Tag: Viacom

  • Viacom in spat with Cablevision over fees

    Viacom in spat with Cablevision over fees

    MUMBAI: More than three million Cablevision customers may start 2013 without receiving 17 Viacom cable network channels as a result of the two parties‘ dispute over programming fees, The New York Post reported.

    The channel network and cable operator‘s five-year deal expires on 31 December and the former is now demanding an increase in fees in the renewed contract.
    Viacom‘s argument is that it accounts for 20 per cent of viewing but only eight per cent of Cablevision‘s overall programming fees, according to the publication.

    Earlier this year, Viacom was involved in a similar spat with DirecTV‘s which caused the operator‘s 20 million customers to lose Viacom‘s channels for nine days in July. The two parties were forced to reconcile after extensive discontent among viewers. Both sides suffered from the prolonged blackout, with Viacom losing ad revenue and DirecTV shedding subscribers. Its dispute over distribution fees with the Tribune Co. lasted more than two months and deprived customers in New York of local station WPIX 11.

    Viacom has been investing in programming to boost flagging ratings at its youth-oriented channels, home to popular shows such as "Teen Mom," "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and "SpongeBob Squarepants."

  • Viacom launches service to connect clients with specific audiences

    Viacom launches service to connect clients with specific audiences

    MUMBAI: Viacom has launched ‘Surround Sound‘, a new sales capability enabling advertisers to reach specific audiences with pinpoint accuracy on every digital platform of the company‘s media networks including MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central.

    Available from today, this service offers advertisers highly targeted, scaled media buys across nearly 100 million homes on-air, and more than 80 million unique visitors online as well as mobile and email users.

    The capability utilises Adobe® AudienceManager.

    Viacom Media Networks head of sales music and entertainment Jeff Lucas said, “Our brands excel at delivering highly targeted demos for advertisers, but ‘Surround Sound‘ takes that ability a big step further, by empowering us to connect clients with specific audiences wherever they are across our digital portfolio.”

    Viacom Media Networks head of sales Nickelodeon Group Jim Perry said, “With ‘Surround Sound,‘ we‘re offering advertisers the sustainable, scalable ability to reach very specific consumers across every screen we program, from television to online video, premium display, mobile and even email advertising inventory.”

    ‘Surround sound‘ utilises data management platform to help identify and reach key audience segments. It leverages proprietary anonymous first-party data from Viacom as well as anonymous data from trusted industry partners and providers around demographics, behaviour, geography, and purchase propensities.

  • ‘When you are a market leader, it’s necessary to shake things a little’ : Ashish Patil- MTV India GM and senior VP creative and content

    ‘When you are a market leader, it’s necessary to shake things a little’ : Ashish Patil- MTV India GM and senior VP creative and content

    MTV India was primarily known for music, comedy, spoofs and “Fully Faltoo” attitude. The team of Cyrus Oshirdar (creative and content), Cyrus Broucha and Cyrus Sahukar was giving its viewers a “no-tension” dose of comedy and music.

     

     

    In 2007, Viacom and Network18 got together to create a joint venture. What followed was the redrawing of the roadmap for MTV. The positioning changed and music became shorter in line with its new image of being a youth entertainment channel.

     

    The man in charge of this content revamp was Ashish Patil as he churned out shows that would stand the new look – Its My MTV. From Fully Faltoo to Kick Ass and from Bakra to Splitsvilla, MTV has scored points in segmenting, targeting and positioning for the youth.

     

     

    The channel has also extended its wings in the US, New Zealand and Australia.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Gaurav Laghate, MTV India GM and senior VP creative and content Patil says that the game has just started.

     

    Excerpts:

    Is the ongoing producer-plex owner’s tussle affecting MTV as there is no new music release to lap up for content?
    We have in any case reduced our music content as a strategic move. Moreover, whatever music we play is full length, which comes out after 1-2 months of release. So far we have enough of new music to run on the channel.

    Why are you going less on music and more on non-music content?
    We have repositioned ourselves as not just a music but a music-plus-masti (fun) channel. It is a youth adda (hangout) channel now. Last year we were playing approximately 70 per cent music content, which we have reduced to 45 per cent at present. By the end of this year, we will be having only 25 per cent of music content.

    What was the need for this change in identity?
    There was consumer as well as a business need. Research suggested that youth is looking out for much more than just music. Youth has needs ranging from style, fashion, romance, passion, thrill, and much more.

     

    And so far as the business goes, the music pie is limiting. Music as a commodity is playing everywhere; so eyeballs are limiting and revenues have hit a ceiling.

    Even the market leader in the music channel genre had to change?
    You have to grow the product. And it’s necessary to shake things a little or else the leader will also get stagnant. The world has gone too far and to get our core audience’s eyeballs, we have to lead the other mediums as well. Also a lot of emphasis is on packaging, looks and graphics, apart from content.

    So what is the new positioning of MTV?
    We have created a new category for ourselves where we are no longer a niche channel. Nor are we a general entertainment channel. We are laser focused on the needs of the youth and have evolved as a mass youth channel. Many players tried to copy us, but failed as it is a very difficult path to tread.

    Music as a commodity is playing everywhere. So eyeballs are limiting and revenues have hit a ceiling

    How will you describe your TG?
    Our core audience is the 18-21-year-olds. Within that demographic, it is the SEC A in the metros particularly Mumbai and Delhi. Our next target extension is viewers among the age group of 15-24 years, SEC AB 1 lakh towns, in the Hindi speaking markets. Beyond that, we look at the 12-35-year-olds (SEC AB, All India 1 Lac+ towns).

     

    This target audience is very fickle and impatient. If they don’t like something, they have multiple options to switch over to. And anything that catches youth eyeballs is competition for me. Be it malls, gizmos, movies, mobiles, ipods, internet, etc.

    So that is why you are making your presence felt on internet and other space?
    The intent is to take MTV to every place where the TG is. Be it web, mobile, on-ground, merchandise. It’s a circle of lead, reflect and affect – one leading to the other. I will follow my viewer everywhere. You see the kind of response we have on the Roadies community on Orkut. It has over 300,000 members now. We have tied up with PVR Cinema, Inox, T.G.I.F., cafes etc for our shows. Roadies merchandise is available in more then 20 categories. We are tapping audiences everywhere by reaching out to them.

