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  • MTV Movie Awards garner all time high online votes

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 01, 2002

    Online voting for this year‘s MTV Movie Awards has crossed the eight million mark, an all time high, says the channel. The figure represents an increase of 75 per cent over last year.
    Nominees for the 2002 MTV Movie Awards were chosen through a poll of MTV and MTV2 viewers, an official release says. MTV, MTV2 and MTV.com viewers, voted from 23 April till 18 May online via MTV.com or by telephone for selecting the winners.

    The eleventh edition of the show will be taped on Saturday at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles and will air on 6 June at 9 pm (ET/PT). A highlight of the show will be Kelly Osbourne performing her cover of Madonna‘s Papa Don‘t Preach for the first time ever. Actors Ben Affleck (The Sum of all fears), Vin Diesel (Boiler Room), Winona Ryder (Reality Bites) and Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly (A Beautiful Mind) are among the star-studded list of presenters. The show will be hosted by Jack Black and Sarah Michelle Gellar of Buffy: the Vampire Slayer fame.

    The show will be available to a potential viewing audience of over one billion people through MTV‘s 35 channels reaching 382.1 million households around the world as well as through syndication. MTV.com will feature convergent as well as original interactive programming.

    Official sponsors of the event include 7 Up, GM, Apple, Hyundai, Nike, Visa and Mars.

  • 'Russian Roulette' and weekend series to spice up Sony's programming

    An Indian version of Russian Roulette, the popular game of chance, and a weekend series from the Balaji stable on Son

  • CNBC launches second edition of Asia Business Leader Awards

    Business and financial channel CNBC in association with TNT, has invited entries for the second annual Asia Business

  • Raids put a stop to stealing of Ten Sports signals in Mumbai

    No more unauthorised reception of the FIFA world cup soccer.

  • McDonald's helps kids connect with soccer at World Cup

    Fast food giant McDonald's is helping children score big at the 2002 FIFA World Cup through a special programme which

  • CAS rollout must address credible monitoring of SMS: Dasgupta

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 31, 2002

    The big question mark on the introduction of conditional access systems in India will be how to keep a check on the subscriber management systems (SMS) that are introduced by cable operators, SET India CEO Kunal Dasgupta said at a media briefing in Mumbai. Though the press conference was to introduce cricketer Kapil Dev as the SET‘s brand ambassador for the ICC Cricket World Cup, the hot topic was CAS. "Will the law make it mandatory to declare the subscriber base? And how do you control it to prevent manipulation? Dasgupta asks.

    Dasgupta said he expected the the rollout of CAS in just the four metros to take at least a year after the expected passage of the Cable TV Networks (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2002 in the next session of Parliament in July.

    Dasgupta pointed out that even post-CAS there would certainly be bundling of channels which would be offered as different packages to subscribers. And at the end of the day the channels which formed part of the best bundle of channels would be the ones that would pack in the most subscribers.

    A point that Dasgupta made was that the introduction of CAS would hasten the entry of DTH into the country. Queried as to whether that wouldn‘t in fact kill DTH because the high-end users would have all sorts of add-ons like interactivity offered to them Dasgupta disagreed. He said what was being envisioned now was essentially analog systems. To introduce digital systems was not as easy as was being made out, Dasgupta said. What was needed was not only headend upgradation as well as line upgradation. And if this was to happen across the country where cable had penetrated it would involve a cost of up to Rs 500 billion, Dasgupta said. According to Dasgupta, only Reliance was doing that kind of work at present.

    Dasgupta said the success or failure of CAS would depend on how it was implemented. "I am sure the government will ensure that when CAS is introduced, services will not be disrupted," Dasgupta concluded.

     

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