Tag: Star India

  • indya.com sets ‘web traffic record’ for Champions Trophy

    indya.com sets ‘web traffic record’ for Champions Trophy

    MUMBAI: Star India’s internet portal indya.com has registered over 1.1 billion hits and 234 million page views on its iccchampionstrophy.indya.com site since its 8 October 2006 launch.

    As the official internet partner of the International Cricket Council, indya.com was designated by the ICC to develop, host and market the official global web destination for the Champions Trophy, asserts an official release.

    The site attracted over three million unique users from around the world – the most from India itself, followed by users from the US, UK, Pakistan and Australia. The ICC Champions Trophy was held from 7 October to 5 November in four cities across India: Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Mohali and Mumbai.

    “Cricket lovers throughout the world have counted upon indya.com to deliver the best online cricket experience available, and I believe that the results speak for themselves,” said Star India Entertainment CEO Sameer Nair.

    “The success we achieved makes icchampionstrophy.indya.com, Star India’s most successful web property to date and as the ICC Champions Trophy serves as a precursor to the 2007 Cricket World Cup, we anticipate an even larger response in the future,” he added.

    The website hosted country specific packages which were available at different price points, allowing internet subscribers to buy into a ‘match pack’ – a gateway to live clips, highlight packages, and expert comments of every match in the tournament. The site served over one million video and live-streaming requests.

    iccchampionstrophy.indya.com also offered a feature rich application called Matchcast that allowed users to access live scores, ball-by-ball updates of on-going matches, player and team backgrounds and a host of other information cricket enthusiasts would bowl their arm out for, adds the release.

    Sponsors on the site throughout the month long tournament included Lufthansa Airlines and Monster.com.

  • Star One, Star Gold to debut in UK this Nov-Dec

    Star One, Star Gold to debut in UK this Nov-Dec

    MUMBAI: After Japan, it’s the turn of the UK for Star India channels to spread their wings. Star India has entered into a syndication deal with BSkyB to launch Star One and Star Gold.

     

    Entertainment channel Star One and movie platform Star Gold will debut in the UK later this month or early December on BSkyB, which is over-35 per cent owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

     

    Star One is already available on US-DirecTV along with, Star Plus, Star News and Star Vijay. Speaking to indiantelevision.com Star India official spokesperson refused to comment on when will Star Gold be available to DirecTV subscribers.

     

    While, on BSkyB, only two of channels –Star Plus and Star News are accessible.

     

    According to information available with Indiantelevision.com, the decision has been taken and most formalities are said to be been completed. The reason for taking these two channels, apart from already existing ones, to the UK is that there’s a sizable Indian-origin population residing there who would pay to watch Indian fare, especially Hindi movies.

     

    However, the programming on Star One and Star Gold may not be a photocopy of what’s seen back home. Reason: copyright issues. Especially those related to the satellite rights of Hindi movies.

     

    Earlier this week, Star had announced launch of five Indian and two international channels in Japan on a new IPTV and community platform World on Demand (WoD). On WoD, Star has launched Star Plus, Star One, Star News, Star Utsav and Vijay, along with Sky News and Fox News.

  • Star One, Star Gold to debut in UK this Nov-Dec

    Star One, Star Gold to debut in UK this Nov-Dec

    MUMBAI: After Japan, it’s the turn of the UK for Star India channels to spread their wings. Star India has entered into a syndication deal with BSkyB to launch Star One and Star Gold.

    Entertainment channel Star One and movie platform Star Gold will debut in the UK later this month or early December on BSkyB, which is over-35 per cent owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

    Star One is already available on US-DirecTV along with, Star Plus, Star News and Star Vijay. Speaking to indiantelevision.com Star India official spokesperson refused to comment on when will Star Gold be available to DirecTV subscribers.

    While, on BSkyB, only two of channels –Star Plus and Star News are accessible.

    According to information available with Indiantelevision.com, the decision has been taken and most formalities are said to be been completed. The reason for taking these two channels, apart from already existing ones, to the UK is that there’s a sizable Indian-origin population residing there who would pay to watch Indian fare, especially Hindi movies.

    However, the programming on Star One and Star Gold may not be a photocopy of what’s seen back home. Reason: copyright issues. Especially those related to the satellite rights of Hindi movies.

    Earlier this week, Star had announced launch of five Indian and two international channels in Japan on a new IPTV and community platform World on Demand (WoD). On WoD, Star has launched Star Plus, Star One, Star News, Star Utsav and Vijay, along with Sky News and Fox News.