    But don’t you think some of the content is not fit for small towns, or non-metros?
    I don’t think that content is not fit for people in the smaller towns. Youth everywhere have same aspirations; the core of youth is the same. So my content is appreciated throughout by my TG – be it metros like Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore or non metros like Gwalior, Indore, Chandigarh etc. Also, some of the content may be more evolved. But in such cases, I do have a simpler version on the same premise for mini metros or small towns. The idea is to have a spectrum of content for different people.

    Is your programming strategy confined to unlicensed thrill, living on edge and speed?
    Not just that. It is, of course, one part of it. But we have other shows like On The Jobs, which talks about alternative careers; ibibo Superstar (the making of stars); Splitsvilla (intense romance); Roadies (which has a cult following now); and who can forget MTV Bakra (known for its wit). Then we have spoof movies, which are well received.

     

    So my aim is to cater to all the needs of my TG. We are now building on our franchise. Earlier I had only Roadies as a fixed offering on Saturdays at 7 pm. Now I have shifted it to Sundays and got the highest opening for Splitsvilla season 2 on Saturdays.

    So you mean you are now getting appointment viewing?
    Absolutely. As I said, earlier we used to launch shows on Saturdays at 7 pm band. I had a great following there, courtesy Roadies. It was a gamble when I shifted it to Sundays, but it did well for us. Now I have viewers for Saturday as well as Sunday. Also, in December, I launched Haven @ 7 on weekdays. So I am taking baby steps to get more viewer attention. I am already getting more viewership than many general entertainment channels (GECs).

    So what are the plans ahead?
    As I said, I am taking baby steps. We have just started. From making just one Roadies two years back, we launched many new shows last year. This year, we will launch even more shows. Recently, with Force India we have launched The Fast and The Gorgeous and are coming up with Pulsar MTV Stunt Mania soon.

    How has the JV between Viacom and Network18 helped in MTV’s growth in India?
    In many ways. It has been a fabulous ride since the JV has been formed. It is in many ways kind of a vitamin supplement. Earlier, it was MTV and Nick supporting each other and suddenly I have the strength of a full network; it’s much more than just financial support.

     

    Also, both (Viacom and Network18), as players, are front-foot batsmen. It has put our transition in the fourth gear. Our efficiency has increased and so has our brand value, distribution, marketing, headcount and infrastructure.

    Have we seen MTV’s revenues grow over the last couple of years?
    We have doubled the revenues during this period. We are expecting a 30 per cent growth this year.

     

    Ad sales accounts for 65 per cent of our revenues, of which 5 per cent comes from international clients. Around 15 per cent comes from affiliates, which is also increasing. 15 per cent comes from Viacom Brand Solutions (client lead stuff, events and advertiser funded programming) like The Fast and The Gorgeorus, Stunt Mania etc. The remaining 5 per cent comes from L&M and movie previews (Ghajini).

     

    Also, we are opening up supplementary revenue streams through mobile, web, and even through ticker. Our ticker has a fan community on social networking sites and advertisers want to be there.

  • ‘It is better to play in the tier 1 GEC game and go out with full ammunition’ : Rajesh Kamat – Colors CEO

    ‘It is better to play in the tier 1 GEC game and go out with full ammunition’ : Rajesh Kamat – Colors CEO

    Viacom and Raghav Bahl-promoted Network18 are furiously working together to create an entertainment conglomerate in India. The central piece in their build-up plan is a Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) that would support other blocks like a Hindi movie channel and a clutch of regional entertainment channels.

     

    Colors has had a dream nine-month run, ending Star Plus’ nine-year rule to become the No. 1 GEC for two consecutive weeks. Puffed with big reality format shows and movies, the channel has made a mark with “disruptive” and “differentiated” content. Family dramas like Balika Vadhu, which are contrarian to Balaji Telefilms’ “K” soaps, have been lapped up by audiences.

     

    Driving Colors’ growth is Rajesh Kamat, the strategist behind the big bang theory who loves to fire at his enemies from all sides. Crafting a plan built on costly but calculated bets, Kamat has shown that a direct play in the tier I GEC space is safer than a cautious, cost-conserving approach. Playing in the tier II game can extend the channel’s break even by four more years while the revenue upside for the tier I GEC is huge, he says.

     

    No wonder Colors is eyeing a revenue of Rs 5 billion and a fourth-quarter break even this fiscal as the channel sits on a stable GRP (gross rating points) base of over 250.

     

    Timing has been key to Kamat’s success as has been the ability to take risks. When Colors launched last year, TV audiences were already showing fatigue symptoms with an overdose of look alike, urban soaps. The movie syndication business had also caught on, allowing Colors to line up a formidable “second run” movie strategy within reasonable costs. Studio18, a sister company engaged in the movie production and distribution business, also churned out hits during the year.

     

    Having spent his previous years at Rupert Murdoch’s Star India, Kamat has learnt the art of scaling up. He is ready to stitch advertising deals that would place Colors in the big league with revenues of over Rs 5 billion, kick in pay income, and take it to the international markets.

     

    The distribution deal with TheOneAlliance, which has Indian Premier League (IPL) content through Max channel, will help Colors in making a smooth transition to pay. Besides, the deal guarantees the Viacom18 channels of Colors, MTV, Nick and VH1 a subscription revenue of Rs 3 billion over three years.

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Sibabrata Das, Colors CEO Kamat talks about the challenges that Hindi GECs face in a ring that has three close competitors.

    Excerpts:

    How significant a feeling is it to end Star Plus’ nine-year rule as the No. 1 Hindi GEC and yet continue to fight weekly for the top slot?
    For a challenger brand like Colors, it was important to breach the psychological barrier and feel life at the top. But we realise we are entering into a bloodbath as there would be no undisputed leader in the Hindi GEC space. From now on, it will be a weekly battle as Star Plus will not give up its nine-year rule so easily. Zee TV is also in the race. Like in the US, we are headed for a confused leadership status with dependence on spikes and seasonality.

    So you are still in an uncomfortable position?
    Not really. We have reached a stable base of 250 GRPs (gross rating points) from our programming. And we are not banking only on Balika Vadhu, which is the biggest perception driver show for us, for our ratings. We have a basket of shows that rate over 3 TVR. With movies, we are stable in the 280-300 GRP band.

    There are other healthy indicators. Our reach at 73 per cent is higher than that of Star Plus. Our prime time GRPs are also higher.

    Movies seem to be a divider between Star Plus and Colors at this stage. But isn’t this a fickle GRP base?
    Even if we fall by half, we will have around 25 GRPs from movies. And then there will be spikes. We have created a stable base for us. The idea is to grow from this.

