Tag: Zhunj Marathmoli

  • Behind the scenes of ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    Behind the scenes of ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    MUMBAI: It’s a full plate and more for the cast and crew of ETV Marathi’s new show Zhunj Marathmoli as they travel the length and breadth of Maharashtra, fulfilling cultural tasks and braving temperatures of up to 47 degree celsius in certain parts.  

     

    So much so, not a single day has gone off without someone falling sick or getting injured. In fact, a doctor from Mumbai has been hired to be with the unit full time to take care of casualties.

     

    However, this has deterred neither the 14 contestants nor celebrity host Shreyas Talpade from making season one a grand success.

     

    “It didn’t come as a surprise to us that we will have to shoot in such high temperatures. We knew it would be excruciatingly hot,” says Talpade, who along with the participants have taken time out from 15 April to 2 June to shoot the show.

     

    90 technicians, including 11 from Ramesh Deo Productions (RDP) and the rest hired crewmen, are ferried from one location to another in 11 cars and buses. “The technicians are freelancers who have worked on shows like Roadies and Khatron Ke Khiladi. Our director of production (DOP) has done 11 seasons of Roadies,” says RDP director Ketan Mangaokar about DOP Sanjay Chawda.

     

    Each location is given four days’ time where the first two days are taken up by the production team to try out tasks and ensure their safety for the participants while shooting happens in the remaining two days, with two tasks per day. The day starts at 6:30am for the production team and 8:00am for the contestants, going up to 10:00pm or 11:00pm at times. Participants are allowed cell phones only on the days ‘task testing’ is done to avoid any kind of distraction.

     

    A 20-day recce was undertaken by Mangaokar, art director Sandeep Bhamkar and a channel representative before the show started. The team scouted the interiors for regions and tasks of interest. “First, we selected the regions and then found out their specialty by talking to the locals. Each task also has a substitute task but fortunately, we haven’t had to use any of those,” says Mangaokar.

     

    Of the 26 episodes, the 20 second one was shot at Ganpatipule in Konkan amidst soaring mercury levels coupled with intense humidity. A visit to the Ganpatipule set revealed nothing more than a patch of land near a hen house. Eight normal HD cameras were set around the frame and six GoPro cameras – hired from ColorPlus in Mumbai – were set inside the task zone. Of the eight HD cameras, one was a master frame focused on the entire set, another a wide-angle camera shot focused on Talpade, yet another a close-up of Talpade and the rest focused on the contestants.

     

    A sufficient number of good quality lapel microphones were used to capture sound on the set with normal ones given to the participants and two advanced ones given to Talpade for his solo link. No part of the episode was dubbed. By the same token, no part of the show has been dubbed.

     

    Also, video diaries were shot in between tasks, encapsulating contestants’ emotions. Additionally, the over the fly (OTF) or byte of the participant before he/she performs the given task was taken.

     

    For the hen-catching task at Ganpatipule, two cameras were placed atop a car for a higher view of the task area. “It’s a practical and cost effective measure as we don’t have cranes and jibs,” says RDP head of operations Rekha Vaid.

     

    The coordination of cameras was done by Chawda who says, “I have been working on similar shows for years so I am aware of the kind of shots that are required.” The show’s creative director is Santosh Kolhe, executive producer Praveen Das, production controller Manohar Desai, sound engineer Mushtaq Sheikh and art director Sandeep Bhamkar. Generally, once any footage is shot, it is transferred onto a hard disk and backup is taken.

     

    Judges for all the tasks are not from the Zhunj Marathmoli team but experts or panch hailing from that region who are either asked to observe the tasks live or watch recorded footage and offer inputs to Talpade. This over, the entire terabytes of footage is despatched to the Mumbai office for post production.

     

    Talpade motivates the team in his usual boyish manner. Not only does he deliver his dialogues but also improvises them. Zhunj is his way to connect to his Maharashtrian roots which he says he missed growing up as a Mumbai kid. He is in awe of the efforts the channel has taken for Zhunj Marathmoli. “You need guts to execute such a show. Constant travelling, setting up new locations, arranging for food and stay of so many people. The channel and production house are going to additional lengths to make the show different and innovative,” he says.

     

    According to sources, nearly Rs 6 to Rs 8 crore is being spent on the show which may not be too much but is definitely on the higher side, where the economics of Marathi television is considered.

     

    Khatron Ke Khiladi and Roadies have higher budgets but with Zhunj Marathmoli, ETV is trying to give viewers maximum quality with a minimum budget.

  • ETV Marathi ups the ante with ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    ETV Marathi ups the ante with ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    MUMBAI: ETV Marathi is all set to take viewers on a road trip during which 14 celebrities will be assigned cultural tasks to prove their Maharashtrian-ness. Starting 26 May at 9:00 pm, the channel hits the highway with Zhunj Marathmoli that will travel to 12 cities in the state with Shreyas Talpade as host.

