Tag: Sunil Doshi

  • ‘We’re a company of technologists and storytellers’: Disney+ Hotstar’s Content Head Gaurav Banerjee

    ‘We’re a company of technologists and storytellers’: Disney+ Hotstar’s Content Head Gaurav Banerjee

    Mumbai: Gaurav Banerjee has successfully straddled the realms of television and digital to deliver the most popular content in India. He runs Star India’s content studio that has delivered nine out of the top 15 web series and six out of the top 10 Hindi TV shows in the country. On the TV side, he’s responsible for popular shows such as Diya Aur Baati Hum, Sasural Genda Phool and on the digital side he’s responsible for hits such as Aarya and Special Ops amongst others.

    He began his career at Star TV Network as a primetime anchor and senior producer at Star News. He launched the Bengali news channel of the group Star Ananda in 2005 and later moved to lead the content strategy of the network’s regional entertainment channels in 2008. Banerjee was responsible for expanding the network’s reach in two key markets West Bengal and Maharashtra with the channels Star Jalsha and Star Pravah, respectively. In 2009, he led the content strategy for the Hindi entertainment channel Star Plus as general manager. He propelled Star Plus into a leading brand with hit shows like Yeh Hai Mohabattein and Mahabharata. In 2015-16, he took charge of Star India’s content studio and refreshed the storytelling approach for Star Plus and Star Bharat.

    Transforming India’s Content Landscape

    Banerjee is a man on a mission to transform India’s content landscape. He is leading Disney+ Hotstar’s foray into original content and has produced several Hotstar Specials that appeal to the unique tastes of digital audiences. While media executives are accustomed to treating television and digital as disparate creative ecosystems, Banerjee’s view is that good content can find its audience on any medium.

    Disney Star head content for HSM entertainment network and Disney+ Hotstar Gaurav Banerjee joined The Adaptation Company creative entrepreneur specialist and producer Sunil Doshi for a candid fireside chat at an event held recently in Mumbai. He spoke about driving the storytelling agenda at Star India, the advantage of being a legacy media company, producing innovative content for Disney+ Hotstar and helming Star India’s writers’ program.

    Edited Excerpts…

    Sunil Doshi: The traditional wisdom says that creating stories for television medium and creating stories for OTT medium are two different things. How have you successfully straddled both these words making Disney+ Hotstar a leader with enviable subscriptions?

    Gaurav Banerjee: We’ve always thought of ourselves as a storytelling and content company. When we’re looking at a script, we want to understand three simple things. First, how is the story going to be fresh to us and our viewers as well? Second, whether it might be relevant to our audience. Third, who is the storyteller and why is he/she excited to tell this story.

    We’ve always approached our scripts essentially using this process. We don’t think too much about distribution in the beginning phase because linear television and streaming are just different ways of distributing content. We’re comfortable with the idea that consumers can choose what technology or distribution platform works for them best. There may be format related choices depending on the media (some formats sit better on TV while others sit better on digital) but those are second order questions.

    Fundamentally, Star has a rich tradition of storytelling that goes back two decades. When we entered digital, we wanted to be native to the digital world and so, we expanded the brief of what we were as a company. Today, we’re a company of technologists and storytellers. The journey we have traversed has taken us from being a company with a consumer and storyteller mindset to a company that understood the product, technology, engineering and storytelling.

    Sunil Doshi: The economic models of streaming are changing. There is global inflation and war in Ukraine. There are streaming platforms that are gaining subscribers and others that are losing subscribers. Amidst all of this do you see Disney+ Hotstar as a technology company or a creative company?

    Gaurav Banerjee: I think Disney+ Hotstar is both. We see ourselves as a content platform that is always thinking about how to create technology that is intuitive for our viewers in India today. As we were building this platform eight years ago, we realised to achieve the scale we needed to reside on mobile phones. This was different from what was happening in the West where streaming was happening on connected TVs in people’s homes. The fact that we were mobile-first meant that our technology needed to be different.

    We were a legacy media company thinking about streaming. There were two advantages to this. First, we knew India’s consumers because we were the biggest broadcaster in the country and second, we understood storytelling having done it for two decades. The fundamentals we arrived at to be a platform that had scale were three things. First, we needed to have a big presence in live sports. Second, we needed to have a big presence in the movie business. Third, we needed to have a really big presence in drama.