    Are you in a position now to play first run movies on your channel?
    Absolutely. After establishing a base of over 250 GRPs, we are in a position to upgrade to a first run of movies on Colors as we can monetise our investments on such big premieres. Our plan is to have at least eight premieres in a year. Ghajani and Jaane Tu…Ya Jaane Na are steps in this direction.

    There is also the flexibility of launching the afternoon band. When will you be playing this card?
    We do 22-23 hours of weekly programming as against 33-38 hours done by Star Plus and Zee TV. Our weekends are not full blown and we have the afternoon band to create. So when the need arises, we can increase original content on our channel to drive in more GRPs.

     

    We were actually tempted a couple of months back to firm up our afternoon strategy. But we decided instead to replace our weaker prime time content at 9.30 pm and 10.30 pm as they were not delivering to the potential. The rejig strategy worked for us as Naa Ana Is Desh Ladoo started delivering. Since the afternoon slots are also doing well with repeats, we can launch an assault with original shows when the need arises. That part of the arsenal we are yet to use.

    After establishing a base of over 250 GRPs, we are in a position to upgrade to a first run of movies as we can monetise our investments. Our plan is to have at least eight premieres in a year

    Stable GRPs, movies, afernoon band yet to launch – are these the selling points to advertisers?
    When we launched last year, we were clear in the head that we would only do short term ad deals and at rates we were comfortable with. The channel, in any case, was growing and we believed our product offering was worth much more. We did not want a hangover of the old deals. Come 1 April and we are operating on effective rates which is clearly off old deals. It’s a free run this year and we have stitched new deals at rates which have come from a position of over 250 GRPs. Yes, we tell advertisers that we are stable on GRPs, we have 14 hours to launch, and we have these rockets in form of reality shows which are to come up each quarter.

    Is Colors targeting a revenue of Rs 5 billion and a fourth-quarter break even this fiscal?
    I can’t comment on the financials, but monetising of GRPs is our primary task now. This year will become the base and benchmark for us. For our big properties, we have already signed with Idea as title sponsor for Khataron Ke Khiladi (Fear Factor) and Maruti Suzuki for India’s Got Talent.

    Is it true that Colors’ programming budget this fiscal is Rs 4.25 billion and the running cost is at 20 per cent above rival GECs?
    When I was at Coca-Cola, I learnt how they used to pump in 70 per cent of their ad budgets in seasons. That is what we did; our annual budget is like the other big GECs while the perception we have built in the market is that we spend big monies on content. You either pump in the money upfront or spread it out. When we launched, we had Khataron Ke Khiladi and backed it with Bigg Boss 2. We fired two missiles, hoping at least one would hit. As it turned out, both became hits. And we used Akshay Kumar for our content, which also helped in marketing our channel. Obviously, non-fiction can’t sustain on weekdays. But we used Bigg Boss to build Uttaran.

    Also, our concept of cost control is reducing the number of hours of original content. Unlike conventional media thinking, we provided alternative time slots for our prime time content and introduced repeats in the afternoon band. At a time when there is so much of audience fragmentation, this worked and maximised our reach. The afternoon repeats got us good ratings.

    Considering the Hindi GEC ecosystem, is it not strategically imperative to go for a big bang theory than fiddle in the mid-rung space with low costs?
    It is better to play in the tier 1 game and go out with full ammunition than take a cost-conserving approach and prepare for gradual growth. The revenue upside is much higher if you have touched 250 GRPs. By playing in the tier II race, you are effectively pushing back your break even by four more years. You would probably save in programming costs, but distribution expenses would be the same for both the players. And if you haven’t quickly moved from a consumer push to a pull situation, you would continue to pay high on distribution. In case of Colors, we will be actually reducing our payout to cable operators in the second year. On top of that, we could turn into a pay channel.

    Were you not fortunate in that viewers were looking for a change from the ‘K’ soaps (Kyunki…, Kasauti… and Kahani…) and nobody was willing to take a risk in providing differentiated content?
    The time was favourable in that there was a fatigue built in for the kind of soaps that were running on Indian television. We made disruptive and differentiated content our main plank. We were willing to take a calculated risk; our concepts were different and on the riskier side. But they worked.

    Even the movie syndication business caught on at the time of your launch. How helpful was this?
    The strategy was to go second run on movies. We could play on that gameplan because the syndication market opened up. This made it feasible for new players like us to keep our movie slot alive within reasonable costs.

    How was the content strategy drawn?
    Broadly, between 7 to 9 pm, we placed shows that had strong appeal among non-metro masses as that is the time zone which attracts viewers from smaller towns. The 9-10 pm slot had content tailored for smaller towns as well as metros as there is an overlap of viewership. The more urban shows like Fear Factor and Sajid’s Superstars were placed at 10 pm.

     

    More specifically, we knew there was a vacuum, particularly among the Gujarati viewers, in the 8.30 pm slot after the exit of Kasauti. We placed Jai Shri Krishna (JSK) in that time slot. we worked out such micro details while planning our programming grid.

    When Star Plus launched Kaun Banega Crorepati, it built lead-in slots. Wasn’t your strategy different in that your showpiece programme Khataron Ka Khiladi was at 10 pm while the other main shows were before that?
    We couldn’t have launched Khataron Ke Khiladi at 9 pm; it had to be 10 pm. It was our differentiator show and Akshay Kumar gave it the scale.

     

    Our first task was to get noticed, invade into single TV households in prime time, and shake up the house. Outside this, we built slots through a different kind of programming slant. Balika Vadhu, for instance, was a family drama based on child marriage and carried a social message. What followed was the lead-in concept. We now own 8-9 pm and 10-10.30 pm.

