Tag: TV

  • Endemol looks at more formats; eyes fiction

    Endemol looks at more formats; eyes fiction

    MUMBAI: A year has passed since global television format creator and distributor Endemol set up shop in India. Buoyed by success the company is looking to bring in more formats in India.

    As far as the fiction side is concerned India head Rajesh Kamath says that Endemol is evaluating the scene. By May it will have decided whether it wants to buy a stake in a production house or go on its own. In fact, before coming into India it had weighed the possibility of acquiring a production house in the fiction space. However it decided to enter the country as a production outfit rather than simply sell formats. It will kick off its fiction slate towards the end of the year.

    Says Kamath, “We are delighted at the success of Bigg Boss, Fame X on Sony and The Great Indian Laughter Challenge on Star One. We produce all three shows and it has been a learning experience.

    “Certainly shooting Bigg Boss day in and day out has been a challenge in terms of keeping the 100+ crew members motivated. They become like one family as the show becomes their life as it were for the shooting period. Earlier there were doubts as to whether the show would work as it was seen to be niche. However the success shows that if the format is unique, the participants are broad based and the audience understands the concept it will work. The Metro viewers were the early adopters as data from the Tam Elite Panel shows. Bigg Boss and Fame X get over next month.

    “We might bring one or both of them towards the end of the year. The temptation might be to do Bigg Boss immediately seeing that it has fared so well. However in the format business you have to create a sense of anticipation on the part of the viewer. So we wait for at least nine months before bringing a format back on air. I am confident that the second season of Bigg Boss will se more people particularity from the small towns jumping on the bandwagon. On the flip side Deal Or No Deal did not work but it is to be expected that not everything will work. Fame X is on an upward curve. As the number of participants goes down the involvement of the viewers goes up.”

    The question arises – what is next? There are two formats that Endemol is looking to sell and produce in India. Right now discussions are on with different broadcasters including Star and Sony. One format is called 1 vs 100. This is already airing in the US on NBC. Here you see one contestant pitting his knowledge against 100 others. It works like this. One contestant is in the hot seat answering a question. The 100 others are the audience members who also answer questions. The studio in fact has 100 screens and one answers by pressing one of three buttons.

    Each of the 100 contestants has a value say Rs 1000 in addition to the value of the question. If the contestant gets it right and say 30 of the audience members get it wrong then he gets that much money. For the next question the value of each audience member goes up depending on how many are remaining. If the person in the hot seat answers incorrectly he goes out and one of the audience members is randomly chosen to replace him. The catch is that if the person in the hot seat answers correctly and so do all the audience members then he gets no money for that question as nobody got eliminated.

    So it is a question of judging whether one should ask for an easy question or a difficult one. There are different genres one can choose from. A difficult question increases the chances of audience members and the person in the hot seat getting it wrong. The viewer at home can also participate through SMS. In some countries the person in the hot seat can choose to discontinue playing and walk off with what he has won. In other countries he must keep playing. The audience members in the US come from different walks of life and are segmented. So you could have five sports people, five businessmen etc.

    The other format is called Set For Life. This was recently introduced by Endemol globally. Here there are 15 buttons half of which are red and the other half are white. If one presses a white button one wins money and goes to the next stage. If one presses a red button one goes back a level. The logic is the same as the Snakes and Ladders board game explains Kamath. The prize money keeps increasing. Four red buttons and one is out.

    However there is a family member in an enclosed room who can see what is happening. This member can choose at any time to stop the game though the contestant keeps playing. So the contestant can win Rs one million when in actual fact the family member pressed the stop button when he had won half a million. It is a question of trusting the participant’s ability and also luck. So a contestant can press four red buttons and feel that he has lost when in actual fact the family member had pressed the stop button earlier.

    The firm is hoping to have at least one if not both these shows on air sometime in August- September. Kamath hints that 1 vs 100 has a better chance of making it first. It is also going to produce the second season of Fear Factor for Sony which it is is hoping to put on air sometime in June. This will be shot in South Africa or Malaysia. The production house is looking to increase the level of stunts involved. It is examining the possibility of having a boot camp where participants are put through a series of tests. It is thinking in terms of categorising the show as Extreme Fear Factor.

