Tag: Television News

  • India TV expands its global footprint; enters in UAE on eLife

    India TV expands its global footprint; enters in UAE on eLife

    Mumbai: India TV has expanded its global footprint by launching itself on eLife, the UAE’s premium content platform from Etisalat. The channel is available on eLife Asiana packages: eLife Asiana, Asiana Lite, Asiana Lite, and Asiana Premium, both on IPTV and OTT platforms.

    India TV has appointed NKN Media FZC as its exclusive ad sales and distribution partner in the region. NKN Media will solicit brand partnerships and offer advertising solutions.

    After establishing a leadership position in the Indian television market, this launch in the UAE is a natural step for India TV to expand its international and digital footprint in that direction. The channel is already available in North America and will be soon launched across major other markets with significant diaspora audiences to keep them connected with news back home. The channel is looking to innovate with local content and launch major shows across local time zones to create better affinity for the brand.

    People of the Indian diaspora living in the UAE can watch India TV round the clock for news coverage on India and the rest of the world by connecting through eLife. India TV has shows like Aap Ki Adalat and Aaj Ki Baat, hosted by India TV editor-in-chief and chairman Rajat Sharma. With its nationwide network of journalists, India TV has been telecasting round-the-clock news bulletins, current affairs programmes, and talk shows for the last 18 years.

    Speaking of this initiative, India TV managing director Ritu Dhawan said, “India TV’s aim is to inform and empower global Indians with accurate, in-depth, unfiltered, fact-based journalism without any bias, outrage, or sensationalism, establishing India TV as the best and most trusted place for news. Making India TV available in the UAE is one more step towards our goal.”

  • TRP scam: Republic TV’s Priya Mukharjee granted anticipatory bail

    TRP scam: Republic TV’s Priya Mukharjee granted anticipatory bail

    NEW DELHI: A Mumbai court on Friday granted anticipatory bail to Republic TV COO Priya Mukharjee in the alleged TRP manipulation case.

    The sessions court directed Mukharjee to appear before the concerned police station once every week. In case Mukharjee is arrested, she can be released on bail bond of Rs 50,000, the court added.

    She was taken into custody on 19 November and was later granted transit bail by the Karnataka high court as she was in Bengaluru and was apprehending arrest by the Mumbai police.

    The high court had granted bail for a period of 20 days within which period Mukharjee was asked to approach the concerned jurisdictional court for further relief. Later, she moved the sessions court for anticipatory bail.

    A few weeks ago, Republic TV editor-in-chief Arnab Goswami was also arrested and was later released on bail after a gap of nearly 10 days. Republic TV has been urging the courts to transfer the investigation to CBI.

    Mumbai police unearthed the fake ratings scam on 8 October after rating agency Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) filed a complaint through Hansa Research Group, alleging that certain television channels were rigging TRP numbers. Hansa had been tasked with installing barometers, which record viewership data at sample households.

     Mumbai police commissioner Param Bir Singh then claimed that Republic TV and two Marathi channels — Box Cinema and Fakt Marathi – were involved in manipulating TRPs. 

    Since then several arrests have been made in the case and there have been legal developments both within and outside of the courtroom. 

  • Indian media not muzzled: BJP spokesperson Nalin Kohli

    Indian media not muzzled: BJP spokesperson Nalin Kohli

    NEW DELHI: Amidst the huge chatter of Indian media being biased and muzzled, BJP national spokesperson and Supreme Court advocate Nalin Kohli has claimed that the country has a robust media otherwise no channel or outlet would be running anti-BJP and anti-Modi stories. He was in a live webcast with Governance Now MD Kailashnath Adhikari during the Visionary Talk series held by the public policy and governance analysis platform. 

    Calling media as an important and fourth pillar of democracy the BJP senior leader said that media is free and vibrant in India what you see on social media is demonstrative of the right to freedom of speech. He refuted the charges that the media is muzzled and said that that media has been muzzled only once during emergencies. “Everybody remembers those days.”

    “If media was really muzzled then how are people using media to abuse prime minister, Narendra Modi and BJP government so openly and freely. I believe and am convinced that media is independent” said Kohli.  

    Kohli blaming the opposition for manufacturing issues and blaming the BJP government for stifling freedom of speech and said that it is a charge leveled against the BJP government without any foundation. “As the opposition, they have a right to manufacture issues. Unfortunately, issues are manufactured without foundation” he said.