    Any specific strategy for timing the launch of Colors on 21 July?
    Since IPL (Indian Premier League) was in April-May, we knew it would disrupt GEC viewership. We saw that as an opportunity to launch Colors post-IPL. It was also 2-3 months before the Diwali season, a hot time for advertisers. That gave us a window to settle in.
    The market talks of Rs 800 million as your distribution cost for the first year?
    Without getting into figures, let me tell you that we took a conscious decision to take space on cable networks next to Star Plus and Zee TV. That outlet was reasonably expensive, but it gave us strategic reach.
    Why did you decide on TheOneAlliance to distribute Colors when it turned pay?
    Besides the monetary offer (rumoured to be Rs 3 billion over three years for the Viacom18 channels of Colors, MTV, Nick and VH1), it was the IPL that swung the deal in favour of TheOneAlliance. Since we turned pay on 1 April and the IPL kicked off on 18 April, it was a good window to make the transition and yet not see impact on the ratings.
    Will there be any revenue inflow from subscription this fiscal or will it be offset against carriage fees?
    We may not see any net gain from pay revenues this fiscal, but we have a step up plan and the second and third years would be crucial. For the first six months, in fact, what we payout will be more than what we collect. If the cable operator switches us off, he will stand to lose more. This will act as a disincentive for him to switch us off. Importantly, we have done almost 80 per cent of the cable deals.
    Is Colors planning to spread its wings outside India?
    We will be launching in the US within 3-6 months. We then plan to reach Dubai before we land in the UK. International revenues fall straight into the bottomline.
    Colors has also opened up syndication revenues with JSK being licensed to Raj TV. How aggressive will you be on this?
    We are looking at syndicating our other shows like Balika Vadhu. We are getting queries from Doordarshan and other networks for some of our content. We are also eyeing the global syndication market. But we have to be careful and conscious that this doesn’t jeopardise our beam syndication plans.
    Will Viacom18 launch a Hindi movie channel and enter into regional language channels?
    Before diversifying into new products, we want to build on Colors. We want the international distribution and market to stabilise before we launch anything. We will prioritise then, based on which is the most growing pocket – a Hindi movie channel or regional channels. That is a call we will take at that stage.
  • ‘With the launch of the kids channel, we are ready to scale up the verticals’ : Rajiv Sangari- Spacetoon India MD & CEO

    ‘With the launch of the kids channel, we are ready to scale up the verticals’ : Rajiv Sangari- Spacetoon India MD & CEO

    It has been a long wait outside the ring. After building up verticals in the licensing, publishing and merchandising space, Spacetoon has launched its kids channel to combat against multinationals like Turner, Walt Disney and Viacom in the tough Indian market.

     

    A licensing and merchandising deal with Emerging Media, owner of the IPL winning team Rajasthan Royals, has put the company on a totally different pedestal. Talks are also on with a few other sporting goliaths to expand the L&M portfolio.

     

    Spacetoon Kids TV, however, will evolve as the prime property and will guzzle over 50 per cent of the company’s Rs 1 billion investment plan.

     

    In India, the group has floated Kids Media India (KMI), a company that will take care of the TV and licensing business. Kids Animation India is the other arm that will look after the publishing activities.

     

    The shareholding has also been restructured with Japanese firm Animation International holding 51 per cent stake in KMI. Dubai-based Spacetoon Media Group holds the remaining with a small stake as sweat equity resting with Spacetoon India managing director and CEO Rajiv Sangari.

     

    In an interview with Indiantelevision.com’s Anindita Sarkar, Sangari talks about the company’s growth plans across the verticals.

     

    Excerpts:

    What took you so long to launch in India?
    Since the germination of the idea way back in 2004-end, we have spent a long time testing the market. As the Indian economy and the TV industry went on a zoom and prices skyrocketed, we had to rethink our strategies as we were going to occupy a niche space. With distribution, marketing and all kinds of operational spends going beserk as Hindi general entertainment channels got launched, it would have made no business sense to launch a kids channel. Frankly, it would have been a business hara-kiri. Now the prices have corrected and things are much more in control. Despite an overall bleak scenario and a tough advertising market, launching at this moment definitely makes more business sense.

    The shareholding for the Indian venture has changed with Japanese firm Animation International (AI) holding 51% stake in Kids Media India. Was the delay partly caused by this?
    Both Spacetoon and AI have relations since the last 25 years and they have been partnering and co-operating with each other on many businesses together. Hence, changing of the hands in shareholding doesn’t have much to do with any kind of interest level subsiding or increasing. It is a strategic move by both partners of re-strategising and restructuring their operations amongst themselves. Most of the East and South East Asian operations, for example, will be monitored by AI, while most of the Western Asian, European and Eastern European operations will come directly under Spacetoon. I would term this as strategic restructuring.

    Spacetoon was in talks with investors to raise money. Is that plan still on?
    Spacetoon was in talks with a few players and we had already determined 3-4 of them at various stages of our discussions. But most of them wanted to basically take advantage of the position of our fund raising, rather than sharing our passion. Either they wanted majority stake or at some point they wanted us to exit. This did not go with our strategy for India.

     

    Though we realise that for taking our verticals to the next level we require some support, we are equipped as of now to handle it on our own. But if we get an extra push in terms of a partner who can value our strength, experience and hard work which has gone behind making the company and the brand what it is today, we will definitely look at the possibility. India’s economy and retail can only grow and we have 360 million kids. We require a partner who thinks and aligns with us for long term.

    Did you first focus on developing the licensing, publishing and merchandising platform before stepping into the kids broadcasting space?
    That is the business model Spacetoon has followed in other markets. We are doing the same thing here. For over a period of 3 years now, other than TV launch, we have successfully launched our licensing, publishing and merchandising divisions and are very soon launching our own IP programmes.

     

    We are glad that we did not divest then. We have done the tough job of laying out a platform for licensing and merchandising. After the launch of the kids channel, the time has come for us to scale up the verticals.

    How much is Spacetoon investing in India?
    We plan to invest Rs 1 billion over three years. Out of this, about 50 per cent upwards will be consumed by the TV operations.

    Why did KMI decide to launch a kids channel when the genre has actually shrunk a bit last year and the revenue size at Rs 150 crore is still too small to take in so many players?
    We need to realise that kids business is not driven completely by TV broadcasting. Unlike general entertainment channels, ad revenue is important but not the only source of income in the kids genre. It’s always the ancillary units like merchandising, publishing, etc. which will help it take to the next level. And TV business is a long term game.

    Kids business is not driven completely by TV broadcasting. Ad revenue is important but not the only source of income in the kids genre. It’s always the ancillary units like merchandising and publishing which will help it take to the next level

    Earlier, Spacetoon Kids TV was looking at investing Rs 250 million for carriage in delivery platforms such as cable TV networks and DTH. However, that number has been scaled down. Why?
    Haven’t others too? It’s simple, the market today doesn’t allow us or anyone to do so. I hear from some sources that most of the top to small TV channels have slashed down their distribution disbursements. And, especially in kids genre, you just can’t support such a large distribution budget.

    The channel is still not well distributed. How are you planning to tackle this and by when do we see it more visible?
    Our focus is not only to tap the Tam cities but also other markets. As of today, our estimates are that we have penetrated over 10 million homes and we expect to do over 15 million by the middle of this year. By year-end, we should be touching 25 million homes. And, don’t forget, it’s only four weeks since we launched. We realise it will take minumum 3-4 months before we start getting visible across all markets.