    Before all this though it is looking at a participation television show. This is where viewers call in to answer questions on a show. They pay for this privilege. Endemol is working on the business model of a show like this in terms of the technology platform, how the revenues are split, where does it come from? To what extent does it come from advertising? It will be aired either in early primetime that is at 7 pm or in the afternoon that is at around 1:30 pm or at midnight.

    It is hoping to put in a participation call TV show on air within a couple of months time either on Star or Sony. BrainTeaser is a possible format here. This is a word based show and has different variants. For instance one might be given the letter H as the start of a word and then clues. One has to guess the word. Then there is the scramble variant where words of eight or more letters are partitioned into four or five pieces, rearranged and presented. One has to unscramble them.

    It is also talking to kids channels about a kids format. However Kamath was loathe to discuss further details. He is also further down the line looking at a sports based format The Match which is a celebrity based football match. In the UK proceeds went charity and aired on Sky. Interestingly Endemol is looking to produce all formats that it sells in India. That is because of the success of Bigg Boss, Fame X and The Great Indian Laughter Challenge.

  • Indian Music Industry felicitates Julio Ribeiro on contribution towards IPR protection

    Indian Music Industry felicitates Julio Ribeiro on contribution towards IPR protection

    MUMBAI: The Indian Music Industry (IMI) yesterday felicitated ex-police commissioner, Julio Rebeiro who is now IMI’s chief coordinator for his services and invaluable contributions towards Intellectual Property protection.

    Riberio’s efforts along with the IMI have pioneered the concept of Intellectual property, its rights, management and protection in the country over the past 10 years. IMI in consultation with Mr. Rebeiro had set up the Anti-Piracy operation in its current format in the year 1996. Ever since, the IMI has to its credit more than 10000 raids registered across 250 cities leading to over 950 convictions in a sphere where awareness levels among many are very low.

    Shabana Azmi, chairperson, Core Group on Piracy, Exhibition Sector including multiplex and issue of Certification felicitated Riberio on the occasion.

    Rebeiro said, “The past decade has been a long journey in terms of creating awareness about respecting the basic rights of an artist and fighting off individuals who are out to make a fast buck on the efforts of others. We have trained the enforcers, i.e., the police, the judiciary and the public prosecutors about Intellectual Property protection. The efficient operations of the IMI has ensured that the legitimate physical product business of CD’s and cassettes has survived in India whereas in neighboring countries like Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, it is virtually non existent’.
    Azmi said, “Organisations like IMI have done a lot for the safeguard of artists rights. The rampant piracy in the early and mid nineties had very adversely affected the music industry, it is through the timely intervention of IMI that people now are aware and respect intellectual property”.

    IMI says that its operations have ensured that that the country’s legitimate physical product business has survived unlike neighbors Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh who have no legitimate music business today or even China that at present suffers from 90 per cent piracy.

  • BabyUniverse & HarperCollins Publishers ink video content partnership deal

    BabyUniverse & HarperCollins Publishers ink video content partnership deal

    MUMBAI: BabyUniverse, Inc. an Internet content, commerce and new media company in the pregnancy, baby and toddler marketplace, has announced that it has signed a video content partnership agreement with HarperCollins Publishers.

    Entertaining video segments based on scenarios from the new book, Babyproofing Your Marriage, How to Laugh More, Argue Less, and Communicate Better as Your Family Grows, will be featured on BabyTV.com, an Internet integrated broadcast channel and social networking community focused on the needs of new and expectant parents, informs an official release.

    “We could not be more excited about this unique content relationship and its alignment with the objectives of BabyTV.com,” said BabyUniverse chairman and CEO John Textor. “HarperCollins’ decision to produce entertaining video content as a means to promote this certain best seller is truly visionary in the new media marketplace. With our acute focus on the connection between content and commerce, the content of Babyproofing Your Marriage has found a perfect home at BabyTV.com.”

    BabyTV.com debuted in December 2006 with cross visibility to over 1.7 million monthly unique visitors of BabyUniverse-owned e-commerce properties such as BabyUniverse.com, PoshTots.com and DreamTimeBaby.com, and content properties such as PoshCravings.com and ePregnancy.com, adds the release.

    BabyTV.com is presented in an interactive format in which the consumer can tune in to broadcast-quality streaming television, upload videos to share with the community, interact with live events, engage in e-commerce transactions, browse links on the Web, and participate in BabyTV.com’s online community.

