Tag: OTT

  • PVR to launch first 12-screen property in Delhi

    PVR to launch first 12-screen property in Delhi

    MUMBAI: Banking on rising theatrical revenues, PVR, one of India’s biggest multiplex chain, will launch its first 12 – Screen Superplex at Vegas Mall, Dwarka, New Delhi, on Monday.

    The flagship property, biggest by PVR in India so far, will be launched in the presence of the starcast of the upcoming romantic action- Marjaavaan and Ajay Bijli, CMD, PVR Ltd, Sanjeev Kumar Bijli, JMD, PVR Ltd and Gautam Dutta, CEO, PVR Ltd. The multiplex will support all movie formats including IMAX and 4DX.

    The launch of 12 – Screen Superplex at Dwarka will also take PVR a tad closer to its aim of achieving the target of 1000 movie screens in India under its chain. Earlier in August, PVR has reached the milestone of 800 screens after it launched a new three-screen property in Sri Ganganagar, Rajasthan. Currently, PVR is present in 69 Indian cities.

    Multiplex business in India is booming despite the disruption caused by OTT in the M&E Industry. As per a recent report in ET, domestic theatrical revenues in India crossed the Rs 100 billion mark in 2018 and will continue to rise in the coming years.

  • I&B Ministry to meet industry leaders to discuss online video content regulation

    I&B Ministry to meet industry leaders to discuss online video content regulation

    Amidst reports of government considering certification/censorship of online video content, the I &B Ministry will hold a second round of consultation next week with industry players, who are determined to oppose any pre-censorship on digital platform.

    The I&B Ministry has invited all  online curated content providers (OCCPs), including Netflix, Amazon and Hotstar, through industry association, the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI) for consultation on the issue of regulation of online video content, as per a report in ET.

    The meeting, slated for next week in Chennai, comes close on the heels of a similar consultation in Mumbai last month.

    In October, PTI had quoted union minister for information and broadcasting Prakash Javadekar as saying that there should be some kind of regulation of OTT platforms on the lines of print and electronic media and films.

    “I have sought suggestions on how to deal with this because there are regular feature films coming on OTT — good, bad and ugly. So how to deal with this, who should monitor, who should regulate?. There is no certification body for OTT platforms and likewise news portals also,” Javadekar was quoted as saying.

    Earlier in September, Live mint has reported that I&B Ministry was looking to finalize a model for the certification of online video streaming content soon after Diwali.

    However, any government attempt to regulate content on OTT, is bound to face stiff opposition from the industry, who believe that the existant IT Act 2000 and a voluntary self-regulatory code signed by major OTT players in January this year, are sufficient in dealing with any untoward situation.

    Online vidoe streaming players like Netflix, Hotstar, Jio, Voot, Zee5, Arre, SonyLIV, ALT Balaji and Eros Now have signed a self-censorship code in January that prohibited these platforms from showing certain kinds of content and set up a redressal mechanism for customer complaints.

    The self-regulation code, bars video players from showing content that’s banned by Indian courts, disrespects the national emblem and flag, outrages religious sentiments, promotes terrorism or violence against State and shows children in sexual acts. Amazon, however, is not part of the self-regulatory code signed under the aegis of IAMAI.

    “We should publish a list of all the laws that apply to OCCP platforms so that there is no is perception that OCCPs are not regulated,” Gowree Gokhale, head of Telecom, Media and Technology practice at Nishith Desai Associates, which is part of the consultation process, was quoted as saying by ET.

    However, despite the presence of a self-regulatory code, there have been an array of PILs in court demanding regulation of online video content.

    In May, the Supreme Court had issued a notice to the Centre on an appeal to regulate content on online streaming platforms.

  • Rajnish Lall: Ad man to OTT content maker

    Rajnish Lall: Ad man to OTT content maker

    MUMBAI: With the explosion of OTT space in the last decade, the content creation folks are having a gala time like never before.  In India alone, there are currently over 30 OTT platforms fighting aggressively for the customer’s wallet-share and screen-time by offering movies, music, sports streaming, satellite channels and original shows.  

    This ever-increasing demand for original content has opened new avenues for young production enthusiasts, for whom  content creation is  more than just minting money.

    Rajnish Lall is one such movie enthusiast who forayed into production with his debut short movie ‘The Fall’ 13-years ago. Having spent more than a decade in corporate life working with advertising agencies (Clarion, Contract & Bates) and as marketing head of B4U Music, Lall had little experience in production before his first project.