    What are the distribution deals you with stitched with the MSOs and the DTH operators?
    We are in talks with the direct-to-home operators. As far as cable goes, we are available in some Hathway Cable & Datacom networks. We have also signed up other cable operators, particularly for their digital viewers. Distribution is a gradual build-up.

    Spacetoon Kids TV will have to jostle with seven existing channels to tap into 360 million kids in India. How do you find space in this tough market?
    Each one of us has a different style, programming methodologies, and formats. Our channel will be focusing a lot on moral and social values, packaged with lots of entertainment content.

    What is the different positioning you are taking?
    Spacetoon will divide the day into 10 planets. Unlike running half-hour episodes back to back, we will be giving the kids a mix of several things. There will be fillers which are moral based, messages, ads, packaging, promos, etc. This will ensure a different look during the whole day.

    Do we also get to see localised content as part of the programming mix?
    We definitely are looking towards creating localised programming very soon. This will be mostly live action-based programming. There are discussions going on with various producers to this effect.

    What are your other marketing plans and spends for the channel?
    We will be creating a touch base by tapping thousands of schools in India. We realise that if we have to tap the minds of the kids, there is no better place than their learning ground – school. We are creating a very good value-based school-contact programme, a key area where most of our energy is going to be focused in the first year.

     

    We will also be having events from April onwards in high public areas like malls.

    What is the revenue Spacetoon is projecting and how does it break up in terms of the channel and other verticals?
    I would not want to put across numbers now. Nobody can predict the forthcoming financials in today’s market. But our major revenue driver will be merchandising, which is in full throttle. Following that are our publishing and licensing activities. As for TV revenue, we are expecting it to start from the later part of the year. It will take us some time to penetrate the market and grab space in the minds of the kids.

    What are your expansion plans in terms of licensing and merchandising?
    We have tapped over 69 licensees in the last 14 months. These are translating into products that will get into the market during the course of this year. We already represent some top companies in the world for licensing and there are few more coming our way in the next few months to make our portfolio more robust and meaningful.

     

    We observed that our portfolio was tilted more towards the boy category. But now with Hello Kitty and Garfield coming our way, I think we have one of the best characters in the girls genre.

    What are your plans with Rajasthan Royals?
    We are in hot pursuit to come out with products before the first week of April when the IPL kicks off. We have already worked out our strategies to tap the right licensees who will be able to add value to this fantastic brand on the ground level through merchandising.

     

    We have a three-year deal with Emerging Media and are targeting Rs 200 million of retail business in the first year. Since the time is very short, we are channelising all our resources towards this.

     

    We are also in discussions with few more goliaths from other sports, especially big international clubs. We hope to stitch deals with some of them soon.

  • ”Music channels need to differentiate themselves’ : Amit Jain- MTV India managing director

    ”Music channels need to differentiate themselves’ : Amit Jain- MTV India managing director

    Viacom’s channels in India have not had an easy time in the last couple of years. For starters, the music genre has been stagnating in terms of viewership. Nick, which is being given a push now, had also failed to compete with the likes of Turner and Disney.

    The company’s recent focus has been to improve operating margins by removing unproductive costs. It is also looking at its brand solutions business as a way forward.

    Indiantelevision.com’s Ashwin Pinto caught up with MTV India MD Amit Jain to find out more about the company’s growth plans.

    Excerpts:

    MTV globally has positioned itself as a brand solutions provider. What is the strategy to transpose that to India?
    As a backgrounder, we have brands in the music, kids and entertainment space. The challenge is to evolve this into a business model which is viable, profitable and works in the long-term. MTV globally is different from other channels. We don’t believe that we simply air content. We are brands. Our channels stand for a specific brand promise to a specific audience.

    We are not about simply putting a pipe out and putting in content that tests well. We have a whole consumer focus which is investment in consumer insight, investigating tastes and preferences of audiences, their lifestyles. We are then able to take decisions based on insight as opposed to taking a show concept and doing research.

    We looked at whether we could take the attitudes of our listeners which is talent, careers and getting double big results in half the time and use that as an insight into our positioning and channels.

    You have brands, research and most importantly in-house creativity. A typical channel thinks of a show concept and gives it out to a production house.

    We, however, have a deep rooted philosophy where we create our own content. 90 per cent of our content is in-house and this allows us to get more aggressive in our programming. We have only outsourced news from a learning perspective. You have everything from A-Z under one roof. On Nick, while we haven’t done local productions before we now have the confidence to do it ourselves.

    Finally instead of being space sellers our team over a period of time has been very client focussed in terms of offering solutions and client integration. While everybody does it here you have a small repertoire of clients. Our managers sit down and discuss with them. They are invited to meetings.

    Agencies take us for client meetings. We are invited to talk about youth branding. We are in a position to understand consumers and clients requirements when we create solutions in-house. We are not a middleman who puts things together and gives it somebody else.

    We use our VJs, events, international properties to create solutions. We are in a position to create value for clients that goes beyond plain vanilla advertising.

    In this manner, we are feeding of our own competence. Viacom Brand Solutions is a premium service for select clients. We are not going out there and making pitches. We work with clients who seek us out and want to do innovations. Our top 10 clients want to work with us in a more effective manner.

    When was the service launched and who are the clients?
    We launched it in January. We have a roster of over five clients. We have worked with Cadbury’s, Unilever, Nokia. The most interesting one was what we did for xBox.

    xBox invited us to popularise the concept of gaming. With MTV we did a short film. It was featured on MSN’s desktop ads. VH1 created modified videos which had gaming characters. Nick had Jimmy Neutron making gaming simple for children. We extended this to the web and now we are looking at other applications. Nokia wanted to position a phone brand strongly in the music space. We tied up with a band pentagram and they gave us the music score. We invited user generated content and a video was to be created. We were stunned at the sheer creativity of untrained minds. The rub off that VHI and Nokia got through the advertising, on the website was good. VH1 did a creative job of making the first user generated music video in the country. Any of around 50-60 entries could have been used.

    Cadbury’s was very different. They wanted to do an innovation around Bytes. It launched with a new package and on purchase of the package it gave the consumer an opportunity to download an MTV ringtone.