     

  • TV Today plans Rs 230 million buy back of shares

    TV Today plans Rs 230 million buy back of shares

    MUMBAI:TV Today Network plans to buy back shares up to five per cent and free reserves aggregating approximately Rs 230 million.

    The board of directors of TV Today Network will meet on January 29 to consider this as well as the unaudited financial results for the quarter ended 31 December 2006.

    The scrip hit a high of Rs 110.45 and a low of Rs 98 on Wednesday. It gained 4.88 per cent to close the day at Rs 103.20.
     

  • Fisher-Price unveils ‘Galli Galli Sim Sim’s’ Elmo singing & dancing to the ‘Hokey Pokey’

    Fisher-Price unveils ‘Galli Galli Sim Sim’s’ Elmo singing & dancing to the ‘Hokey Pokey’

    MUMBAI: Fisher-Price, the infant and pre-school brand from Mattel Toys has introduced Galli Galli Sim Sim’s main character Elmo to the Indian market, as a soft toy that can dance, sing and speak. What’s more, it speaks the local language, Hindi. Apart from Elmo, the range also includes other characters like Bharat, Ernie and Biscuit Badshah from the show.

    The surprise element of the range is that the first-ever Hindi speaking Elmo sings and dances to the tune of “Hokey Pokey” while grooving to the beats and doing all the steps, including turning around in a full circle and shaking all about.

    The assortment from Fisher-Price includes soft toys including Bharat, Ernie, Biscuit Badshah and Elmo in 9 and 18 inch sizes, priced at Rs. 299 and Rs. 799 respectively. While a jumbo size of 24 inches is priced at Rs. 1099. The customised ‘Hokey Pokey Elmo’ is 11 inches tall, and is available for Rs. 1399. The complete range will be available at all leading departmental and toy stores, informs an official release.

    Sesame Street’s Indian adaptation Galli Galli Sim Sim aims to empower young children by making learning fun. International versions of Sesame Street are given their own muppets to reflect local issues. In India, they have characters like Googly, Chamki, Aanchoo and Boombah, who have been specially created with Indian characteristics and elements.

    Developed with the help of Indian educational experts, the show exposes children to reading and counting and claims to help children to cope with their emotions, develop healthy habits, value diversity, take pride in their culture and treat others with respect.

     

  • Licence fee payers to help set the BBC’s agenda

    Licence fee payers to help set the BBC’s agenda

    MUMBAI: For the first time, licence fee payers will have a say in how UK pubcaster the BBC delivers its mission to inform, educate and entertain.

    The new Charter and Agreement outline six ‘Public Purposes’ for the BBC and task the new BBC Trust with ensuring the BBC delivers the best possible programming to promote them.

    The Trust has taken its first step to fulfilling this responsibility, publishing for public consultation six draft Purpose Remits which spell out proposed priorities and how the BBCs delivery of each purpose will be judged. The consultation and the first of the Trusts major audience research surveys will seek to find out what priorities are most important to licence fee payers and how the BBC is currently performing in those areas.

    BBC Trust acting chairman Chitra Bharucha said, “The new Charter makes clear that the BBC exists only to serve the public interest and the BBC’s main object is the promotion of its six Public Purposes. For each of these Public Purposes we are today publishing draft remits and asking licence fee payers whether they agree with the priorities proposed for the BBC. We also want to know how well licence fee payers think the BBC is currently performing in these priority areas.”

    The public consultation has begun formally and any individual or organisation can respond via the BBC Trust’s website. The Audience Councils – the Trust’s advisers in the UK’s four nations will provide responses from Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and around England; and the Trust will seek to raise awareness amongst interest groups and the public directly.

    Bharucha said however that the Trust needed to do more in order to ensure the evidence on which the Trust based its judgements was properly representative of licence fee payers:

    “The Trust hopes as many people as possible will respond to the consultation. We owe it to all licence fee payers to ensure that the evidence we collect is truly representative. We are therefore also commissioning our first major survey of 4,500 adults to help identify the publics priorities for the BBC and where they think the BBC could do better. The Trust will take account of all views expressed before finalising the Purpose Remits. We will then request BBC management to respond with their plans for delivery.”

    The consultation will close on 10 April 2007. The Trust will publish responses to the consultation and the results of the survey alongside the final Purpose Remits later this year. This follows on media reports last month which had stated that UK’s culture secretary Tessa Jowell and chancellor Gordon Brown had agreed to a below-inflation rise for the TV licence fee. The agreement has not yet been approved by British PM Tony Blair.