    While responding to a question on how the government will regularize social media content, Kohli, who has also been convener of BJP’s national media cell said there is the issue of territorial jurisdiction when it comes to social media. He reiterated that that freedom of speech is an extremely valuable fundamental right under Article 19 of the Constitution but also puts reasonable restrictions on that freedom. He said that nothing can be beyond the constitutional framework and the best way is to self-regulate.

     “There is always a way to express yourself with civility and you cannot threaten anyone. To threaten a lady or her daughters with rape, obscenity, and abusive language is a reflection of an individual’s own self. If we forget to be civil, how can we have civilization” he asked.    

    “Freedom of speech does not mean curtailing other persons freedom by fear…because after Article 21 provides for life and liberty. If a person feels intimidated or stalked or threatened because of the exercise of freedom of speech of someone else that too needs to be reviewed.  We are reaching a point where these issues are being discussed. Perhaps they will be debated and over a period of time…some kind of framework may come, maybe self-regulation by the platform whether it would require a court to intervene, laws to come in…that’s a much larger debate’’ said Kohli.

  • News Republic’s Shafi Saxena shares India plans

    News Republic’s Shafi Saxena shares India plans

    MUMBAI: In an age where the average time span that a reader spends on an article continues to decline, Indian readers, especially the youth, have emerged as voracious readers, with a knack for in-depth articles heavy on data.

     
    The perspective comes from news consumption surveys done by one of the leading global news syndicators, News Republic that launched in India six months ago.

    “We do regular news consumption surveys on our platform based on global trends. We have found that young Indian readers are very similar to the global readers in terms of topics and trends they follow. The number one reason they follow news is to be connected with the rest of the world,” says News Republic, chief brand officer  Shafi Saxena who recently visited Mumbai.  But when it comes to long form versus short form journalism, Indians, including the young readers who form the bulk of India’s readership, are inclined towards the former.

    “I think India is one of the robust long form markets in the world. Indians like to read and they love data. For instance, in India, right now, the user is reading about a hundred pages on our app every month. In France and Germany which are both well-established markets for us, they are reading two hundred pages a month, with the global average being 150 pages a month approximately. If we look at the fact that we just launched in May in this market, and are still in the process of bringing more partners and content on board, if India is already reading 100 pages on the app, that’s pretty significant,” asserts Saxena.

    In terms of subjects or beats, the Indian news reader is interested in political news, technological news and sports and entertainment. “I have seen huge traction for sites such as cricbuzz, cricinfo, etc.”

    Saxena informs that she is looking at a target group of young educated Indians making more use of the app which is mobile only, and has 40 editions worldwide and content partnerships with over 1,100 leading news organizations. Shafi breaks down News Republics’ syndication partnerships with publications across the board as ‘a simple revenue sharing business,’ while giving due credit to the publication and journalists involved. Available on Android, iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch and Samsung Watch (Gear S2), News Republic syndicated news articles from 1,500 licensed publishers.

    With 50,000 licensed articles made available on the platform daily, curating them for the readers becomes a crucial step. Shafi explains how they go about it while staying impartial to a topic or a publication. “If we find 700 articles written about say Bihar elections, and two of them are being clicked on the most, and readers are spending more time on them, we will prioritise quality and interest and boost those articles. Instead of sending all 700 articles, we will push those two. The algorithm running on the app takes the call based on several variables such as readership, level of interest, how long are people staying on the article as well as how many moods, shares and comments readers have shared on it. It sounds simple but it’s a complex analytical tool that powers our curation,” she ifnorms.

    Infact, the app locates a user with geotagging and pushes local articles relative to their current location if users enable the service. Moreover the service has also curated articles in eight regional Indian languages, from regional news producing partners such as Aaj Tak.

    With Digital India still in the making and most of the country not having uniform internet connection, would an app like News Republic be able cater to tier II and tier II users with same amount of coverage? “We are aware of the limited availability of high speed internet in India and have taken a few steps keeping that in mind,” Saxena clarifies, “For example, in the metros you can opt for the full-fledged robust interface of the app, with videos and photos and all the multimedia. But those in areas of weaker internet connection can access the app in just the HTML format, which is lighter and easily downloadable. You can opt to download rich media when you have Wifi access. Moreover one can access and save articles while in a 3G or 4G zone, and read them again offline as well.”

     

    Despite such a diverse range and coverage News Republic comes completely free for a user. “Our app is free. We do have a subscription based model, but its contribution is tiny when it comes to our total revenue. The rest is all ad based. We have not turned on ads in India yet. We cannot do advertisement in a market in the first year of our launch. Having said that, we are a revenue generating company in markets we have been in for a while such as Europe and the western market. We use the revenue we generate in such markets and the funding that we have to reinvest  in newer markets like India and Russia,” Shafi explains, while adding that the app just celebrated one year of its presence in Russia.