     Lall says that he was bored with his life as an ad-film maker and was looking for a new medium to tell stories close to his heart.  

    His very first project, The Fall, a slickly shot love tale was a 10-minute-long silent movie featuring Rahul Bose and Nauheed Cyrusi.

    Recalling his experience, Lall says that the entire movie was shot in a single day with a budget of just over Rs 60,000 including the post-production cost.

    “To be honest, even Rs 60,000 felt like a big amount then. We shot the entire movie on Super 16 camera as there were no HD cameras then. I collected old footage left from earlier shoots. I asked my colleagues to edit it for free. Believe me, no one in our team, right from Rahul Bose, Nauheed Cyrusi, cinematographer Vishal Sinha (who shot Bhoot), composer Sandeep Chowta, was paid. People liked the movie and that gave me the confidence to continue making films,” remembers Lall, who since then has produced over 500 ad-films, one movie and two full seasons of a web-series.

    “The best thing about this experience was that I could tell stories that I wanted, which was not possible in ad-film making.”

    Lall’s next big break was Sooper se Ooper, which he produced in 2013 with Reliance Entertainment. However, he still regrets that the movie did not do as well commercially despite having a good script and some amazing performances.

    “2013 was a terrible year. Most of the movies produced by Reliance had tanked. There was Besharam, Zanjeer 2. At one stage, Reliance was not even upbeat about releasing the movie. When it was released, it got a good response, but since the following week was the release of Krrish 3, it could not reach its full potential,” he says, candidly accepting that its failure set him back.

    Big success came to Lall soon enough with Thinkistan, a story about changing dynamics of advertising in India in the late 1990s, when satellite TV helped advertisers find new reach. Told through the characters of English-speaking Hema and Hindi-speaking Amit, the series, released on MX Player, is like a love letter to the changing world of Indian advertising.

    Lall says that Thinkistan is the story of India in transition in 1990s, told through the contrasting experiences of two advertising professionals, one English-speaking and urban, the other Hindi-speaking and coming from small-town India.

    The show mirrors India’s evolution in the 21st century where more and more talent is coming from small-towns, where the likes of Piyush Pandey and Prasoon Joshi have elbowed-out big, established English copywriters and where Hindi is secure about its place in India and co-exists comfortably with English, adds Lall.

    The immediate success of Thinkistan, however, has not taken Lall of his feet. Any other usual run-of-the-mill producer would have tried to cash-in on its success by making similar shows. Lall, on the contrary, is taking his time to find a truly inspiring idea.

    “We were approached by multiple OTT players following the success of Thinkistan. However, I was clear that I do not want to do any regular, usual thriller, sex-comedy or family soap-opera. I am looking for a unique, big idea. I am in no rush to make just another ordinary show,” says Lall.   

    Talking about the streaming platforms, Lall says it has definitely improved availability of funds for shows.

    “OTT is here to say. However, its success and reach would depend on the quality of content offered,” quips Lall, who believes there is enough space for the more than 30 OTT players to co-exist in the expansive Indian market.

    Lall also has no qualms in accepting that he writes and produces shows for a global audience.

    “I do not belong to Hindustan, but a place called Thinkistan. My stories are based in India, but the emotions my characters deal with are universal, they cannot be limited to one particular time or society. I am making original, premium, web content for a global audience,” says Lall, adding that the coming of OTT platforms will help Indian content reach global audiences.

    To an extent, this has already happened. The international Emmy awards this year definitely has an Indian footprint. Two Indian shows, Sacred Games and Lust Stories, are nominated for Best Drama.

    “Indians have a natural talent for storytelling, even longer form storytelling. We gave the world Mahabarata, the world’s longest poem. If Indian producers are honest to their creative integrity, Indian content can truly reach a global audience.”

    Talking about censorship on OTT, Lall says that while he is principally opposed to the idea of censorship, he is also honest enough to accept that some of the producers have used the freedom offered by OTT platforms irresponsibly by overdoing nudity and cuss words, even when it’s not required by the script.

    “Not all of us are watching shows on mobiles. People are also watching shows on TV with families. And too much nudity is definitely a barrier in providing entertainment to this audience.”

    He underlines that while everyone is cashing-in on nudity and violence, there is still some reluctance on the part of Indian producers to take up politically sensitive issues.

    While Lall did not share specifics of his current projects, he did tell us that he is working on a show which tells the story of a product over 100 years, starting from the non-cooperation movement in the 1920s to 2019.

    Asked about his personal favourite shows, Lall says that he likes the scripting of Family Man and Made in Heaven. In foreign shows, Fauda and Barry.