  • SaharaOne and Filmy accept CAS ceiling price of Rs 5

    SaharaOne and Filmy accept CAS ceiling price of Rs 5

    MUMBAI: Sahara One Media and Entertainment Ltd have let the 15 October deadline pass to inform sector regulator Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) the channel price fixed for the notified areas under conditional access system (CAS).

    The company, which manages general entertainment channel SaharaOne and movie channel Filmy, has acknowledged the ceiling price of Rs 5. 

    The two channels switched to the pay mode in September. 

    The regulator had set a common price on all pay channels directing that under CAS regime they will cost a maximum Rs 5/- per channel per subscriber per month (excluding taxes).

    Ahead of the deadline, most pay broadcasters including Star India, Set Discovery, ESPN Software, Raj TV Network, Sun TV, Udaya TV, Gemini TV limited, Ushodaya Enterprises Limited, B4U Television Network, Sun TV, Udaya TV and Gemini TV, British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and Zee Turner Ltd had agreed to the price and declared the charges of all the channels.

  • Star signs first CAS agreement in Delhi

    Star signs first CAS agreement in Delhi

    NEW DELHI: Star India looks like being the first major broadcaster to sign on to the CAS bandwagon.

    In a clear statement of intent directed at its detractors who have been claiming that India’s leading broadcast network is only paying lip service to the government mandated rollout of addressability, Star has signed up with one of South Delhi’s biggest independent cable TV networks, Home Cable, for CAS-enabled services.

    This agreement between a broadcaster and a cable network also heralds that the “CAS dawn” is around the corner.

    Says Star India president – advertising sales and distribution Paritosh Joshi, “We have sent out CAS agreements to all the cable networks operating in the CAS notified areas of Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata. We expect to have signed contracts in place well within the government-stipulated deadlines.”

    “Other than Home Cable, we expect to sign up the other networks in Delhi like SitiCable (now called WWIL), INCablenet and Hathway (26 per cent owned by Star) by tomorrow evening. In Kolkata there are seven or eight networks while in south Mumbai the main ones are Hatway and INCablenet,” Joshi pointed out.

    Addressability is an issue that has been buffeted by various forces, including political ones wherein the underlying theme had been to stall it as long as possible.
    Home Cable is owned by Vikki Chowdhry and services a sizable number of households in the posh Maharani Bagh and New Friends Colony areas of South Delhi where CAS is scheduled to be rolled out from 1 January 2007.

    According to Chowdhry, “The court mandated CAS has to be rolled out and since my network was one of those that has registered with the government, it is better I finish signing up the various agreements with broadcasters as soon as possible.”

    Those cable networks and MSOs who have applied for government clearance for CAS rollout in Delhi include WWIL, the Hindujas-controlled INCablenet, Hathway and few other independent operators who have big networks servicing a large area.

    CAS is scheduled to be rolled out in south zones of Mumbai, Kolkata and Delhi from the midnight of 31 December 2006 wherein all pay channels would have to pass through a set-top box on a mandatory basis.

  • Star India locks in ‘KBC’ rights for next five years

    Star India locks in ‘KBC’ rights for next five years

    MUMBAI: Star India’s iconic gameshow Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC) is coming back – and for another five seasons, mind it.

    The return of KBC was revealed this evening by Star Entertainment India CEO Sameer Nair at an Ad Club function in Mumbai. Nair disclosed that Star had locked in the rights to KBC for a period of five years (2007 to 2011). Nair also stated that Star was in talks to sign on an advertiser who would commit to all five seasons of the show.

    Star Plus first launched KBC in 2000 with superstar Amitabh Bachchan in the anchor’s seat. The tremendous success of the show inspired the channel to bring it back in August 2005, with the second season KBC Dviteeya. The game show has been delivering good numbers for the channel before it got pulled out after 61 episodes due to Bachchan’s illness. Big B, who originally committed to shoot 85 episodes, was unable to continue shooting after his hospitalisation.

    Celador, the UK-based format producer, owns the original version of KBC, ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire’.

    The Big Q of course is whether Star will be able to “lock kiya jaye” the Big B. That looks highly unlikely at this juncture so the next Big Q is who could be the possible choice to step into Bachchan’s considerably large (not just in terms of foot size) shoes?

  • Zee’s ‘Betiyann’ clears telecast stay hurdle

    Zee’s ‘Betiyann’ clears telecast stay hurdle

    MUMBAI: The Bombay High Court has refused to stay Zee TV’s latest prime time launch Ghar Ki Lakshmi Betiyann, in a copyright infringement suit filed by writer Rekha Modi. She had alleged that the concept of the serial being aired by Zee originally belonged to her.