    From day one, our content portfolio has tried to traverse and build on these three pillars. I’ve been in TV for 22 years now and these are the big pillars of Indian television. These three pillars take care of most of the entertainment needs of consumers.

    Sunil Doshi: You’ve dealt with technology. Now, you’ve done some exciting content innovations at Disney+ Hotstar where traditional TV content is feeding streaming content. What is your creative team doing to spot such opportunities?

    Gaurav Banerjee: Star is an interesting company with a great culture. While in some ways we’ve been leaders of entertainment in this country, we’ve always thought of ourselves as challenges.

    When we entered the digital space, we felt that there was a bias working against us. We were this legacy media company that has entered the streaming space and was not accustomed to the industry jargon or ways of working. We didn’t create this ecosystem or arrive here first. But we asked some fundamental questions and reimagined this world.

    The first decision we took was that streaming is something that can and should happen at scale. Therefore, the kind of content that is made for streaming should be high quality but cater to all audiences and not some niche.

    We took two strategic decisions, first, we decided to put our best content on streaming platforms. So, our linear TV content is first available on Disney+ Hotstar for paying subscribers. We observed that a lot of fans of the show will catch up on the latest episode during the day without waiting for it to be telecast at 10 pm on Star Plus.

    In a traditional setup, if we had taken such a decision, I would be worried because I’m doing something that’s threatening the ratings and viewership of the TV show. However, we changed the way we incentivized creative teams to focus on building a great show and not where consumers are supposed to watch it.

    There was a real feeling that TV shows, TV producers, and TV actors are in some way not good enough for digital. As someone who’s coming from a television background, we were clear that we were not going to participate and fuel this bias against TV content in any way.

    That’s why I’m incredibly proud of our Anupama prequel that’s streaming on Disney+ Hotstar called Namaste America. The show reveals when the first cracks appeared in Anupama’s marriage before the events in the TV series transpired. Another popular franchise Bigg Boss was doing well for our regional channels in Telugu and Tamil. Here, we felt a digital-only version with Stars like Kamal Haasan and Nagarjuna would work and both those seasons have done well. There are franchises such as “Special Ops” where we did a spin-off series that was just four episodes which worked on digital. We’re open to more experiments on OTT like Namaste India, Bigg Boss and Dance+.

    Sunil Doshi: I consider Star television as a thought leader as they have created so many iconic IPs. In the near absence of TV schools and film schools in our country, where is the new talent that is going to fuel creativity on digital and television going to come from?

    Gaurav Banerjee: We look at ourselves as an IP creation company. If we keep creating high-quality IP and continue to capture the imagination of audiences then monetisation will follow. That also means that we’re in the business of finding the best creative people, the best creative ideas and jostling with them in a healthy environment. The writing and creative community deserve our empathy because as an executive I’m looking at several scripts every day but they’re working on 1-3 stories and putting pen and ink to paper. We need to be conscious that we’re doing a good job of finding the best creative talent and treating them with empathy.

    When I was a student, I wanted to get into the creative business and understand how to make a TV show or film. This was in the year 1998 and after coming out of college I discovered there were only two places in India of any repute where you could learn to become a filmmaker or TV producer. One of them admitted 15 people and the other admitted 18 people. There were just 33 seats and I hoped to get one of those 33 seats. The luck of the draw.

    I got lucky but I realised this is a small number for an industry that is so big. For several years, I struggled to find new writers to bring to television. The belief we had as broadcasters is that there is a market need and so someone will come and build these institutions to feed this market. But nobody came. I urged both the institutions known for TV and filmmaking to start a course that teaches students how to write TV series. But that did not happen. How is the industry going to get better if no one is going to share knowledge, best practices and learn from each other?

    Star India put together a budget, teachers and a syllabus and a website to launch the program. We hired people and essentially, I asked all my writer friends in the industry to come to take classes and get the program going. We hired someone to put together a syllabus as this was a specialised program. I don’t know how many other companies are there where you can go to the CFO and say we’re spending a few X crores and there’s going to be no monetary return at the end of it. With a new show, you can get some revenue but with the writer’s program, no money is immediately going to come. It was just something to set up these budding writers and hopefully, if they become good writers, they might write something for us in three to four years but not necessarily.