    The company plans to cash-in on advertisement revenue in India in about a year of being in operation after studying the market. “When you launch in a new market, there are so many variables that are out of your control. Anything from bandwidth to spectrum, to server, to usage, to the kind of phones people are using, affect us. It’s takes about a year to learn the market,” Shafi adds, saying she is highly optimistic about doing business in India, going by the rate at which mobile users are increasing.

    “Indians are spending more time on mobile. They are spending three to five hours per day online, and a bulk of that is on mobile. So an ad revenue generated model of the app will soon launch in this market,” she adds with optimism, while also revealing the kind of advertisers her company sees on-board in a year’s time. “As per our TG, I see automobiles, education and technology related advertisers spending on News Republic. And of course e-commerce players are also major potential advertisers for us.”

    Speaking about News Republic’s future plans for the Indian market she says, “The Indian market is growing very quickly. Strategic conception points can happen overnight in a country as technology savvy and aspirational as India. Mobile and social is the name of the game in the media business here. We have some big plans for the market which we will reveal in about three months’ time.”

    “While we are looking at virtual reality and 3D video and other exciting stuff in the west, we will bring them to India as well, after addressing the country’s bandwidth issues first. For now we will be looking to a multi-lingual, mobile optimised format with respect to the ecosystem. There’s lots in store for sure,” Saxena concludes.

  • The year the industry entered the ICU

    The year the industry entered the ICU

    Perhaps that best expresses what Television News underwent in 2013. Simply because it spells out to say: What (the) Hell Ever Happened!

    A pause would have been a positive sentiment; in a year that felt like the roller coaster was going to crash. Yes, flat revenues, would have been a positive. Flat viewership would have been a positive.

    If the TV News industry was a human body, it would have woken up at the end of the year, from a long and deep coma only to discover, multiple organ attacks and multiple surgeries on its meager body had thrashed whatever hope it started the year of 2013 with.

    There was a name change, a year that saw a new expression (and that’s the biggest positive outcome of 2013) – ‘TVT’ replace ‘TRP’ to aid acknowledgement of the growth of TV viewers, was the silver lining on an otherwise dark cloud. But still to gain currency and translate into value. So, at this stage for TV News, just a name change.

    Then came hope, with the promise of new infusion of body muscle with a change in thinking around foreign investment in TV News. But on the day the good Doctor did not show up and the patient will limber on trying to find investment funds. The strong may survive, but many will perish, without new hope of quality investment.

    Tossed from one operating theatre to another, the patient remains in ICU. Not knowing if the doctor will pull the plug or resuscitate.

    A series of cardiac attacks followed, with circulation of blood (advertising income) threatening to be restricted, cutting away supply of oxygen and threatening the very survival of the TV News industry and the consequent ill effects on democracy. Tossed from one operating theatre to another, the patient remains in ICU. Not knowing if the doctor will pull the plug or resuscitate. The patient though is showing visible signs of fighting strong.

    Finally, the cost of medication went up, with Digital Addressable System (DAS) 2 – carriage fees, which were expected and promised to go down (as was experienced with DAS1) headed northwards. The daily dose of vitamins just got more expensive.

    In this mayhem and bodily torture, what kept the soul and the body together, you may ask? The kindred of the TV News industry survives on the very one thing it does best – delivering quality news, round the clock, with commitment.

    There was lots of news. It became more social and digital and TV News leveraged that growth engine.

    It has built a sound set of principles and a robust mechanism to work together as an industry, in unison. This antibody resisted all those attacks and kept intact body and soul. Nourishing it for another day, another year.  One that the TV News industry, knows will not be easy. But it has got smarter and knows how to work together.

    For 2014, the TV news industry must make a Bang – big audacious news and glory. With a major election in sigh, the industry must learn to stick together even more, grow its value and turn away the woes and the Whew to bold steps of business collaboration, to drive down costs and bring profitability into the industry.

    Be it carriage, ad price, inventory, news standards, governance – the TV News business can evolve the industry’s future by creating its own self-regulation on best business practices and best shareholder practices to bring the shine back into it.

    2014 brings hope, renewed faith and will be full of News! Good News! BANG!

    (Sunil Lulla is MD and CEO of Times Television Network. The views expressed in the above article are the author’s personal views)