    Having carved a niche space for himself as a producer of ad-films, web series and TV shows, Lall is currently in a happy space, where he is willing to wait and invest his time and energy in a truly inspiring idea, very much like the tag-line of his show Thinkistan – ‘Idea Jiska, India Uska’.

  • Indian viewers want government regulation for OTT platforms

    Indian viewers want government regulation for OTT platforms

    MUMBAI: Online content regulation has stirred a lot of controversies recently in the Indian over-the-top (OTT) ecosystem. While many experts and platforms are not in favour of censorship, a survey revealed that 57 per cent of Indians want government regulation for OTT platforms.

    “Nine in ten (91 per cent) said content-either on TV, films or online, should be regulated by the government, either always (as said by 40 per cent) or sometime (51 per cent). Men are more likely than women to say they want content to be regulated always (45 per cent versus 34 per cent) while women are more likely to want censorship sometime (56 per cent 46 per cent),” Business Insider quoted a survey from YouGov.

    According to the survey, more than 59 per cent of Indians think that OTT platforms in the country have huge offensive content which is unsuitable for public viewing while 47 per cent find some of the content uncomfortable to watch around family. But 30 per cent of the respondents think content quality will be compromised due to censorship.

    YouGov Omnibus conducted the survey among 1005 respondents in India between 22-28 October using YouGov’s panel of over 6mn people worldwide.

    Earlier, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) secretary Amit Khare said there is a need to rethink regulating over-the-top (OTT) platforms because some sections of the society are voicing concerns on its content. 

  • OTT creators and producers, up close and personal at Vidnet Masterclasses 2019

    OTT creators and producers, up close and personal at Vidnet Masterclasses 2019

    Delhi Crime, Kota Factory, Criminal Justice, TVF Bachelors, Permanent Roommates, Ghoul, Bard of Blood, Sacred Games, Verdict, Little Things, Thinkstan and Mirzapur are just some of the shows that we all watch, love and are inspired by in the last few years that are the content of this, ‘New Wave’ of Indian original shows on OTT platforms Netflix, Amazon, Hotstar, AltBalaji, YouTube and others.

    If you too want to be a writer, creator or director with his idea and vision seen as a reality on any of these platforms then read on.

    On a grey Mumbai morning on 4 October 2019, I got a chance to meet all these brilliant minds behind all these path-breaking shows and ask them questions and learn from them the creator's first-hand knowledge of how these shows were conceived, written and created for all of us to view.

    If you were not present in these two esteemed rooms where all these discussions took place, here is a brief summary from memory, dear reader of what I learned from these Masterclasses.

    I begin with the man about whom I had heard vaguely from people in the industry. A man who from his corporate boardroom job had made the transition and written this hard-hitting gangster Saga that is as good as anything from Hollywood and a truly Original Indian masterpiece on Amazon Prime produced by India’s premiere production house Excel Entertainment.

    Puneet Krishna, the creator of the Epic gangster saga ‘Mirzapur’ got it made on the strength of his concept and what on paper is a mind-boggling 195 speaking characters in one show.

    The biggest learning from Puneet who answered everyone’s questions with such humility was, “I do not have a writers’ room, my writers’ room is my bedroom where my brother and I conceived and wrote this show that is Mirzapur.” Puneet wrote the basic outline for the entire show in four days and Season 2 will be out soon.

    On a personal note, Mirzapur is a show I loved and I did get to tell him face to face that after I had seen it, I felt that all other shows of a similar genre, looked like Kiddy Disney shows to me, he laughed and told me a big thank you.

    From Mirzapur to Om Shanti Om was the next talk with the experienced screenwriter, teacher & lyricist of over 400 Bollywood songs Mayur Puri. He sang the lyrics of two of his famous songs and I was shocked to learn the real double meanings to them which I cannot even mention here, but rest assured I will pay closer attention to these seriously talented lyrics when I hear them next! But on a more serious note Mayur who is from a small town and has truly worked his way to the top gave the room the most enlightening advice when he said that there is no Special Cult ‘Illuminati’ type zone of people with power in film, TV or OTT who meet every night to discuss who will make it through in this big bad world of Bollywood. He said, “If you have a concept or story or lyrics or anything just go out there & put it out to the world.”

    Patrick Graham, a British national, who is a Bandra boy was inspired by the torture chambers set up in Kashmir to make Ghoul. He spoke with his editor Nitin about the use of several techniques of the horror genre and stay away from cliches.