    It brings together our expertise in partnerships in the mobile space, our creative expertise. We got seven mobile operators for this deal and around 85-90 per cent of the country’s mobile users were covered by the promotion. Cadbury’s also asked us to work with agency and create a commercial spot. This is an A-Z solution. The technical delivery across different platforms was very good. We had some operators calling up and complaining that the download of the ring tone was not working.

    Our guys were scrambling in places like Madhya Pradesh where the ringtone was not activated on Idea Cellular. There were tense moments but when it came together it rocked. Most recently we worked with HLL. This was Lux Body Wash. They worked with our team to create music videos. They wanted to own the space of dancing, music. We created a music video for them based on their brand positioning. The music video is called Friday Night Fever. The song was written in-house and produced within our own studios. They have asked to make one more video and this time around we are working with an internationally famous VJ. We have international scriptwriters. While it is early days if clients are saying that they want to do more, it is a pretty good report card. We have three more upcoming projects.

    So a recent media report that says that MTV is looking to outsource ad sales is rubbish?
    Yes! You could not have summarised it better. I don’t know where that came from. It doesn’t make logical sense. The beauty of the Brand Solutions division is that we are not in conflict with anyone. The client and media agency welcome us. We are in a joint venture with the creative agency. It is a truly collaborative effort and we are not substituting anyone at anytime. Brand managers constantly look at ways to activate consumers in a unique way. There aren’t too many options of activating consumers in a relevant manner. We offer solutions to address youth and kids. The solution will never be mass market though.

     

    MTV globally is in restructuring mode. Is this impacting India in any way?
    We now report directly to MTV international. Earlier we reported to London. Bob Bakish who is the head of MTV International is my boss. There is better focus and we get a lot of support from MTV International. For a lot of our brand solutions we are getting excellent help from our global digital team. There is a lot of sharing of experience.

     

    Could you talk about the new team that has been put in place?
    This is my favourite topic. The big challenge is that while we have always had a creative team, how do you convert it into a business? We have put in place a completely empowered matrix structure. There are three general managers. They are Ashish, Keertan and Nina. Then you have functional experts – head of ad sales, distribution. The general manager and functional expert jointly run the channel. This is the innovation that we have brought in. I do not make too many decisions.

    I set the policy and hire people. My job is to drive the culture and set a course for the future direction. I look at the vision three months to a year. We are a collaborative organisation. I run a skip level lunch for those who have been with the company for a couple of months. There are no bosses and no hierarchy. Everybody for a secretary to a general manager attends the lunch. We have freewheeling dialogue about how the experience has been. We are a young organisation. All our general managers are in their mid-30s. Sanjeev Hiremath and myself are the only 40 plus grey hairs in this organisation.

    One of MTV’s key goals globally is to increase operating margins. What is the gameplan in this regard in India?
    It is simple. Identify unproductive costs and convert them into productive costs. Drive the yields. We used to outsource 40 per cent of production, editing and post production work. We have invested in an integrated production and editing facility. The easiest thing that I see people do is outsource jobs that they do not want to do. That is not what we are doing. We are among the most cost effective content producers in the country today. We also cut costs. Last year the entire leadership team including myself did not stay in a five star hotel or fly business class. While these measures will not affect the bottomline, they are symbols of the importance of belt tightening.

    We took out overheads and invested them back into the business. We focussed on remunerative clients. We were not afraid of letting clients go who were not paying us a remunerative rate. We improved our client mix in a challenging year. We brought down our inventory by 30 per cent as we wanted to clean the environment. We took down our inventory and took up our use. We now have a strong revenue line on the back of less inventory, We are looking at a high double digit revenue growth.

    Tam data indicates that ratings for music channels are falling. What is the way forward for MTV?
    This is the most important question. The genre has been stagnating for quite a while. So what do you do about it? There is a lot of fragmentation happening in this genre. Last year four more music channels launched. We have held on to our share. Now you have 16 music channels. Typically the leader gets affected. We have however managed to avoid that.

    In difficult times Ashish and his team have done a creditable job in keeping up in the midst of competitive pressures. After eight years what generally happens is that new entrants take bites out of the leader. It is never number three or four that is hit. We however have not been hit despite being the leader. We are sitting on 34 per cent of viewership.

    A few things need to happen. From an industry point of view music channels need to differentiate themselves. This is critical. Being the leader, we have to show the way. Consumers listen to Bollywood music. You cannot be presumptuous and tell them to listen to other stuff like ghazals instead of Bollywood music. Led by consumer insight, we found that for youngsters getting up in the mornings is the most dreary part of the day. Getting a lift is very important.

    So we launched MTV Kickass Mornings. It starts with a high energy promotion with two ninjas. We have hits, humour, horoscopes and health. Most content here is audio driven. For instance health tips like how to cut down on spicy food, how much water to drink are spoken. Whatever you are doing, you will not miss out.

    Music channels get 30 second, 60 second clips as an entry point. As they do not have to pay, they are happy to play them. We are investing in content though. We are doing full length music videos. Thanks to our relationship with music labels we normally get a first look. The entire Kickass Mornings is about new music. From 100 videos a maximum of 30 are chosen. We are offering a newer and richer music experience than anybody else. And we are packaging the whole proposition. MTV helps your day get brighter and better. This is our message.

    We also recently started Soundcheck. As a leader we want to take a call and put our reputation on the line by saying what works and what does not. It is a music ratings service. There are speakers that determine the rating. Music experts are helping us make these choices as to what is emerging music as opposed to what is selling. We are not afraid to take on big names saying that their music is absolute rubbish. Some popular videos have been thrashed by us.

      http://www.indiantelevision.com/sites/drupal7.indiantelevision.co.in/files/styles/large/public/Amit%20copy.jpg?itok=e0oJYruk

    How important is MTV’s reality portfolio in the programming mix and is it mostly males tuning for this?
    Research shows that youth are tiring of fiction. They genuinely see soaps as there is no alternative. If they are given quality programming in their space they will switch despite the presence of single TV homes. Last year we took a punt on ramping up Roadies. There was an 18 city audition and covered 3600 km from Kerala to Kashmir down to Sikkhim. It was niot stage managed. We did not handpick good looking faces.

    There were kids selected by the sheer dint of their talent. We had a fantastic partnership with Hero Honda. Their ability to manage large selection was invaluable. The show had a rating of 1.9 in the metros which is really good for a special interest channel. The Roadies finale got a rating of six. Reality among the urban youth is a conceopt that will work really well.