    Under the plan, the fee would rise by three per cent next year and the year after, and two per cent for the following three years. The Retail Price Index is currently 3.9 per cent. The decision would mean the licence fee rising to £135.45 next year from its current level of £131.50. By 2012, the cost of a TV licence is set to be between £148.05 and £151. BBC DG Mark Thompson had told staff it would be a real disappointment if this move goes ahead. The BBC wanted an annual rise of 1.8 per cent above inflation.

  • Disney licenses ‘Ugly Betty’ to Spanish broadcaster Cuatro

    Disney licenses ‘Ugly Betty’ to Spanish broadcaster Cuatro

    MUMBAI: Disney’s international TV distribution arm, Buena Vista International Television (BVITV), has announced that Spanish free TV broadcaster Cuatro will launch the Golden Globe -winning show Ugly Betty to its viewers later this year.

    Yesterday the show won a Golden Globe for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy. America Ferrera (who plays Betty Suarez) also received a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy.

    The show was adapted in India by Sony as Jassi Jaisi Koi Nahin. Ugly Betty follows Betty Suarez, a seemingly plain, but intelligent and hard-working, secretary at fashion magazine Mode. Few people get to know her because in the world of fashion, Betty is the oversized square peg in the petite round hole. When publishing mogul Bradford Meade hands the reigns of his fashion magazine over to his son Daniel (Eric Mabius), he hires Betty as his son’s new assistant, because she’s the only woman in NYC who Daniel won’t sleep with. Neither of them knows the ins and outs of the fashion world, but together they’re a formidable team against the label-wearing sharks who will do anything to see them fail.

    Ugly Betty is based on Yo Soy Betty La Fea the Colombian telenovela. Cuatro has also picked up the other Touchstone Television series Day Break and Six Degrees. Taye Diggs stars in the thriller Day Break that takes a bad day and multiplies it by infinity. Detective Brett Hopper (Diggs) is having a hellacious day; the kind of day where nothing goes his way and he just can’t wait to put it behind him… only he can’t, because he’s living the same day over and over again. Only when Hopper figures out why his life is broken and how to fix it will he awaken to a brand new day.

    Six Degrees created by J.J Abrams Lost, is an ensemble drama which follows the notion that everybody is connected to one another by a chain of six people, which means that nobody is a stranger for long. Six very different New Yorkers go about their lives not realising the impact they’re having on each other – yet. A mysterious web of coincidences will gradually draw them closer, changing the course of their lives forever.

  • Skype founders looks to put the Joost in online TV

    Skype founders looks to put the Joost in online TV

    MUMBAI: The cofounders of the Internet telephone service Skype have unveiled the brand name and details of their latest project. This is a new Internet-based television service called Joost.

    The Venice Project has revealed its official brand, Joost. Currently available in private beta testing, Joost combines TV and the Internet by offering viewers a TV-like experience enhanced with the choice, control and flexibility of web 2.0.

    Joost is looking to fill a gap in the online video entertainment arena. Joost claims to be powered by a secure, efficient, piracy-proof Internet platform that enables premium interactive video experiences while guaranteeing copyright protection for content owners and creators.

    Joost CEO Fredrik de Wahl says, “People are looking for increased choice and flexibility in their TV experience, while the entertainment industry needs to retain control over their content. With Joost, we’ve married that consumer desire with the industry’s interests.”

    Joost is the first global TV distribution platform, bringing together advertisers, content owners and viewers in an interactive, community-driven environment. Joost can be accessed with a broadband Internet connection and offers broadcast-quality content to viewers for free.

    de Wahl says, “We have received positive and constructive feedback from our early beta-testers and are now at a stage where we’re ready to reveal our true brand. The Joost name has global appeal, embodies fun and energy, and will come to define the ’best of TV and the best of the Internet’”.
     

  • Tam increases number of peoplemeters to 6917

    Tam increases number of peoplemeters to 6917

    MUMBAI: Ratings measurement service Tam is in expansion mode. Earlier this month it came out with an Elite Panel for Mumbai and Delhi. The aim is to measure what the creme de la creme consume.