    Nitin Baid, one of India’s top editors, ended the conversation with how he edited Gully Boy with Zoya Akhtar in a most unique way away from India somewhere in Europe.

    Lunch break was a nice long line of hungry delegates where a lot of people in both rooms got to meet and greet each other. If you want to know, the line was so long that I started with dessert first & then my food!

    Post lunch was director Raghav Subu & editor Gourav Gopal of the current new age cult show Kota Factory by TVF.

    Kota Factory is a show I have not seen but have heard in glowing appreciation from various people from within the industry.

    Did you know that Raghav, on pure instinct, decided the show would be in B&W, a decision he was not sure of and hence shot it with 2 cameras – one in colour & one B&W. Days before the launch, he informed the backers of the show that it will be in B&W and they were fine with it!

    There was also a rather interesting take on all the drone shots used in the show and how they were used to tell the story in a far more constructive way.

    Danish Aslam was up next with his young DOP Jay Bhansali. Danish, who has been to film school, assisted big directors, made a film & so much more, was giving a crash course on guerilla filmmaking and how he had to unlearn everything he learned in film school to move forward in the real world. His was a no holds barred take on what you have to do to convert your ideas into reality in the limited budgets & time constraints. Those who are NOT in the top 2 per cent of makers who get to make a Sacred Games or Made In Heaven with lavish budgets have to adhere to make the most of what we have with our stories and ideas.

    I would strongly recommend that you see his Masterclass if and when it comes on YouTube and learn from what he showed by several examples of his own footage to the rest of us with his shows It’s Not That Simple and Time Out and how he & his DOP shot some of the footage on the streets in unique ways with no lights or fancy equipment. His was a real-time learning lesson for future makers of content on the web.

    From here I managed to rush to the other room where I caught and wished had heard the full soul-bearing method & methodology of actor, writer & director Dhruv Sehgal (for the record you could only attend one Masterclass but I paid for both & hence managed to jump between both rooms).

    Upon entering the room, Dhruv was speaking and there was an image on the large display screen on stage, of a cheap blue bed sheet on a table, a laptop and a pizza box in a Mumbai home and how Dhruv was telling the enthralled audience in the room of future aspiring writers and creators about his office space that was his room in Mumbai and how he wrote his show, ‘Little Things’ in that humble room of his which made to Netflix and all our rooms across the planet.

    Tea Break – Somewhere at this point, while eating cake, I met the organisers of Indiantelvision.com and was asked by the organizer and owner Anil Wanvari if I would be interested in writing a review/critique of the event.  Which I agreed to do and now I am an actor who is about to become a first time writer!

    For the record, I always wanted to be a writer since my film appreciation course and with all the films I have been watching since age five and with the current amount of content I watch daily, here was my chance. So I say 'YES' looking at the man. I have no idea what I was doing saying yes to him in all honesty, but do let me know if I did alright dear readers.

    Anil tells me casually to do a 500-word piece on the event. I am on word 1326 as I type this!

    BUT,

    I have saved the best for the last and I hope you are still with me dear reader and have not gone on to check your phone for all the notifications popping on your screen from Instagram or Facebook and other social media platforms that have been calling you all this while. I am trying to explain in as concise a manner all that I learned and absorbed on that day at the Westin hotel in Mumbai.

    The last session of the day at 5 pm on 4 October 2019 was a tough choice. In one room were the multiple writers of Sacred Games & in the other room the one that I did not move from for some strange reason was the writer, director, creator, and if I can say with no doubt in my mind, a genius of a man  Richie Mehta. He has given us all the most important show (in my personal opinion) of this decade – Delhi Crime.

    Delhi Crime is a show that I first urge all of you who have not seen, to see today, right now if you can. Those of you who are worried or afraid to see it let me assure you.  The graphic violence of the incident that every Indian never wants to feel again is not depicted in the show (necessary spoiler for all those who have not seen the show) but what is shown in the show in painstaking detail is how the Delhi Police captured the criminals who committed the most heinous crime in the collective memory of India to date.

    This is a procedural drama that should be mandatory in all training academies in India and how this one man from Canada single-handedly researched the show for four years and how he managed to bring the reality of it to the viewers.

    Richie Mehta is a zen-like man with a soft-spoken voice and a crystal clear thought process.

    While he was on stage, this frail man in a jeans and T-shirt took off his floaters (I have not seen those in years on anyone’s feet since college) and sat barefoot on stage, first took everyone’s questions in the room as notes on his phone all of them methodically and then began to answer the questions in a systematic manner on how he made Delhi Crime or rather how he made it with so much authenticity that made the show look so real to all of us who have seen it.