    How would you describe your relationships with the Indian music labels and film producers who always want more in terms of license fees?
    We have a win-win relationship with them. A lot of labels look at us as an extension of them. That is because we are careful about partners. We see ourselves as a marketing arm. If you look at the likes of Yash Raj Films most of them give us a first look.

    We premiered the making of Tara Rum Pum on MTV. If it is in the youth space, film producers give us a first look. We are not victims of hard bargaining. They see the value we deliver in marketing to the right audiences. We do not have the buyer seller relationship. It is a genuine partnership.

    Could you talk about how taking up social causes like Aids has helped boost MTV’s brand image and perception?
    In terms of perception it come down to whether it is fun and frolic or does MTV have a larger meaning. It adds a reason for our existence. We are now going into an additional initiative and we are taking up the cause of illegal human trafficking on an international level across borders. We are looking to build awareness around that.

    The Indian government recently banned FTV and earlier AXN on the grounds of obscene content. What steps has MTV taken to ensure that its music videos and shows do not offend anyone?
    I must admit that early last year we faced this challenge. We got a notice. Our response was to fly down and apologise. We promised that it would not happen. We later told them why it would not happen.

    The entire MTV team showed them a new system that has been put in place. Since that incident the Ministry has complimented us for the work that we have done.

    I would appreciate your views on the proposed content code.
    This should be formulated by dialogue involving all parties. Accountability should not rest with one party. Besides the broadcaster the content cerator should also be held accountable.

    Could you elaborate on Nick’s strategy to challenge Turner and Disney?
    I am a believer in doing the basics and not trying to do too many things at one time. We will not take on Disney in the South. We have to be a serious player among the first two to three channels in the Hindi Speaking Markets. Now we are not yet there. But six months back we were the number seven market player. Now we are going to be number four.

    In six months the stickiness on Nick has doubled. The time spent has moved form the 50’s to the 90’s. Distribution, time spent, promos are in place. Now we are focussing on marketing and brand building. In the last four months a strong brand building promos are in place. They are not multi crore promos. We did a Bakra Pakdi initiative and got 80,000 entries.

    Nick has appropriate and safe content. We take our responsibility as a broadcaster seriously. We avoid violence. We are the safest babysitter available. If a mother is to leave her child in front of the television it would most likely be Nick. I can say that with confidence. We like to be the best destination for comedy. So Nick is about fun, smiles and seen from a child’s point of view. I would be surprised if we are not number three by the end of the year.

    Has the deal for ad sales with NDTV worked?
    Well our MTV and VHI teams have fared so well people wondered what we were doing. Here is where I come from. When you grow a business you need a portfolio approach. You have to make choices.

    Strategy is about what to do and what not to do. That is what I tell my team. You cannot do a little bit here, a little bit there and hope to succeed. Last year people were shocked that nick did not invest in marketing. We were focussed on building up content.

    Now in the priorities of Nick do we want to make a multi crore investment in a sales team or do we want to put the same money into brand building? We have chosen to do the latter. The deal with NDTV allows us access to several hundred clients for a share of revenue. We have limited resources and we decided to build the brand and let an expert handle client management.

    How is VH1 faring?
    It is a uniquely different brand in the Western music and lifestyle space. There is no brand close to it in this space. BH1 is delivering the highest quality audience in the country. While it may be small it delivers the highest incidence of car, refrigerator, mobile owners etc. We target a high propensity to consume buyers. Clients get no wastage. Its wastage factor is the lowest in the industry.

     

    On the distribution front what progress has been made to boost the reach of the channels across Asia?
    When we launched in Pakistan late last year people were sceptical. But if you look at it over the last three years with the growth in the Pakistan economy siome disposable income has come into the hands of the youth.

    Economic growth leads to a more Westernised consumption culture. Over the last three to four years the McDonalds, KFCs, Pepsis, Cokes and mobile operators have opened the doors of consumer culture. Their economy is growing as fast as ours. This has formed a middle class.

    The television industry in Pakistan is ad driven. If you do not have consumption expenditure among a large audience you cannot have an ad sales proposition. MTV was also waiting to have enough content to have a sustainable 24 hour channel. Their music video content is as good as ours. Sometimes it is better. We have Indus Television as our partner. We did research about the brand MTV. Will it be rejected? Are there going to be any negative connotations by some elements of society?

    The consequences have been positive. We trained the Pakistan team in terms of promotions, packaging.

    Then we launched Nick in Pakistan with Ary. It launched this year in English. Our markets are all licensing deals except for Pakistan which is ad driven. The tourism economy has helped us grow in the Maldives. A lot of our revenue comes from the resorts there.

    With India going through digitisation with Cas and DTH the time seems ripe to bring in more channels. Are there any plans in this regard?
    We are waiting for the digital platforms to consolidate. Let DTH reach four million homes and then we will examine options. Comedy Central is one channel I would look at bringing in. Spike TV is a channel for men is another as it is a clear differentiator. There is a correct time to do things.

    VH1 launched at the right time. I come back to the point about what I tell my team – strategy is not only about what to do. It is also about what not to do. In hindsight one can say that Nick should not have been launched so many years ago. If the management team at that time was not going to invest in it then the launch should have happened later. It is now that we are investing in it and giving it a clear direction and goals that it is moving towards.

  • Viacom to sell music publishing business

    Viacom to sell music publishing business

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate Viacom has decided to explore strategic alternatives to maximise the value of Famous Music, its music publishing business.

    It could sell the business. The company has retained UBS Investment Bank to act as financial advisor to assist in this process.

    Famous Music was founded in 1928 by Paramount Pictures’ predecessor, the Famous-Lasky Corporation, to publish music from its “talking pictures”. Today the firm says that it is one of the top 10 music publishers in the US, supplying music to a diversified range of global media.

    Its catalogue of more than 125,000 copyrights spans seven decades and includes music from films like The Godfather, Forrest Gump and Titanic, as well as classic television shows including The Brady Bunch, Cheers and the Star Trek franchise.

    Since 1992, Famous Music has moved into the mainstream of contemporary music with such platinum-plus acts as Shakira, Akon, Eminem and Busta Rhymes. Writers and producers on the Famous roster include Irv Gotti, 7 Aurelius, Linda Perry, Tia Sillers, Charlie Midnight, and Marvin Hamlisch.
     

  • Viacom’s revenues for the year rise 19% to $11.5 billion

    Viacom’s revenues for the year rise 19% to $11.5 billion

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate Viacom has reported financial results for the full year and fourth quarter ended 31 December, 2006.

