• Prasar Bharati running short on cash

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    Prasar Bharati Corporation, the autonomous body modelled on the UK pubcaster BBC and overseeing the work of Doordarshan (DD) and the All India Radio (AIR), is facing a cash crunch and will move the government to release the funds allotted to it.

    Admitting this fact, a senior Prasar Bharati Corporation official told indiantelevision.com, "There is a cash flow problem and we are taking up this issue with the government."

    According to the Corporation official, who is also part of the governing body, Prasar Bharati has mooted a proposal that it will sign a memorandum of understanding with the government to get released the grant-in-aid to it in two tranches. "This will ease the financial problems which the Corporation has been facing for quite some time now

    Though the official denied any knowledge of non-payment of dues for work which had been sourced from outside, Prasar Bharati insiders did reveal to indiantelevison.com that the funds crunch has resulted in arrears piling up.

    For example, the insiders said that casual reporters working for DD have not been paid their remuneration or get the payments late. Casual reporters are paid at the rate of Rs 750 per day and cannot be employed for more than ten days in a month.

    Similarly, it is also said that DD had contracted an outside agency to act as its research division and undertake research work for various reports, analysis and news features for which payment is pending.

    However, several efforts made by indiantelevision to elicit a response from the persons concerned who undertake research activities for DD proved futile.

    But there is no denying the question that Prasar Bharati, partially on an expansion mode under chief executive KS Sarma, who is now slightly over three months old in the Corporation, is facing a cash flow problems.

    Armed with a Rs 1000-million kitty for sourcing fresh programming, the Corporation will also soon start commissioning and buying programmes outright. "If we find, for example, a serial good then the Corporation will buy out the rights for it outright," the official said.

    The issue relating to finances and other matters will be discussed by the Prasar Bharati Corporation board meeting slated to be held on 3 July.

    There is also a proposal to re-launch DD News, closed down earlier this year on 26 January after over 18 months of existence. But whether this will find favour with the board members and also the government, which still retains control over the Corporation indirectly, is still to be seen.

  • BBC World announces array of programmes for coming season

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    BBC World has announced a wide range of shows to captivate viewers of different tastes and dislikes with a line up that includes special areas including the arts, travel and the environment.
    For people bitten by wanderlust, the channel will debut Fast Track next month, a show that examines tourist and business destinations. For people facinated with the Far East, there is the Arab World Direct, a show that takes a look at the culture and stories that make headlines in the region.

    Earth 2002 Season which kicks off in August in time for the World Summit for sustaineable development in South Africa will analyse the negotiations, the highlight being an Earth Summit Debate. Other programmes revolving around the environmental theme include ‘State of the Planet‘. Presented by David Attenborough, the three part series commences in mid August and examines the future of mankind. Film star Jackie Chan appears in Chasing the Tiger, while host Julian Pettifer looks at the condition of wild tigers and what the action star is doing to protect them. In the last week of August, Natures Numbers follows biologists in the Bolovian rainforest who try to find which species are in immediate danger of extinction.

    On a different track, bookworms can savour eight programmes in Great Writers Season next month. Writers profiled include Frankenstein writer Mary Shelley in the episode A Monstrous Life, children‘s author Lewis Carroll in Curiouser and curiouser and mystery novelist Iris Murdoch in Starnge Love.

    For those wanting a dose of harsh reality instead of Alice in Wonderland, the channel will air the documentary Breaking the Silence- Music in Afghanistan in August. It tells the tale of how Afghan music was devastated during 20 years of war. It sees how the first signs of revival of music started a few weeks after the Taliban government was given the boot.

    In September, the channel targets the marketing and ad community with the programming block ‘Branded‘ which examines the consumer world. The three part show The Ad Factor follows the journey of creating an ad from pitching to roll out of the final product. Logo takes viewers on the journey of how brands influence society and culture.

    In the lifestyle programming section, the channel will unveil ‘ The Bike‘s The Star‘ next month. It takes a look at classic motor bikes. Mary Anne Hobbs hosts Mary Anne‘s Bikes in August, which scrutinises all aspects of biker culture.

    BBC World announces array of programmes for coming season.

  • TV's first soap turns 50 on Sunday

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    We‘ve all heard of soaps that never seem to end. But try this one for sheer longevity. Guiding Light, the broadcast industry‘s longest-running daily programme, is all set to mark its 50th anniversary on television on 30 June.

    Guiding Light creator Irma Philips

    By this weekend, the show will have aired 13,941 episodes on CBS, and 16,401 episodes if radio shows are included. A new opening sequence was unveiled on the show on 24 June to celebrate the milestone.

    Created by Irma Phillips, The Guiding Light debuted during the second world war on 25 Jan 1937 as a 15 minute series on radio. Guiding Light was, and continues to be, produced by Procter & Gamble Productions, the company who put the "soap" in the soap opera.

    For six decades, Guiding Light has led its counterparts in daytime and prime-time drama in exploring a range of topical and timeless issues, says an official release. Beginning in 1962, the TV series tackled the first social issue-driven storyline: the early detection of Bert Bauer‘s uterine cancer via a pap smear. Since then, subjects covered included organ transplant, Down‘s syndrome, substance abuse and domestic violence, apart, of course, from love, romance, family and community.Guiding Light is the only daytime programme inducted into the Soap Opera Hall of Fame. Recipient of 55 Daytime Emmy Awards, it is a weekday daily on CBS Television Network. The series‘ creators attribute the show‘s longevity to the fact that while the complexity of storytelling and production has evolved considerably over time, the simple, life-affirming issues and values the show began exploring 65 years ago still lie at the heart of the show and continue resonating with a new generation of viewers.

