• Tara Marathi goes Hindi at primetime

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jul 04, 2002

    Eternal Dreams, that took on the unenviable task of turning around Broadcast Worldwide‘s Tara Marathi in March this year, seems to have found its forte.
    Buoyed by the success of its distance education programme in cooking and baking that the company launched to target SEC B audiences two months ago, Eternal Dreams is now going Hindi in prime time. From 6.30 pm to 9 pm weekdays, the new look Tara Marathi will air distance learning shows in Hindi, imparting instruction in English speaking, customer relations, housekeeping as well as international cuisine. The move, says the channel management company, has been necessitated by an overwhelming response from viewers, particularly non Maharashtrians. The company is now negotiating with Doordarshan to air the series on DD Metro. If the deal is pulled off, says chief operating officer Bonnie Jain, the programme, that has taken up nearly 40 per cent of the channel‘s programming budget, will be aired in Hindi on DD Metro and in Marathi on Tara Marathi.

    Admitting that "it is a big risk" taking on mainstream entertainment channels at prime time with a distance learning show, Jain says the series is a "do or die" venture, a calculated risk aimed at weaning away viewers from the ubiquitous soap and slapstick comedy on rival channels. Eternal Dreams is also negotiating with a "major channel" in South India for broadcasting the series in Tamil, as well as with other channels in north and western India for dubbing in regional languages.

    Tara Marathi, languishing at number four among Marathi channels, has seen a spurt in ratings since relaunching in March, with the distance learning programme contributing most to its revival, says managing director Sapna Chaturvedi. The channel has managed to rope in 40 clients with over 100 brands advertising on air, she says. The six week course in cooking and baking, which will shortly be repeated on air, is affiliated with the Indian Institute of Hotel Management and gives participants a certificate after a practical examination at the end of the course. The low cost vocational training has helped rope in the lower SEC B segment to the channel, says Jain.

    Tara Marathi is also toying with the idea of teaming up with ministry of higher education and ITI (Indian Technical Institute) in offering distance learning courses in collaboration with the State. While ratings are yet to catch up with the leaders in the Marathi channel market, the channel is already firming up plans of its second round of fresh programming in August. While the channel is currently making do with re-runs of older serials and dubbed versions of mythos, 40 per cent of programming is fresh, says Jain. Comedian Laxmikant Berde will make his debut on the small screen with Lakshat Theva a slapstick show, while another show, Abhimaan Maharashtracha, will profile prominent young achievers from the state, including the likes of Sachin Tendulkar and Vinod Kambli. Vichitra, a "believe it or not" show will also take off on the channel by August.

  • Cyrus Broacha to moderate Clinton Q&A show on MTV

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jul 04, 2002

    MTV anchor Cyrus Broacha is slated to moderate an hour long programme which will have former US president Bill Clinton among other panelists who will take questions from young adults from over 25 countries on the global AIDS epidemic.

    The MTV special, titled Staying Alive: A Global Forum on HIV/AIDS, will be taped on 11 July in Barcelona and will be telecast from 12 July onwards on more than 30 MTV channels around the world. The special, says the channel, is part of a new youth-oriented AIDS awareness campaign MTV is launching in conjunction with the Kaiser Family Foundation and Family Health International. Joining Clinton on the panel will be Peter Piot, head of the Joint UN Program on HIV/AIDS, Brazilian Health Ministry official Paulo Roberto Teixeira and Vicki Ehrich of British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline Plc.

    The former president, an honorary co-chairman of the International AIDS Trust foundation, first appeared on MTV during his initial bid for the White House in 1992, when he appeared on a town hall-style special in which he played his saxophone and gamely answered questions about what sort of underwear he wore. He later credited the MTV appearance with helping energize young people about politics and went on to unseat Republican incumbent President George Bush in the general election.

    The special show is the second in a series of "social awareness" specials MTV has aired this year. In February 2002, the channel organized "Be Heard: An MTV Global Discussion With Colin Powell," a forum that had young adults across the world shooting questions at the US secretary of state.

  • B4U Movies targets 31 July as go pay day at Rs 8.90 per subscriber

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jul 04, 2002

    One more channel readies to take the pay mode plunge. The difference this time being that it will be the first pay channel to be offered as an independent offering and not part of any bouquet.
    B4U Movies begins a dual illumination feed from 15 July, with plans to be fully encrypted by 31 July. "All the technical parameters are in place. But keeping in mind last minute hold-ups, it still may take till end-August for the full rollout, B4U Worldwide CEO Ravi Gupta said. B4U is using the Smart-card from Nagravision as the encryption module.
    Queried as to the subscription price, Gupta said it would be Rs 8.90 per month. B4U is offering 15 per cent discount on its subscription rate to cable operators making advance payments or quarterly payments.

    Where B4U Music will be different from the others is that it will be the only pay channel that is not offered as part of a bouquet. When it was put to Gupta that this would likely prove disadvantageous, he had this to say: "Yes, but that‘s a short term way of looking at it. The reason to go it alone is because of the price sensitivity of the market. We believe that especially in the non-metro markets there are operators for whom single channel option like B4U are worth going for."

    "I do not want to tie up with anyone at the present juncture. I want to keep my options open. I prefer to wait for a time where I am able to offer my channel non-exclusively to all the bouquets. And we will be constantly tracking developments. Being independent allows us the freedom to take a call on it when we feel it is advantageous for us," Gupta said.

    Whether Gupta is correct in his reasoning will be known soon enough anyway.

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