    The great thing about our company and my pitch was that as long as the industry improves and there’s great writing then it is understood that we will also improve. That’s how we created the Star writers’ program and we had about 35-40 writers on our payroll over the last three to four years. While it undoubtedly has had its share of problems, it is also something that we’re very proud of.

  • Cinema content producers still discovering audience taste

    Cinema content producers still discovering audience taste

    MUMBAI: The Indian movie industry is one of the richest in the world and its content has been gaining patrons worldwide. But producers still believe that the industry doesn’t have the pulse of audience preference.

    The point was raised at the third edition of Indiantelevision.com’s ‘The Content Hub’ during a panel discussion on how new Hindi film producers are making their mark and what business models they are drawing up. The panel included Essel Vision (Zee Studios) CEO Shariq Patel, Viacom18 Studios chief operating officer Ajit Andhare, Alliance Media and Entertainment owner Sunil Doshi and Fox Star Studios India CEO Vijay Singh. Moderating the panel was film reviewer at Film Companion Suchitra Tyagi.

    Singh said that though we do not have an absolute understanding, we are better informed than we were few years ago. "Let me just give you some facts. Theatrical in India was going single digit till last year, where it actually has its most record breaking year and the business has grown by 14 per cent. Correspondingly, even if you look at Hollywood, last year they have had their biggest theatrical year," he said.

    However, Patel was of the view that the reason behind this is the constantly emerging trends. He shared that it is not possible to foresee or sight the changes in what the audience deems popular.

    Reflecting similar thoughts was Andhare who said, “Trends and cinema are two terms which are not friends with each other, because the moment you try to say this is trend you will falter. You can safely say that yes content has to be taken more seriously, just the package film which used to a success few years ago may not work.”

    He further added, “Also from a purely film business point of view, if you see a movie goer base, it is actually divided in three major markets, Hindi is just one, and the other two big bases are down south. So if you really want to address the entire consumer base for cinema in this country, you have to address all these three and from that stand point regional becomes extremely relevant.”

    There is a great opportunity to be a content producer today. "There is a huge opportunity in OTT and I can tell you that in films there is equally large opportunity. What has happened in Hollywood over the last 10 years, because the contribution from outside America started going up. 10 years back international content contributed 30 per cent and today it contributes 70 per cent. That is the reason why studios are working on franchise films or the few films which have the ability to actually travel across the globe,” Singh concluded.

  • Kamal Haasan signs up with Alliance Media & Entertainment

    Kamal Haasan signs up with Alliance Media & Entertainment

    MUMBAI: Padma Shri actor-writer-director Kamal Haasan has agreed to do brand endorsements and has signed up exclusively with celebrity and talent sourcing and management firm Alliance Media & Entertainment for this purpose.

    This marks a first in the actor’s nearly five decade long career which began when he started acting as a 3-year-old.

    Alliance Media & Entertainment founder and MD Sunil Doshi said, “We shall soon announce which brand Mr Kamal Haasan will be endorsing. Mr Kamal Haasan is known for his ideals and principles, and needless to say, we shall advise him to pick a brand that fits with his values and stature, and will have a campaign to match.”

    Haasan said, “I have signed up with Sunil Doshi’s Alliance Media because I believe it is India’s most respected talent management firm and is known to provide excellent strategic counsel to several top celebrities and personalities. I look forward to yet another first – that of brand endorsement – in my creative life, and to keep being able to do my bit for society.”

    Revealing why Kamal Haasan has decided to go in for brand endorsement, Doshi said, “Kamal Haasan has certain plans for his work in social service, but is also unwilling to rely on external sources of funding those plans. Therefore, he feels that endorsements with leading companies and brands that have a strong commitment to society and causes would be an appropriate and independent means of fulfilling his vision.”

  • Sunil Doshi’s Alliance Media to handle Dhanush’s endorsements

    Sunil Doshi’s Alliance Media to handle Dhanush’s endorsements

    MUMBAI: Sunil Doshi-owned boutique production house, Alliance Media, which also manages celebrity endorsements, will now take care of the endorsements of ‘Kolaveri Di‘ singer, Dhanush.

    The company already handles accounts of film personalities like Amitabh Bachchan, Rani Mukherjee and Manisha Koirala.