    For the year, revenues were up by 19 per cent to $11.5 billion. Media networks revenues rose by seven per cent to $7.24 billion, led by an increase of 11 per cent in affiliate revenues to $2.03 billion.

    Global ad revenues were up six per cent to $4.29 billion, while ancillary revenues grew two per cent to $916 million.

    Viacom executive chairman Sumner M. Redstone, said, “Viacom delivered solid results for 2006, guided by a new management team under the leadership of Philippe Dauman, who has moved quickly to put the Company back on a steady path of success. I have great confidence that we will continue to build on the momentum of the last several months both in expanding our digital horizons and continuing to grow in traditional markets.”

    Viacom president and CEO Philippe P. Dauman says, “We are making significant progress financially and operationally to ensure that we thrive in all distribution channels, including the evolving digital marketplace. Financially, our 2006 performance was strong, with double digit growth in revenues and operating income and 16 per cent growth in adjusted net earnings per share.

    “During the first quarter of this year, we took decisive steps to deploy our capital in more productive ways, including restructuring our operations here and abroad. At the same time, we continued to introduce popular new programming on our linear channels, to expand our digital operations organically and to reach innovative agreements with new digital partners. 

    Additionally, we continue to expand on our position as a leading global provider of digital wireless video, and to innovate with new online sites and experiences.”

    In 2006, acquisitions contributed $125 million in incremental revenues to media networks. The increase of 46 per cent in film revenues to $4.38 billion in 2006 from $3.00 billion in 2005 principally reflected the acquisition of DreamWorks and distribution activities for DreamWorks Animation and the DreamWorks live-action library.

    This contributed $1.36 billion to 2006 revenues. Fourth Quarter revenues of $3.59 billion grew 32 per cent from $2.72 billion in 2005. Media Networks revenues rose by four per cent in the quarter to $2.08 billion from $1.99 billion in 2005 led by growth in affiliate revenues which were up 14 per cent to $532 million. Worldwide advertising revenues rose six per cent to $1.26 billion from $1.19 billion in 2005.

    Ancillary revenues declined 15 per cent in the quarter versus 2005 to $289 million, principally due to timing and mix of home entertainment releases. Acquisitions contributed $78 million in incremental revenues to Media Networks in the quarter. Film revenues doubled to $1.57 billion, with the acquisition of DreamWorks and the distribution activities for DreamWorks Animation and the DreamWorks live-action library films contributing revenues of $560 million.

  • Viacom partners with online global TV distribution platform Joost

    Viacom partners with online global TV distribution platform Joost

    MUMBAI: US media conglomerate Viacom and broadcast-quality Internet television service Joost have announced that Viacom will be a key content partner.

    It will offer a range of brands and programming for free to consumers on the Joost distribution platform.

    Under the agreement, Viacom’s divisions – MTV, Bet and Paramount Pictures – will provide television and theatrical programming on the Joost platform. Founded by Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis who were behind Skype, Joost is powered by an Internet platform that enables premium interactive video experiences while guaranteeing copyright protection for content owners and creators. The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Joost will allow users to have free access to thousands of programs and channels not readily available on the Web. Through Joost, viewers can watch programming from many of Viacom’s brands on their computers through a customizable platform with advanced television viewing features such as links that lead to more information or related websites based on the content; and a variety of plug-in applications, such as instant messaging, message boards, and news tickers.

    Currently available in limited beta, Joost combines TV and the internet by offering viewers a TV-like experience. Joost is the first online, global TV distribution platform, bringing together advertisers, content owners and viewers in an interactive, community-driven environment, according to an official release.

    MTV will offer shows, both past and present, including Laguna Beach, Beavis and Butthead, Real World. Comedy Central will feature episodes from Stella, CCP’s and Freak Show. Nickelodeon, CMT: Country Music Television, MTV2, Logo, Spike TV, mtvU, and Gametrailers.com will also provide content.

    VH1’s offerings will include episodes of Flavour of Love, Surreal Life and I Love New York.

  • MTV, Adobe showcase mobile applications at 3GSM conference

    MTV, Adobe showcase mobile applications at 3GSM conference

    MUMBAI: At the 3GSM World Congress in Spain US broadcaster MTV Networks and Adobe Systems are previewing new mobile media applications featuring exclusive MTV Networks programming and leveraging Adobe Flash technology.

    The mobile media applications, available later this year, will deliver music, comedy and entertainment content from the MTV, VH1, Logo and Comedy Central brands directly to handsets that support Adobe FlashCast.

    The new FlashCast channels are the latest example of the ongoing alliance between Adobe and Viacom. Last year the two companies announced that Adobe would serve as the preferred technology provider for rich media authoring tools and interactive online video solutions for Viacom’s extensive array of television, motion picture and digital properties.

    In September, a number of new casual games based on franchises like Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants and MTV’s Pimp My Ride were published as part of the Shockwave Minis launch using Adobe’s Flash Lite technology. Additionally, several of MTV Networks’ broadband channels – including COMEDYCENTRAL.com, MTV.com, VSPOT at VH1.com, LOADED at CMT.com, LogoOnline, and TurboNick at Nick.com – have since standardised on Flash technology to deliver streaming video.

    MTV Mobile Media senior VP Greg Clayman says, “The MTV, VH1, Comedy Central and Logo FlashCast channels that we are jointly demonstrating at 3GSM are indicative of the rich experiences that can be created on the handset when the power of programming meets the power of technology. With FlashCast technology, we’re able to create innovative mobile experiences that allow our viewers to connect with the music, comedy and entertainment programming they love.”

    Adobe senior VP mobile and device solutions Al Ramadan says, “Viacom is at the forefront of defining great mobile experiences and we are excited that our partner is choosing Flash to make it happen.

    “The first results of our partnership can be seen in our booth at 3GSM demonstrating our commitment to working closely together in the future to advance the innovation of mobile experiences.”

    Adobe’s FlashCast is a client-server solution that delivers mobile data experiences. Building applications with FlashCast technology gives MTV another option to quickly and easily extend the reach of its premium programming to the handset, connecting viewers with their favorite content wherever they are. The MTV FlashCast channel, for instance, features artist interviews, features and breaking stories from MTV News, as well as news for the game community.

    The VH1 application features the Best Week Ever blog and VH1 news; the Logo channel features its popular NewNowNext blog as well as programming from the recently acquired 365 Gay, After Ellen and After Elton web sites; and the Comedy Central FlashCast application features jokes, Booty Call pick-up lines, What’s Your Sign horoscopes and more.