    A co-production of Ramesh Deo Productions (RDP) and Logical Thinkers, the 26-episode show has already canned around 14 episodes in seven weeks. Tracking districts across Vidarbha, Konkan, Marathwada, Amravati and Khandesh, Zhunj Marathmoli will see two cultural tasks being executed by the contestants per episode. One participant will be eliminated every week and there will be two or three wild-card entries as well.

    Zhunj took more than six months of ideation while every one-hour episode takes two to three days of shooting and nearly a week of post production. 78 people from RDP are travelling with the participants and Talpade along with four Scarlett Red cameras and six GoPro cams.

    Says RDP producer Abhinay Deo, “In a very simple format, we are trying to show the stories of the 14 participants and Talpade as well as the region where we are shooting through each episode.”

    Comparisons with other shows have already begun but Deo says that once people see the first episode, they will know for themselves. The locations either depict specific cultures or are task or production-friendly. “In season one, we just about cover a third of the state and it will take three seasons for almost full coverage,” says Deo.

    Promotions for the show are taking place in stages. After the first teaser look, the show song was launched on the digital platform. A live Facebook video chat with Talpade has been arranged for next week. The show being youthful, disproportionately higher focus is on digital. Outdoor marketing has for now been fixed in Mumbai while the rest of Maharashtra is on the cards. The creative for the campaign is done in-house and planning executed by Vizeum.

    Budgets for the show, sources say, are approximately Rs 25 lakh to Rs 30 lakh per episode, putting the worth of the whole project at a whopping Rs 6 crore to Rs 8 crore. Ten-second ad slots are being sold for Rs 50,000, which is 30 per cent higher than ETV Marathi’s other flagship programme, Kon Hoeel Marathi Crorepati (KHMC) went for. Lunar footwear has come on board as associate sponsor while the hunt for a title sponsor is on.

    “The Marathi TV space is hugely undervalued. So we are investing in shows to get that up. A show like this couldn’t have been done by us last year but after successfully doing KHMC, we have proved ourselves,” says Viacom18 EVP and ETV Marathi business head Anuj Poddar.

    Talpade has the task of coming up with instant dialogues while the shooting is on. “This show is unlike a studio recorded show. Here, you have to know what exactly your contestants are feeling. For me, that’s my zhunj (fight). Only if someone is getting distracted and we have to get them back on track do I get a pointer or else, it is totally unscripted,” he says.

    For the celebrities Pandaharinath Kamble, Megha Sampat, Swapnil Bhutkar, Arti Solanki, Vikram Gaikwad, Hemlata Bane, Satish Dede, Parag Kanhere, Tyagraj Khandilkar, Deepti Devi, Megha Dhade, Ruchi Savaran, Manisha Kelka and Abhijit Thakur, it boils down to ‘aata mateech tharvel kas’ or ‘the land will decide our worth’.

  • ETV Marathi to replace ‘KHMC’ with new non-fiction show ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    ETV Marathi to replace ‘KHMC’ with new non-fiction show ‘Zhunj Marathmoli’

    MUMBAI: Sticking to its word of providing entertaining content to all kinds of audiences and focus on the youth, Viacom 18’s regional GEC ETV Marathi is all set to thrill the viewers with a new action road trip show called Zhunj Marathmoli.

     

    The title that is derived from an expression used for a cock fight in the interiors of Maharashtra means ‘fight for respect as a true Maharashtrian’ that will be proved through tasks to test the contestants’ grit and determination.

     

    The show will also be aired at the 9:00 pm slot post the end of Kon Hoeel Marathi Crorepati (KHMC) season two once the IPL fever settles down in May or June. Currently KHMC is aired on Mondays and Tuesdays. However, the days for airing the new show being hosted by well known Bollywood actor Shreyas Talpade has not yet been finalised.

     

    14 Marathi celebrity contestants will contest in the tasks that are rooted in the Marathi culture across 12 cities including Nashik, Latur, Vidharba etc. Well known production house Ramesh Deo Productions (RDP) is behind this show, the production for which will begin only next month. The ETV team had been working on the concept since the last four to five months. This will be the first show being produced by RDP for ETV after its acquisition by Viacom 18. Prior to the acquisition also it has done shows for the channel.

     

    Viacom 18 EVP and business head of ETV Marathi and ETV Gujarati Anuj Poddar says that the series has all the scale to draw the attention of the younger audiences along with maintaining the conventional regional GEC audiences as well. “With Zhunj Marathmoli we have continued with our intent of launching shows that break new grounds of innovation in the regional space, striking a balance between contemporary thought and traditional values. Shreyas has the attitude and the youthful appeal. He is a well known Marathi personality who is rooted in his culture and has also gone out and achieved things,” he says.

     

    Speaking on his debut role as host Shreyas Talpade said “Coming back to Marathi Television with a show like Zhunj Marathamoli that will take me closer to my roots is like coming back home. Apart from allowing me to exploit my adventurous streak & connect with the youth of Maharashtra, this show gives me a sense of immense pride. I have travelled across the length and breadth of Maharashtra before. This show has allowed me to understand and connect with my motherland”.