Tag: Rangrasiya

  • Sukhwinder Singh composes a song for “Rangrasiya” on the Aaj Tak – special holi show

    Sukhwinder Singh composes a song for “Rangrasiya” on the Aaj Tak – special holi show

    MUMBAI: The undisputed No.1 Hindi News Channel Aaj Tak has always been innovative with its special formats. The much celebrated Holi show “Rangrasiya” was celebrated with even more joy this year with Aaj Tak’s winning reign continuing for 52 weeks nonstop. Rangrasiya the special show was hosted by Sweta Singh and had in attendance big names like Manoj Tiwari, Kumar Vishwas, Sukhwinder Singh and many more.

    Sukhwinder Singh, one of the most loved voices of the country composed a song exclusively for Aaj Tak during the Rangrasiya Holi Celebrations. The lyrics of the songs were “Rangrasiya rangrasiya, Rang de rangrasiya mohe rang de”.

    Pulkit Samrat and Kriti Kharbanda – stars of recently released film “Veere Ki Wedding” were also a part of Rangrasiya.  Jimmy Shergill added to the entertainment quotient in his own style by entering the scene on a bike.

    Manoj Tiwari and Kumar Vishwas had a funfilled exchange of dialogues. Kumar Vishwas recited an exclusive poem on Virat Kohli whereas Malini Awasthi, who sang Jogira and recited a poem on Yogi Adityanath, also added to the festivities along with Arun Gemini entertaining the audience with his classic satires.

    Aaj Tak celebrated holi in its own unique style, as always -Sabse Tez.

  • Eros International to offer top rated TV content on ErosNow

    Eros International to offer top rated TV content on ErosNow

    MUMBAI: Eros International plc (NYSE: EROS) (“Eros”), a leading global company in the Indian film entertainment industry, today announced that it is adding top Bollywood television content to its large selection of movies and music content on its online streaming platform, ErosNow (www.erosnow.com).

    Beginning in May, 2014, ErosNow free as well as paying subscribers will have access to the highly popular television programming ranging from top rated current serials and soaps to reality shows such as Balika Vadhu, Uttaran, Sasural Simar Ka, Beintehaa, Rangrasiya, Sanskaar (Season 2), Madhubala, Comedy Nights with Kapil and Khatronke Khiladi (Season 5). These programs will be available on ErosNow within 36 hours of their television premiere in India with thousands of hours of catch up episodes.

    Speaking on the development, Rishika Lulla Singh, Chief Executive Officer of ErosNow said, “ErosNow is the only unique online streaming service in the world to offer both current and classic Bollywood blockbusters, music videos and popular television shows. The addition of even more premium television content offers our subscribers the instant access they crave to today’s most compelling and highly rated TV shows and series in India.”

    ErosNow is available across multiple platforms and provides subscribers with thousands of hours of free content through their PC, smartphone or tablet just by signing up for an ErosNow account. Subscribers can also choose to purchase a premium ErosNow subscription that provides access to the latest online premieres, HD quality content, and offers downloading capabilities across multiple devices for quality entertainment on the go.

  • Adding an Islamic shade to the Colors’ canvas

    Adding an Islamic shade to the Colors’ canvas

    MUMBAI: It was in the early nineties that a show like Gul Gulshan Gulfaam on Doordarshan captured the life of the Muslim community. It was probably for the first time in India that a show gave the masses at large an opportunity to take a sneak peek in to the life of the Islamic households in the country. Set in Kashmir, it was about the tribulations of the Kashmiris surviving on the business of houseboats in the Dal Lake.

    Much later, at the end of the same decade, Heena and Shaheen, both of which aired on Sony Entertainment Television, captured the life Muslim women, their struggles and a lot more, giving the audience another chance to look at the life of a Muslim household closely. Around the same time, came Tanha – a show with the collaboration between India and Pakistan. It was not just set in a Muslim milieu but also became popular for its insightful portrayal of the community and the characters, not just in India and Pakistan but also in the entire subcontinent. Zaaraaired on Sahara One in 2006 was another show capturing the essence of the culture.

    More recently, a serial on Star Plus – Sajda Tere Pyaar Mein that ran for few months in 2012 featured the life of a Muslim woman whose patriotic credentials were questioned; and Qubool Hai on Zee TV captures the contemporary Muslim household with the unfolding of an interesting love story. Interestingly, Qubool Hai has become one of the most popular shows in the Hindi GEC space. Its ratings are almost close to 5862TVTs (as per Tam ratings for week 49).

    And when a concept has become so popular, it isn’t a surprise to see something very similar (as far as the set up is concerned) inspiring others. Close on the heels of Zee TV, now, Colors is set to air its new show Beintehaa – a first for the channel focusing on the pan-Muslim milieu with a story of two similar and headstrong individuals Aaliya and Zain, who are tied in a volatile relationship.