    He explained how he studied the case files, the hours of interviews with the Delhi Police, his observations while he waited in police stations and spoke to the senior officers, traffic police constables and other officers in charge of the case, how they told him facts about the case and other cases because nobody ever bothered to ask them these basic questions that Richie asked while he did the research for the show. He also had to keep an objective viewpoint to the show while he shot it with his Danish DOP with no Netflix on board (which came in much later after the show was made).

    What I learned most from this unique human being was that he had no big aspiration with what he was making apart from a duty-bound conviction to tell the story with utmost honesty.

    In conclusion, here is what I learned from all these brilliant minds on that day.

    All that matters is your idea, your conviction, your belief in the idea, and the desire to make it. Nothing can stop you.

    The industry has gone through a paradigm shift in its outlook to content. Especially when it comes to OTT platforms, they are looking for the next big idea more than you know. It's not about stars, nepotism, contacts, money or power. It's about the idea and that can come from anywhere in this current set up whether you are from the industry or from outside from a small town or a big city. It can be made into a show whether you are an experienced old-time writer or a first-time corporate who has a show in his mind. It can come from you who is reading this or from me who is writing this for you, the new world of content for OTT is open to us all, so write it down and get it made, or wait for Vidnet 2020 to get inspired.

    (The author is a TV actor. The views expressed in this article are his own and Indiantelevision.com may not subscribe to them.)

  • DishTV’s OTT app Watcho arrives on Amazon Fire TV

    DishTV’s OTT app Watcho arrives on Amazon Fire TV

    MUMBAI: With an aim to offer engaging and differentiated content catering to young audiences across the country, Dish TV India Ltd, the world’s largest single-country DTH company, has expanded distribution of its OTT app Watcho to Amazon Fire TV Stick. Effective immediately, Amazon Fire TV Stick customers can access Watcho app to discover original web shows, short films, more than 100 Live TV channels and various other regional shows and movies.

    Watcho provides access to a large VOD content library of originals, movies and popular shows along with linear TV service. It is also the first OTT service to feature user generated content allowing users to create and upload their own content to Watcho. The flexible service was designed to address the large base of over 23 million subscribers of DishTV and d2h and is also open to new users.

    “We are excited to bring Watcho to the wide audience base on Amazon Fire TV Stick. Watcho, since launch, has received a good reception and there has been demand to host it across platforms. The OTT market is continuously evolving and the consumption is growing on TV and mobile. We are confident that users will be delighted with the seamless experience of watching new-age and bite-sized video content of Watcho on the Amazon Fire TV Stick,” Dish TV India Ltd executive director and group CEO Anil Dua said.

    Watcho offers 1000+ hours of library content including movies and short films and can now be installed directly from the Amazon App Store. At present it has around 20 original shows in Hindi, Telugu and Kannada. As an introductory offer, the service is available free of cost.

  • Top Netflix executive dismisses reports on meetings with RSS

    Top Netflix executive dismisses reports on meetings with RSS

    MUMBAI: Top Netflix executive has denied the rumoured meeting of the streaming service and representatives of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). Netflix India International Original film director Srishti Behl Arya termed the reports as “fake news”.

    A few days ago, media reports floated on the meetings of RSS representatives with officials of online streaming platforms such as Netflix and Amazon to restrict ‘antinational’ and ‘anti-Hindu’ content on shows and urge them to show content that “represents real Indian culture and ethos.”

    “It’s not a true story. There was no meeting at all. It’s a fake news,” Behl Arya said at a panel titled “Artistic Freedom: Mapping Out The Entertainment Story” at the ongoing Jio MAMI 21st Mumbai Film Festival Dismissing the report as “completely false,” PTI reported.

    Amazon Prime India Originals head Aparna Purohit said, "We will continue to comply with the law of the land." 

    "The law is the law. It's not like, 'I don't like you, so I'm going to stab you.' Whatever is permitted by the law, we would go into those spaces and the rest is all about the stories that creators want to tell," Behl Arya elaborated.

    Recently Reuters also reported quoting a government official that the government might impose censorship on streaming platforms which may cause censorship threats  for services like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Hotstar. 

  • ZEE5 plans more show franchises, to invest in direct-to-digital movies

    ZEE5 plans more show franchises, to invest in direct-to-digital movies

    MUMBAI: Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd’s (ZEEL) digital arm ZEE5 has built its library on the back of marquee properties and regional content since the time of its entry in the burgeoning over-the-top (OTT) ecosystem. After hitting the audience with a number of popular original shows and direct-to-digital movies, the platform is planning to bring more franchises like Rangbaaz. Moreover, while ZEE5 will continue to invest in buying movies, the platform is also planning to invest more in direct-to-digital movies.