    Alliance Media CEO and director Sunil Doshi confirmed the development to Indiantelevision.com. 
     
    Superstar Rajnikanth‘s son-in-law, Dhanush recently came into limelight for his song ‘Kolaveri Di‘ became a rage on the social media platforms and Youtube. The video has received over 18 million views in just 3 weeks on youtube.

    Doshi is also an independent film producer. The first movie he produced was Bheja Fry, starring Rajat Kapoor, Vinay Pathak, Milind Soman, Ranvir Shorey and Sarika.

    The production house has also produced ad films like Cadbury‘s – Amitabh Bachchan TVC, Dabur Chavanprash, Dabur Pudin Haraa, Nerolac – Shaadi TVC and all the films for Pulse Polio campaign since 2002.

  • India and the Cannes Film Fest

    India and the Cannes Film Fest

    MUMBAI: Eight months down the line, and there’s nostalgia and a longing to be in Cannes again. The Cannes Film Festival had this habit of growing on you. The high cost of living (hotel and apartment rates in Cannes rise four to six times offseason rates during the fest), and the punishing schedules for the press conferences and for the screenings notwithstanding. (Bed time is 2:30 am, awakening time is 7:00 am as the first screening is at 8:30 am and it’s a 20 minute walk from one’s apartment to the Palais des Festivals’ Grand Auditorium).

    2007 is the 60th year of the Cannes Fest, the 60th year of India’s indedpendence and a great deal of gigs are planned highlighting the world’s second or is it most attractive economy.

    Hopefully, the volume of noise will be higher this year because India’s efforts get lost in the cacophony that is the mark of the festival. The American studios, the UK independents, the Chinese film makers, Latin American and European directors attract so much of the limelight, that India’s efforts simple don’t make much of an impact. Of course, the Indian media will send back reports saying how well India is doing at Cannes, when the truth is far from that.

    Hopefully, the Indian pavilion along the Croisette will be better organized this time around. The CII – which puts the Indian participation together – needs to be patted for the initiative, but a little more organization on the ground, will mean so much for the industry. Obviously, it is learning from its experiences and this year it promises that it will be an eyepopping experience for all.

    The Indian independent film makers group – which had got the support of the Reliance group’s Adlabs in the form of a pavilion – apparently is going to be back. In a much bigger way, says film maker Aditya Bhattacharrya. “It’s become a movement globally, Almost any independent Indian outside of India who is making movies has become a part of it,” he says. “It’s good for the movie business.”

    The nostalgia that wells up is that of Tom Hanks charming one and all even as the da Vici Code got blasted as a disaster by all,Jon Voigt mumbling in an undecipherable language,. the gorgeous Maria Belluci, the maverick outlook of Wong kar Wai, the applause that Babel, Volver, Pan’s Labrynth, received, among many other classy movies which were presented at the festival.

    From the Indian perspective there is the victory of animatrix Gitanjali Rao who won a couple of awards being the sole Indian flag bearer. She in her way charmed one and all by her grace and dignity at the film mart. Then there was this group of French girls who came up to this writer pleading to meet with Karan Johar and Shah rukh Khan. The former was there they were told, the latter would not be coming. But did they meet him? Then there was the Omkara book launch, the Jagmohan Mundra’s Provoked, WEG India’s Avinash Jumaani’s lavish party near the old port, Sunil Doshi’s screening of Mixed Doubles in the Palais, the Film Producer Guild party which had more Indians than the overseas trade which is what it was meant to attract.

    In its 60th year, India’s entertainment barons have an opportunity to set things right. And leave no stone unturned while attempting to do it.