    The show would be aired at the prime-time slot – 9 pm every Monday to Friday from 30 December. A replacement for Bigg Boss, the show is being promoted heavily across platforms as the channel is keeping its hopes high on this one. Colors weekday fiction head Prashant Bhatt says that the narrative style of the show and its backdrop is going to be its USP, which would not just pull the regular TV viewers but will also draw the younger audience from the age group of 14 above.

    “The story telling has a simple, yet intriguing style with a contemporary set up and that’s going to be the pull,” says Bhatt.

    If we look at all the shows made with a Muslim backdrop in the past, we would realise that each of them have been really popular during the time they were aired. Yet, unlike other Indian cultures, from Punjabi and Gujarati to Bihari, Harayanvi, Rajasthani and Marathi, on which many shows have been made till date, there have been very few with a Muslim milieu. An avid TV viewer can easily summon up the number of TV serials based in an Islamic household.During the launch of Beintehaa in Mumbai recently, when asked what has kept TV away from exploring this community, Bhatt revealed that Colors has been looking for such a concept since almost two years now. “We have been waiting for almost two years to get this colour onto the Colors canvas,” he remarks and adds, “We were not getting a story suitable enough to do justice to the culture. Finally the story that Farhan Salaruddin (the producer and writer of the show) brought to us felt as if it was tailormade to display the Muslim culture,” he says.

    And the channel didn’t wait for so long because the competitor channel came up with Qubool Hai, neither was it ever in a hurry to start with something similar. “We were not in a race. We wanted to come up with something that does complete justice as well as is developed well,” he says.

    And if we go by the expert views the idea of featuring this Islamic culture is on its way to becoming a trend. Veteran TV writer Gajra Kottary credited for pathbreaking shows like Balika Vadhu says that many people haven’t tried their hand at capturing this backdrop because of the stigma associated with it. “Another thing that may have kept many away is the fear of not pulling the masses. But it may become a trend as it would give the makers as well as viewers an opportunity to explore something really new,” she says.

    Even Salaruddin, who has earlier co-produced the show Bind Banunga Ghodi Chadunga thinks the same. According to him, since his show is very contemporary and resonates with the present day’s lifestyle of youngsters it is going to be liked by masses across religion. “It isn’t isolated to showing the Islamic culture. It explores the overall life of two Muslim youngsters, from their difficulties to their dilemmas,” he says and adds that the show will work for its content.

    Media veteran Divya Radhakrishnan reflects the same views. “The Muslim backdrop is just a creative setting. It will give the creatives a chance to explore new avenues. But any show doesn’t work because of the backdrop, rather it works because of the content,” she says.

    Salaruddin is also happy to get the primetime slot which will give his story more visibility. The presence of other strong shows doesn’t bother him much. “The other shows were new at one point of time too. With time, we will make our place,” he says.

    While the entire Colors team is betting big on the content, we also hope that like earlier TV shows in the same backdrop, this one will work well too.

  • What Colors intends to do post Bigg Boss 7

    What Colors intends to do post Bigg Boss 7

    JAIPUR: The year 2013 is about to end and everybody is getting ready to plan their yearend parties. However, there’s someone that’s making a new beginning even before the New Year sets in. When the world would be partying and bidding adieu to 2013, the general entertainment channel Colors would be ushering in to a new beginning with two new shows – Beintehaa and Rangrasiya.

     

    While the first is a show with a pan-Muslim milieu that tells the story of two similar and headstrong individuals Aaliya and Zain, who are in a volatile relationship, the latter is an explosive and edgy intense hate story between Paro and Rudra that would air on the channel at the prime-time slot – 9 pm and 9.30 pm respectively – from 30 December, 2013, every Monday to Friday. The one-hour slot being filled by these two shows will be vacated by the celebrity reality show Bigg Boss season 7.

     

    Interestingly, the channel thinks it’s completely okay to make a new beginning on the second last day of the year as the regular TV viewers would still catch up on the shows rather than partying. “How many of us really go out to party on 31 Dec, I don’t think many. If we don’t talk about the youngsters in the metros, then I believe most of the people still stay at home and want to watch TV. And, the craze for the New Year specials on TV has also gone down in the last few years. And thus, the viewers want to watch the daily soaps and both these shows are just going to give them more variety,” says Colors fiction-head Prashant Bhatt on the sidelines of the grand launch of Rangrasiya in Jaipur on Thursday night.

