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  • Maas' checklist for killer TV commercials

    NEWDELHI: Want some insights into what makes for killer television commercials?

  • Bangla channel ETV gets some respite as review petition set for 24 August

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 05, 2002

    MUMBAI: ETV, Bangladesh‘s first private terrestrial television channel, which is under threat of closure from the authorities, has again managed to get some breathing time from the country‘s apex appeals court.
    The Appellate Division, headed by Chief Justice Mainur Reza Chowdhury, in its order issued yesterday, decreed that it could to continue broadcast till 24 August, the new date set for disposal of a review petition, Bangladesh‘s The Independent, reported today. According to The Independent, the Appellate Division had earlier stayed its own order of upholding the verdict of a High Court Division Bench that declared the agreement between ETV and the government without any lawful authority and allowed the ETV‘s prayer for filing a review petition and also allowed five weeks to do so.

    The court accepted ETV‘s plea that it could not file the review petition as it "did not get the certified copy of the court‘s order."

    The High Court had earlier found irregularities in the existing agreement between ETV and the government and held that the granting of licence to ETV was done without any lawful authority. The Appellate Division on 2 July allowed ETV five weeks to file a review petition against its (court) order.

    If the Appellate Division finally does uphold the verdict of the High Court, ETV would have to shut down its telecasts till issuance of a fresh licence by the government.

    The writ petition against the ETV was filed by two Dhaka University teachers and the president of the Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists (BFUJ) Gias Kamal Chowdhury, on 19 September, 2001 challenging the legality of the ETV-government agreement.

    ETV was launched on the basis of an agreement signed between the Ministry of Information and AS Mahmud, Chairman of the company, on March 9, 1999.


  • Zee News tops the charts with channel share of 27%

    New Delhi, 4th Aug’06 : India’s pioneer Hindi News Channel, Zee News is now also the No.

  • New avtaar HBO for South Asia launched

    Now here's a channel that will definitely give Star movies a run for its money.

  • UTI to invest Rs 4.5 crore in Broadcast Worldwide

    The Unit Trust of India has invested Rs 4.5 crores in Rathikant Basu promoted Broadcast Worldwide.

  • BBC series 'Kumars' sold to NBC for ?6m

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 03, 2002

    MUMBAI: This piece of news should certainly interest Indian TV production houses looking to find a market for their programming beyond the traditional Indian Diaspora audience. Popular BBC comedy The Kumars at No 42, has been sold in the United States, where the Asian characters will be replaced by Mexicans.US television network NBC has paid ?6m to copy the formula and title of the Bafta-nominated spoof chat show devised by its host, the actor Sanjeev Bhaskar, The Independent has reported.

    The Kumars At No 42 revolves around Sanjeev Kumar (Sanjeev Bhaskar), a TV chat show host. His shows are filmed in a studio that is part of the house he shares with his family. The guests who appear on Sanjeev‘s chat show have to endure a pre-programme grilling from Sanjeev‘s father Ashwin (Vincent Ebrahim), mother Madhuri (Indira Joshi) and his grandmother Sushila (Meera Syal of Goodness Gracious Me fame).


    The Kumars At No 42

    Kumar is the only son of a rich Indian family living in England. He wants to be a chat show host and become an international star. Towards that end his devoted parents bulldoze their back garden to build him a TV studio. The comedy revolves Kumar and the hilarious situations that arise out of his family‘s inquisitive nature and his efforts to keep the family from interfering while he is interviewing famous people.

    Jimmy Mulville, the joint managing director of the UK production company Hat Trick, which is to co-produce the show for NBC, has been quoted as saying: "We needed to identify the most successful immigrant population in the States. African-Americans are already well assimilated and we needed a socially mobile family. There are 25 million Hispanics in the States so we settled on Mexican-Americans."

    Hat Trick, which makes the original BBC2 version of the show, hopes to sell the series to Hispanic stations. There are also plans to sell the series to Germany and replace the Kumars with a Turkish family because of the large number of Turkish immigrants to Germany, the report says.

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