    “Among the few things we have learnt, the first is that we want to bring more franchises. We are making follow-up seasons of some of the bigger shows like Rangbaaz and The Final Call,” ZEE5 India CEO Tarun Katial said in an interaction with Indiantelevision.com.

    “The other thing we have been able to do is an extension of existing TV show library. We did Subhan Allah into Ishq Ajkal, we did Jamai Raja into Jamai 2.0. There’s a lot more treasure in the ZEE library. Also, we have seen a very successful direct-to-digitals. While we will continue to invest in buying movies, this is a getaway to hedge cost and build own IPs. So, we are planning to invest more in direct-to-digital movies,” he added.

    Katial also noted that while the platform started the year with the commitment of creating one of the largest libraries of regional content in the country, ZEE5 consistently created content not only Hindi content but  also content in Tamil, Telugu, Bengali, Marathi, and even in Kannada.

    Katial also mentioned that among all the regional markets, the “film and original crazy” Telugu market has been doing amazingly well. As he shared, the Tamil market is also doing well after Telugu while Kannada has been a very surprising market, one of their fastest-growing markets in the regional sphere.

    While all three of these markets have regional packs, some of the users who first buy into the regional packs in Telugu and Kannada markets upgrade themselves into an all-access pack to consume some of the Hindi originals and Hindi movies. Hence, the regional packs have acted as a good entry point for consumers to sample ZEE5 and then eventually to upgrade into full subscription packages.

    ZEE5 also entered into an unusual content partnership with ALTBalaji in July to co-create original content which are available on both the platforms. Katial said that the partnership has doubled the content output every single month. He also added that it allows them to talk to different taste clusters and build certain amount of velocity behind moving, upgrading consumers from AVOD to SVOD.

    ZEE5 also broadened a lot of technology partners across the world this year. “It has been able to give us a strong collaborative recommendation engine, a consumer data platform that can engage with our consumers real-time and to be able to trigger consumption and as well as trigger updates and subscriptions that we can understand and communicate in their language, need and requirement,” he said.

    Katial also added that they noticed over a period of time that product and user journey needed to be enhanced. Hence, the platform has launched a plethora of new apps on smart TV devices with new UI, new subscription journeys enhancing its ability to onboard new users more easily. In addition to that, he noted that ZEE5 has been able to invest in data sciences this year helping them to add a fair amount of user knowledge to improve decision making, ability to create content and user experiences and more importantly to take long-term decisions on different kind of product cases.

    “The strength of market lies in two things. One is the device-ecosystem which is growing extremely well not only just on the mobile side but also on the smart-TV side. And the other is the growth of the data consumption story and video consumption is the largest part of data consumption. These are the two indicators of why Indians are going to consume more digital video and with that there will be better opportunities both on the ad-supported side as well as on the subscription side,” he commented on how the overall ecosystem has fared. 

  • OTT content comes under govt scanner

    OTT content comes under govt scanner

    MUMBAI: OTT platforms such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video might face a censorship threat in India. Recently a senior government source told Reuters that the government might impose censorship on streaming platforms.

    The government official, who has direct knowledge of the deliberations was quoted by Reuters as saying, “The government's concern has been sparked by several court cases and complaints filed to the police in recent months, alleging that some content was obscene or insulted religious sentiment.”

    The government official also raised concern on OTT platforms not carrying the mandatory anti-tobacco textual warnings on smoking scenes in Bollywood movies.

    As per the earlier report, MIB’s secretary said that there is a need to rethink regulating OTT platform due the voice raised by certain sections of the society but the ministry does not have any plan to impose any regulation yet.

  • Ali Hussein promoted to CEO at Eros Now

    Ali Hussein promoted to CEO at Eros Now

    MUMBAI: Ali Hussein has been elevated to the post of chief executive officer (CEO) at Eros Now, the digital arm of Eros International PLC. Hussein joined the organisation as chief operating officer in 2018.

    His experience spans over 15 years in the media entertainment and digital space. Ali has been an entrepreneur and board advisor to Discovery Networks and other startups in the media and technology domain. The media professional has updated about his recent promotion on Linkedin.

    He was associated with organisations such as Google, Viacom 18 and Hungama where he has held key positions. His expertise comes from complex mandates across mobile marketing, content syndication and distribution.