     

    The channel that has been at the second position in the GEC’s ratings chart almost all-through the year in 2013, is looking forward to add diversity to its already strong fiction line-up. However, considering the past record, the shows that have replaced Bigg Boss in the previous years haven’t really done too well, case in point – the second seasons of Na Bole Tum Na Maine Kuch Kaha and Sanskaar…Darohar Apno Ka that were on air at the prime-time slot before the seventh season of Bigg Boss kicked off. While the former was wrapped up before the launch of the reality show, the latter has been moved to the 7 pm slot.

     

    Quiz Bhatt about this, and he refuses to agree that Sanskaar… hasn’t done well. In fact, he says that the second season of Sanskaar… is doing better than the first. However, somewhere he consents that the shows replacing the reality show have not been able to get similar popularity that other fiction shows on the channel have got. “There’s no set formula for success, but we should never stop trying to come out with interesting stuff,” he says as he guarantees that the present attempt is going to be really rewarding.

     

    However, coming back to Rangrasiya – the serial has been produced by Nautanki Films – the same production house that has produced Madhubala…Ek Ishq, Ek Junoon for Colors and stars Sanaya Irani and Ashish Sharma.The story is loosely based on William Shakespeare’s Othello and a large part of the few initial episodes have been shot in different parts of Rajasthan – mostly Rann of Jaisalmer, dunes of Jodhpur and Bikaner. It thus made more sense to launch the show in the state.

     

    According to the producers, Saurabh Tewari and Abhinav Shukla of Nautanki Films, the shooting in Rajasthan was done on a grand scale with almost 60 camels and 200 junior artists over 18-20 days. Six cameras were used during the shoot, out of which three were Epic-M Red Dragon cameras that are mostly used to shoot movies. The show has quite a few stunt scenes that are directed by Amar Shetty, who has done Om Shanti Om in the past and is currently working on Happy New Year.

     

    Tewari says that Rangrasiya has been made on a similar scale as a Bollywood movie, something like Ishaqzaade.

     

    Giving more details about the production, Shukla says that so far close to Rs 4-5 crore has already been sunk into the show. “We have shot it in Jaisalmer and many nearby villages. A large sequence on cross-border terrorism has been shot in the deserts of Rann. We have also shot few scenes in the Mohangarh Fort where the movie Sarfarosh was shot earlier,” reveals Shukla, also adding that they had zeroed down on other options like Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, and South India as well, but Rajasthan was chosen because it gelled really well with the plot.

     

    “After the success of Madhubala…, we wanted to raise the bar for Rangrasiya in terms of the visual scale and narrative. From visual conceptualisation, to the scale and experimentation with the characters, everything is real,” he adds.

     

    However, the post-production work has been done in Mumbai and now since the show has mostly in-house scenes, a set has been erected in Andheri, Mumbai where the rest of the episodes are being shot. “We will keep coming back to the state as and when the script requires,” says Shukla.

     

    The channel’s focus is currently on massively promoting the two shows across all platforms. While the promos went on air across-channels some time back on TV, now they are set to hit cinema theatres. The shows will be promoted with today’s release Dhoom 3.

     

    Commenting on the marketing and promotional strategy for the two shows, Colors marketing head Rajesh Iyer says, “We have designed a very high intensive outreach campaign to engage audiences at multiple touch points across the country. Beintehaa and Rangrasiya will be promoted extensively across mediums including in-theatre integrations during Dhoom 3 in HSMs, OOH across 60 cities and towns, and a media mix comprising of over 40 channels and radio stations covering over 40 cities. As the launch leads into the New Year we will be launching special calendars with select publications to enable audiences to bring their favourite characters home. To ensure that both shows continue to be the topic of dinner-table conversations, we have developed an all-round social media strategy exploring various avenues.”

     

    The fact that the rival channels have some of their most popular shows at both the 9 pm and 9.30 pm slot is also not bothering Colors much. While Zee TV has one of its oldest and most loved shows, Pavitra Rishta at 9 pm and Qubool Hai at 9.30; Star Plus airs Diya Aur Baati Hum that has become one of the most popular serials of recent times at 9 pm and the family drama Yeh Rishtaa Kya Kehlata Hai at 9.30 pm.

     

    Bhatt says that the new offerings would make a place for themselves in the audience’s heart.

     

    “At the end of the day, the audience is hungry for something new, something different and we are offering that. Most of the times viewers keep watching certain shows because they don’t have an interesting choice to switch to – they either have family dramas or social dramas. However, we are breaking that mould with our new offering and are hoping that like other shows that we already have, even these two would be loved and take us to the first position on the ratings chart in the coming year,” he says.

     

    Ironically enough, the real-life partners of the lead actors of Rangrasiya – Archana Taide (Ashish’s wife) and Mohit Sehgal (Sanaya’s fiance) are both currently starring in Zee’s Qubool Hai. Now let’s hope that coincidence leads to another one: Colors’ new shows too become as successful as Qubool Hai.