    Now it has increased the number of peoplemeters in the country. The number of meters have been increased from 4800 to 6917, a 44 per cent rise. The aim is to deepen the coverage to more towns.

    This Peoplemeter Update marks the second stage of the TAM expansion project. The first stage was executed to broaden the coverage from 5 states to 12 states but within the existing reporting stratum (0.1 Mn+ population stratum). The second stage is to deepen the coverage to more towns within the less than 0.1Mn+ stratum for all markets covered in stage 1.

    This expansion marks the conclusion of the second step of the entire expansion plan.

    In addition, improvements have been made in the design to take into account the changing demographic and media landscape that results in a higher precision of the viewership estimates.

    The number of cities Tam covers has grown from 73 to 151. In terms of expansion in the Metros are as follows: while earlier there were 450 homes measured in Mumbai now there are 495; in Kolkata the number has risen to 330 from 265. In Delhi it has risen from 425 to 470; in Chennai, Bangalore and Hyderabad it has grown from 255 homes in each of them to 280.

    In terms of how the sample sizes across markets were determined, Tam India CEO LV Krishnan says, “A range of factors influence the sample size allocation of the overall sample across markets. These include the desired depth of analysis, availability of sufficient sample sizes for commonly analysed target groups and a desired level of statistical precision.

    “While markets are analysed by two strata (1 million+ and 0.1 – 1 million) for sampling purposes the 0.1-1 million is broken into 0.1-0.5 mn and 0.5 mn – 1 mn. For the expansion, the 0.1-0.5 mn was broken up further into 0.1-0.2 mn and 0.2-0.5 mn.”

    In terms of the SEC distribution, 33 per cent of the sample homes measured in Delhi are SEC A. In Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai it is 25 per cent. The representation of SEC D and E is highest in Mumbai and Kolkata at 32 per cent. At an all India level it is 28 per cent for SEC D and E. SEC A and B have a 25 per cent representation each. SEC C has a 21 per cent representation.

    The presence of children was included as a new control parameter for the expansion. This paramater, Tam says, ensures that the proportion of homes in the sample with kids 4-9 years and 10-14 years matches that of the universe. In terms of new markets being introduced in the new Tam panel data, two changes have been seen at a market level.

    Firstly West Bengal 1mn+ is a new market strata that has emerged due to towns moving up to the 1mn+ population bracket. Then Rajasthan, which was earlier reported as Rajasthan 0.1mn+, has now split into a two market strata i.e. Rajasthan 1mn+ and Rajasthan 0.1-1 mn.

  • Horlicks ‘Wiz Kids Exam Ka Bhoot Bhagao’ initiative helps Mumbai kids to cope with exam pressure

    MUMBAI: GlaxoSmithKline’s health food drink, Horlicks has kicked off an on ground initiative to provide Mumbai students with exam and health tips as part of the ‘Horlicks Wiz Kids Exam Ka Bhoot Bhagao’ interactive sessions that prepares kids to cope with exam stress. The session commenced on 17 January and will be held for the entire week in other schools in Mumbai.

    This initiative by Horlicks, aims to help kids prepare better for exams, also provided parents, teachers and principals with ‘Exam Time Tips’ booklet on how to support children practically and emotionally during exam time – to ensure that children feel encouraged and get the right nourishment and atmosphere to study.

    Experts interacted with students at the ‘Exam Ka Bhoot Bhagao’ event throwing light on the importance of studying, modes of thinking and ways to recognize one’s study patterns for producing effective results. Exam tips were related to attention and concentration, concept of memory, tips and techniques on how to improve memory, methodology of reading text books better and test taking strategy. Health tips laid emphasis on diet, nutrition, sleep, exercise and relaxation, informs an official release.

    The week long event begun at Ramniranjan Podar School, however, students of the Naval Public School (Colaba), Cambridge school (Kandivali) and Oxford Public school will also be among the other schools to benifit from the ‘Exam Ka Bhoot Bhagao’ interactive session.

    GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare vice president marketing Shubhajit Sen said, “There is an ever increasing pressure of exams amongst students. This may also lead to declining results and self confidence in them. To cope with exam stress and fear, and to help students become sharper at studies, we have undertaken this initiative for students in India. Students can now prepare better for their exams by adopting exam tips online, on TV, radio, newspapers, magazines and through our ‘Exam Ka Bhoot Bhagao’ interactive sessions in schools.”