    Below is a snapshot of Cannes Film Fest 2006

    Films in competition

    * L’Amico di famiglia – Paolo Sorrentino
    * Babel – Alejandro González Iñárritu
    * Crónica De Una Fuga – Israel Adrián Caetano
    * Il caimano – Nanni Moretti
    * Iklimler – Nuri Bilge Ceylan
    * Fast Food Nation – Richard Linklater
    * Flandres – Bruno Dumont
    * Indigènes – Rachid Bouchareb
    * Juventude Em Marcha (Colossal Youth) – Pedro Costa
    * El Laberinto del Fauno – Guillermo del Toro
    * Laitakaupungin valot – Aki Kaurismäki
    * Marie-Antoinette – Sofia Coppola
    * Quand j’étais chanteur – Xavier Giannoli
    * La raison du plus faible – Lucas Belvaux
    * Red Road – Andrea Arnold
    * Selon Charlie – Nicole Garcia
    * Southland Tales – Richard Kelly
    * Summer Palace – Lou Ye
    * Volver – Pedro Almodóvar
    * The Wind That Shakes the Barley – Ken Loach

    Films out of Competition

    * The Da Vinci Code, by Ron Howard (Opening Film)
    * Transylvania,by Tony Gatlif (Closing Film)
    * United 93, by Paul Greengrass
    * X-Men: The Last Stand, by Brett Ratner
    * Over the Hedge, by Tim Johnson, Karey Kirkpatrick
    * Election 2 (aka Triad Election ), by Johnnie To
    * Clerks II, by Kevin Smith
    * Silk, by Su Chao-pin
    * Shortbus, by John Cameron Mitchell
    * An Inconvenient Truth, by Davis Guggenheim
    * Boffo! Tinseltown’s Bombs and Blockbusters, by Bill Couturie
    * Volevo Solo Vivere, by Mimmo Calopresti
    * Bamako, by Abderrahmane Sissako
    * Ici Najac, a vous la terre, by Jean-Henri Meunier
    * Avida, by Benoit Delepine
    * El-Banate Dol (aka These Girls ), by Tahani Rached
    * Zidane, A 21st Century Portrait, by Philippe Parreno ,Douglas Gordon
    * Nouvelle Chance, by Anne Fontaine
    * The House Is Burning, by Holger Ernst
    * Chlopiec na galopujacym koniu (aka The Boy on the Galloping Horse ), by Adam Guzinski

    Un Certain Regard

    * 977 – Nikolay Khomeriki
    * A Scanner Darkly – Richard Linklater
    * Bihisht Faqat Baroi Murdagon – Djamshed Usmonov
    * Bled Number One – Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche
    * Cum Mi-am Petrecut Sfarsitul Lumii – Catalin Mitulescu
    * El Violin – Francisco Vargas Quevdeo
    * Gwaï wik – Oxide Pang & Danny Pang
    * Hamaca Paraguaya – Paz Encina
    * Il Regista Di Matrimoni – Marco Belloccio
    * La Californie – Jacques Fieschi
    * La Tourneuse de pages – Denis Dercourt
    * Luxury Car – Chao Wang
    * Meurtrieres – Patrick Grandperret
    * Paris, je t’aime – Gurinder Chadha, Bruno Podalydès, Gus van Sant, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Walter Salles, Daniela Thomas, Christopher Doyle, Isabel Coixet, Suwa Nobuhiro, Sylvain Chomet, Alfonso Cuarón, Olivier Assayas, Oliver Schmitz, Richard LaGravenese, Vincenzo Natali, Wes Craven, Tom Tykwer, Gérard Depardieu, Frédéric Auburtin, Alexander Payne
    * Salvador – Manuel Huerga
    * Serambi – Garin Nugroho, Tonny Trimarsanto, Viva Westi, Lianto Luseno
    * Suburban Mayhem – Paul Goldman
    * Taxidermia – György Pálfi
    * Ten Canoes – Rolf de Heer
    * The Unforgiven – Jong-bin Yoon
    * 2:37 – Murali K. Thalluri
    * Uro – Stefan Faldbakken
    * You Am I – Kristijonas Vildziunas
    * Z Odzysku – Slawomir Fabicki

    Winners

    * Palme d’Or (Won by Ken Loach for The Wind That Shakes the Barley)
    * Grand Prix (Won by Bruno Dumont for Flandres)
    * Prix de la mise en scène (Won by Alejandro González Iñárritu director of Babel)
    * Prix du Jury (Won by Andrea Arnold for Red Road)
    * Prix du scénario (Won by Pedro Almodovar for Volver)
    * Prix d’interprétation féminine du Festival de Cannes (Won by the cast of Volver including Penelope Cruz)
    * Prix d’interprétation masculine du Festival de Cannes (Won by the cast of Indigènes)
    * Prix un certain regard (Won by Chao Wang for Luxury Car).