    A still from Guiding Light


    Currently, the always adventurous, Reva Shayne (played by three-time Emmy winner Kim Zimmer) and her soulmate, Josh Lewis (Robert Newman), are embarking on marriage for the third time; Dr. Rick Bauer (Michael O‘Leary), who suffers from a deteriorating heart condition, and former prince Richard Winslow (Bradley Cole), victim of a horrible car accident, fight for their lives; Beth Raines tries to rebuild her life by coming to terms with the past of her alternate personality, Lorelei Hills (both played by Beth Chamberlin); and the feisty Harley Cooper (Beth Ehlers) and the irksome Gus Aitoro (Ricky Paull Goldin) try to make a go of their new relationship despite the objections of everyone in town, including Harley‘s ex-husband, the wealthy Phillip Spaulding (Grant Aleksander).

  • SET-Discovery JV formalised; search on to get more channels on platform

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    Sony Entertainment Television India (SET India) and Discovery Communications India (DCI) today announced the formation of their joint venture company - SET Discovery Pvt Ltd.
    And in a clear indication that Sony was on the lookout to add more channels to the "One Alliance" platform, the official release says SET "would continue to seek opportunities with other channels."

    As a continuance of the close involvement of its parent company in SET India, the JV includes two representatives from Columbia TriStar International Television - Martha Eberts and Michael March (both are also directors in SET India). The other two members of the SET Discovery management team are Kunal Dasgupta (who will be leading the company) and DCI CEO Deepak Shourie.

    Shantonu Aditya, currently SET India‘s head of the distribution business, will oversee day-to-day operations of the new company which will handle the distribution of both channels and will include ground cable and affiliate businesses.

    Announcing the newly formed venture, Aditya said: "With Discovery joining our existing bouquet of channels, The One Alliance partnership, announced earlier this year, is uniquely placed to offer our viewers an enhanced genre of programming supported by our combined distribution strength. We are now strategically positioned to be the No. 1 television network in the country."

    SET India holds 74 per cent of SET Discovery‘s equity with the remainder being with DCI. Today‘s announcement comes a little over a month after the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) cleared the JV proposal.

  • Pakistan in talks with Hughes for satellite deal

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    Pakistan is negotiating a satellite deal with European and US operators to buy two satellites, one to occupy the 38 E orbital slot allotted to the country, and the other as a back up option in the same slot.

    Reports in the national newspaper Dawn say Pakistan has sent a high-level delegation to Germany to negotiate with Hughes Global Services for the Anatolia 1 satellite. The satellite, which started life as Palapa C1, is a series 601 satellite, built by Boeing, which was resold to Hughes in January 1999. It was first launched on 31 January, 1996, using an Atlas 2AS booster and was slotted at 150 degrees East after launching from Kourou in French Guiana. Quoting Federal Minister for Science and Technology Dr Atta-ur-Rehman, the Dawn says Turkey, which currently has the satellite in its 50 E orbital slot, has expressed its inability to do frequency coordination for the satellite.


    Meanwhile, the Daily Jang says that Pakistan‘s ministry of science and technology has invited internationally recognised consultants to assist in developing the country‘s PAKSAT satellite project to "enhance the country‘s communications as well as strategic capabilities." The newspaper says the orbital slot allocated to Pakistan by the International Telecommunication Union at 38 deg E would lapse in April 2003 unless the country has a satellite in place with transponders switched on and international approval is obtained for ownership of the slot.

  • Arianespace readies for 5 July dual telecom satellite launch

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 27, 2002

    Arianespace‘s eighth mission of the year, a dual telecommunications satellite launch, will take place on 5 July.
    A heavy-lift Ariane 5 will loft the dual telecommunications satellite payload on Flight 153 carrying the Stellat 5 and N-STAR c satellites, with liftoff set at the opening of a launch window that runs from 8:21 pm to 9:18 pm Kourou time. Stellat 5, according to Arianespace, will ride in the upper payload position on Arianespace‘s heavy-lift Ariane 5, and will be released into geostationary transfer orbit first. It will be followed by N-STAR c, which is to be in the lower position.
    The N-STAR c is optimised for a 10-year on-orbit life and will provide mobile telephony and data transfer services to Japan and its surrounding waters. The satellite was delivered to the Ariane Spaceport in French Guiana on 18 June and was immediately moved into the new S5 preparation complex, where it is being readied for flight. Built by a Lockheed Martin/Orbital team for Japan‘s NTT DoCoMo, N-STAR c will operate in S-band frequencies from an orbital location at 136 degrees East longitude. It will have a launch mass of 1,625 kg., and the satellite is based on Orbital‘s STAR-1 and STAR-2 standard platforms, says Arianespace.

    The Stellat 5 payload for Flight 153 will be used by a joint-venture company called Stellat, which brings together France Telecom with EuropeStar. Positioned at 5 degrees West longitude, Stellat 5, which arrived in French Guiana in May, will support two-way broadband Internet access across much of Europe, and will offer a connectivity matrix between Europe, the east coasts of North and South America, Africa, the Middle East and significant swaths of near Asia. Stellat 5, says Arianespace, is based on the Alcatel Space Industries‘ Spacebus 3000 B3 platform, and will have a launch mass of 4,100 kg.

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