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  • Roy set to launch independent English, Hindi news channels?

    Prannoy Roy's New Delhi Television appears to have finalised plans for life after Star News.

  • Moves afoot to make AIR available as a satellite radio feed on cable networks

    There are plans to make All India Radio available on cable networks as a satellite radio feed.

  • 'Samurai Jack' adjudged world's best TV series at International Animated Film Festival

    Cartoon Network's Samurai Jack has been voted the World's Best TV Series at the International Animated Film Festival.

  • BBC World Service, InCableNet reach deal for radio programming

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 13, 2002

    BBC World Service and IndusInd Media & Communications Ltd announced toady a partnership to provide BBC radio programmes 24 hours a day on INCableNet, in Mumbai.

    BBC radio programmes will now be available live from London via satellite in digital sound on INCableNet‘s network in Mumbai. INCableNet had been running a test feed for some days prior to the formal announcement.

    INCableNet president
    Rajiv vyas

    On hand to explain the strategy were Head of BBC World Service for Asia and Pacific region Elizabeth Wright and president INCableNet Rajiv Vyas.

    Wright said that the aim of the broadcaster was to reach a larger audience. She pointed out that in addition to English programmes, viewers will also get four hours of Hindi programmes every day and half an hour of Tamil programmes. Hindi programming is at 6:30 am, 8:00 am, 7:30 pm and 10:30 pm and Tamil programmes are beamed at 8:45 pm daily.

    INCableNet has put BBC on S Band, which gives them convenient access to the MSO‘s subscriber base, Vyas said. INCableNet claims to cover 60-70 per cent of the city.

    Explaining the thinking behind launching the radio feed on Incable Net, Wright said: "Radio has something to offer that television cannot. It allows one to do other chores while catching up with news, listening to a sports broadcast or listening to music."

    "As the most dynamic region of the world, the Asia and the Pacific area present tremendous challenges and opportunities for broadcasters" Wright said.

    "Actually, the idea is not so strange in the era of convergence - we

    Head of BBC World Service for Asia and Pacific region
    Elizabeth Wright

    already have a similar, but not so comprehensive, deal with RPG in Calcutta. The great advantage is that the BBC World Service will be available to at least 1.5 million households in Mumbai in perfect sound quality, where in thepast they would have had to struggle with short wave. We fully accept that this will only appeal to a niche audience, but it provides added value for us and for InCableNet. There is now a real resurgence of interest in radio in Mumbai, but at present this is almost exclusively music. We are there for people who want news and information in depth," Wright said.

    Regarding the service on RPG in Kolkata, Wright said the Bengali programmes had proved popular with women in the afternoon. BBC was also running technology trials in conjunction with Siticable in a bid to expand its presence in other areas of the country, she added. The BBC‘s ability to produce world class radio programmes in different languages will enable it to establish the brand in different markets, she asserted.

    Vyas said that this new initiative is in keeping with the MSO‘s strategy of providing value added services to subscribers. It fits in with the operators‘ convergence initiatives. The television in the near future will be a single utility point where one can surf the net, listen to radio and make telephone calls, Vyas said. Talking about other initiatives that were in the pipeline, Vyas said InCable would be introducing VOIP (voice over Internet Protocol) services in the immediate future that would allow subscribers to make calls abroad at cheaper rates. The company‘s Internet arm, In2cable.com already has an all-India ISP license, Vyas said. According to him, it currently has a presence in nine cities with a subscriber base of over 30,000.

    Currently, the service with BBC is available only in Mumbai and depending on the feedback, the MSO could extend the facility to other cities where it has a presence, Vyas said.

  • 'Millionaire' to end prime-time run in US 27 June

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 13, 2002

    The Indian avatar of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Kaun Banega Crorepati, came, saw, conquered, and has gone into the history books as the show that redefined the dynamics of entertainment television in the country. KBC ended its run on Star Plus in January after providing the thrust that drove Star into pole position in the channel stakes.
    Across the Atlantic, the US version of the Celador-licenced show is also set for its walk into the sunset. Who Wants to Be a Millionaire officially ends its just under three-year run on 27 June, ABC announced late on Monday.

    To send it off, the network will reportedly air a 90-minute edition of the Regis Philbin-fronted gamer. After that, Millionaire will be revamped as an occasional series of specials, similar to how the programme debuted in 1999.

    With the departure of Millionaire and NBC‘s Weakest Link from this fall‘s primetime schedules, the trend has now gone full circle: quiz-based game shows have once again been relegated to daytime, syndication and cable.

    And that looks like a trend that is going to be replicated in India as well because the gameshow is increasingly looking to be a losing proposition.


  • 'Focus Asia' correspondent Adrian Brown takes first prize at Amnesty press awards

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 13, 2002

    Star‘s Focus Asia correspondent Adrian Brown took first prize in the English television category of the 7th Annual Amnesty International Human Rights Press Awards in Hong Kong.

    This is the third successive year that Focus Asia has walked away with the esteemed award. Focus Asia correspondent Jennifer Lee took the prize in 2001 and correspondent Susan Yu won in 2000.

    The 2002 award was given in recognition of Adrian Brown‘s report on Child Sexploitation, which was originally broadcast on Focus Asia in April 2001. The report detailed the problem of child prostitution in Cambodia and the inability of Cambodian authorities to crack down and manage this widespread problem. In the report, Brown interviewed an American man in jail awaiting trial on child sex charges as well as a Japanese man accused of similar offences. He also interviewed a child rights campaigner who has worked to rescue under-age girls from brothels.

    Adrian Brown is an experienced television journalist and has worked in Asia since 1988. He has interviewed a number of Asian leaders for Focus Asia including former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid and Cambodia‘s Prime Minister Hun Sen.

    Jim Laurie, vice-president of network news and current affairs, said: "We are extremely proud of this accomplishment by our Focus Asia correspondents. By taking our third consecutive Amnesty International Human Rights Press Award, we have proved that our talented team of correspondents rivals the best of any news team and that we are continuing to provide hard hitting and socially relevant reports affecting the Asian region."

    Focus Asia is the flagship current affairs program produced by Star‘s news team in Hong Kong, exploring a wide range of social, economic and political issues across the Asia region. Indian viewers can see this hard-hitting programme on Star World every Sunday at 5:30 pm (8:00 pm Hong Kong time).

    The 7th Annual Human Rights Press Awards were sponsored by Amnesty International (Hong Kong), the Foreign Correspondents‘ Club and the Hong Kong Journalists Association, and announced on 8 June.


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