    However, due to creative differences with Zee TV, she later approached Star India with the script. The Star One soap titled Betiyann – Apni yaa Paraya Dhan — which is based on Modi’s script — is launching on 9 October.

    Justice S J Vazifdar refused to grant any interim relief after Modi failed to submit proof of her rights for the concept. The Court also noted that, the copyright for the serial now belonged to the production house Creative Eye. Also, Star India is not complaining about any copyright infringement.

    “The Betiyann concept is originally owned by Creative Eye and Modi couldn’t produce any proof to support her claim. Hence, the court has refused to stay the Zee TV soap,” said Zee Networks SVP Ashish Kaul.

     

  • Nimbus pegs 2-channel package price at Rs 58

    Nimbus pegs 2-channel package price at Rs 58

    MUMBAI: With the Conditional Access System (CAS) controversy continuing unabated at the broadcasters’ level, Nimbus Sports Broadcast has quoted a premium price for two of its channels at Rs 58 to the sector regulator.

    The newly launched Neo Sports, which debuted on 1 October in some parts of the country, is likely to turn pay ahead of the January 2007 cricket series. This company has priced this channel at Rs 40.

    Even, the yet-to be launched Neo Sports Plus holds a price tag of Rs 40. The company has specified a bundled price of Rs 58 for the two channels.

    The proposed prices are yet to be accepted by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai), which in the normal course takes about one month to issue procedural clearance. Interestingly, rival sports channels ESPN and Star Sports are priced at Rs 38 per subscriber for the two-channel bundle.

    The rates at which the two Neo Sports have been pegged are in line with what Nimbus Communications chairman Harish Thawani had told indiantelevision.com in a recent interview: “We are looking to charge a premium price. Broadcasters so far have not had the guts to charge the price that they feel reflects the true value of their product. What I can confirm is that our pricing will be considerably higher than ESPN Star Sports.”

    TDSAT had earlier directed that the rates of the channels available on the direct to home platform (DTH) will cost half the price of what is charged to cable platforms (exclusive of taxes).

    This benchmark judgment was issued with respect to Dish TV vs Star India, wherein the two were haggling over price. The reason for the verdict was attributed to DTH being an addressable system where loss of revenue down the value chain is negligible if not zero.

    The distribution rights for all Nimbus’ sports channels are held by Rupert Murdoch’s Star India and run till 2010. The Star-Nimbus distribution deal will apply to the two sports channels that will be launching by the end of the year as well as any future sports channels from the Neo Sports stable (a sports news channel is also in the pipeline scheduled for debut in the second half of 2007).

    Although Nimbus has proposed the prices of its channels to Trai, it has already created doubts in the minds of the various stakeholders, whether this would be easily accepted by the regulator and if yes, whether it will go down well with the industry.

    Under the CAS notified areas, the two Nimbus channels will be charged as per the ceiling price fixed by Trai.

  • Industry tuned to CAS; pricing still vexed issue

    Industry tuned to CAS; pricing still vexed issue

    NEW DELHI: From “let there be voluntary CAS” to “if you must mandate CAS stay out of the pricing mechanism”. That could well sum up how the view of the broadcast sector in general to the prospect of the rollout of addressability has changed from the situation that existed back in 2003. 

    That was a recurring theme during the informed discussions that went on in the post-lunch session of the Indian Broadband Digital Networks Forum organised by Indiantelevision.com and Media Partners Asia in the capital yesterday. The two sessions – The Strategic Imperative: Consolidation & Convergence and Ground Realities: Content Distribution & Technology flowed seamlessly from one to the other taking further the cues that had been provided in the morning’s keynotes.

    Unless pricing was elastic, it was a non-sustainable business model not just for the pay channels but for the cable service providers as well, was the view expressed by Raghav Sahgal, CBO, Converse. Speakiing during the morning keynote, John Malone-controlled Liberty Media board member Shane O’Neill suggested that a better formula for the government to consider might be that the baseline or lifeline service (basic tier?) be given maximum spread while the rest should be left to the market to determine.

    Interestingly, that was the sentiment off the Orissa-based MSO Ortel Communications’ Jagi Mangat Panda as well. Said Panda, “CAS is important and necessary. But the regulator entering into pricing issues is unviable for long.” Mandate CAS but stay away from pricing, she offered. Panda also spoke of the need for a level playing field on issues like foreign investment similar to what the telcos enjoyed for all players in the broadcasty sector.

