stretches of space, not far from Earth; Dinopaws, an animation series about the delightful adventures of a trio of very young, inquisitive dinos; and Hey Duggee, the animated series narrated by award-winning comedian Alexander Armstrongo.

    Subscribers to the service will also able to watch award-winning and highly-rated BBC factual programs such as Gandhi, The World’s Weirdest Weapons, and The Genius of Inventions.

    Amazon Prime Video India director and country head Nitesh Kripalani added, “We are pleased to work with BBC Worldwide to avail premium quality pre-school and documentary programmes to our Prime Video customers. We are very humbled by the positive response from customers to Prime Video and we are confident that the BBC’s programmes will resonate with customers. We look forward to a long and fruitful relationship with BBC Worldwide.”