    ADAPT OR PERISH:

    Speaking on the issue of the shift to digital, HSBC Securities’ Sandeep Pahwa pointed out that “consolidation and building of scale is important but not a necessary recipe for success.” The ability to innovate according to the dynamics as determined by Indian situation was the critical factor, according to Pahwa. “Adapt or perish. The mantra is continual innovation,” Pahwa said.

    Another point that came through in the discussions was that in the move towards digital delivery, the real battle in the short to mid term would be between cable and DTH. “IPTV is a real challenge in an emerging market like India,” said Comverse CBO Raghav Sahgal.

    According to Pahwa, DTH will compete on reach (cable dark areas in particular) and service. However, where cable service providers have got it right, there is a clear advantage in their favour.

    WWIL’s JS Kohli said, “CAS is the trigger that will actually facilitate the move towards convergence.”

    Tata Sky’s Vikram Kaushik said while in the medium term quality of service would be the key differentiator that DTH offered, going forward, once transponder limitations haad been overcome some element of exclusivity would come into play. 80 per cent of programming will be across platform and 15 per cent will be exclusive, Kaushik said.

    Speaking on the content provider’s side Star India’s Paritosh Joshi said, “Star’s content for the mass audiences will remain the primary focus. We will look for opportunities – mobile in particular is something we’re particularly gung ho about. That’s something we’re already actively looking at.”

    “A marginal higher value consumer may exist and these we will address,” Joshi said.

    Speaking about the impact CAS would have Hathway MSO’s K Jayaraman said, “CAS is going to be painful in terms of investments required. If the first phase of CAS goes well then the funding is going to be a challenge.”

    Incable’s Ashok Mansukhani offered, “We need to put in a lot of money to upgrade ourselves as well as LCOs. We believe in 100 per cent transparency.”

    On the scope for IPTV, Tandberg Television’s Alan Delaney said, “There is plenty of space in the market for everybody.”

    Bharti Televentures’ Sriram TV was clear that staying out of content creation was the way to go for telcos. Said Sriram, “Focus on what you’re best at. Bharti has taken its learnings from the experiences of Singtel / Vodafone in the UK as examples of networks that went into too many areas and lived to regret the decision. Network convergence, device convergence and industry convergence is what we are looking at. Bharti has content tie-ups with all the pay channels.”

    HFCL’s Surendra Lunia, however, said, “We will evaluate according to opportunity.”

    Another problem for broadband is that technical skill sets need to be sorted out before value added services can be rolled out, said Jayaraman. This statement coming from the head of a cable MSO who has 100,000 registered users reflects on the difficulties that lie ahead for introduction of IPTV in particular.

    However, Mansukhani was more optimistic on that front: “It is a dynamic growth oriented business. Broadband adding significantly in the next three years.”

  • ‘K’ show rate hikes: Balaji expects 8% rise in turnover

    MUMBAI: Balaji Telefilms Ltd. is targeting a 7-8 per cent growth in turnover to around Rs 3.1 billion this fiscal on the back of a rate hike on four of their popular TV serials and an increase in programming hours.

    The investment in capital expenditure for the year is estimated at Rs 250-300 million. “We are adding two more studios this year. The capex is also towards equipments and sets,” a source in the company says.
    Of the four serials that will come up for an upward rate revision, three are expected from Star India and one from Zee Telefilms. Balaji makes a prime time show, Kasamh Se, for Zee TV.

    The paid up capital for Balaji’s wholly owned subsidary company at Sharjah will be Rs 40 million.

    The company is making a serial for ARY which will go on air by the first week of November. “The serial will air four days a week. If demand for our shows increase, we will invest in ramping up our facility. We don’t expect revenue inflows getting reflected this fiscal,” the source adds. The subsidiary company will produce serials aimed specifically at the Middle East market.
    Commissioned programming in the year is eexpected to increase by 7-8 per cent while exposure in the sponsored category will reduce. Revenue from the southern market is also estimated to reduce from Rs 320 million to Rs 200-250 million. Balaji has an exposure on the Sun Network channels.

    “The average revenue realisation per house will see a further rise this fiscal,” the source says. Balaji’s realisation per hour of commissioned shows rose from Rs 1.7 million to Rs 2.2 million for FY06.

    The company is adopting a cautious approach towards movie production. It will not be releasing any movie this year and is taking the co-production route for the next three films. “We are taking safer bets. There is no pressure on us to take risks. Our bottomline will stand even stronger this year,” the source says.

    Balaji Telefilms saw a robust growth in FY06 with topline increasing 43 per cent to Rs 2.8 billion. Net profit rose 44 per cent to Rs 594 million.