Chinese agency SINA piggybacks on soccer to bolster media services
SINA, which claims to be a leading Chinese Internet media and services company, has announced the successful conclusi
After a day of hard negotiations, Star India and Hinduja Group MSO INCableNet this evening appeared to have bought themselves some time to arrive at an agreement on the terms of a new contract after the current one expired on 30 June.
Executive V-P distribution Tony D‘Silva said Star had given INCableNet a proposal and the MSO was supposed to revert back on it within 48 hours. D‘Silva was however, quick to point out the latest round of talks were not confrontationist in nature and that he felt reasonably confident that it would not come to a scenario of Star switching off the INCableNet feed. D‘Silva said the proposal Star had put forward was valid for a limited one-month period during which a final agreement would have to be arrived at.
Rajiv Vyas, newly promoted COO of IndusInd Media & Communications Ltd (IMC), of which INCableNet is the operations arm, spoke in a similar vein while stating the two sides had worked out a month-long bridge period in which to resolve all outstanding issues and come to an agreement which would be beneficial to both sides. Vyas added that Star had sent them a proposal in which they‘d sought a response in 48 hours. It was not an ultimatum, Vyas said.
The scene was a sea change from the one existing at the beginning of the day where it had almost seemed as a certainty that there would be a confrontation between the two sides. Big ads in yesterday‘s edition of The Sunday Times of India and Sunday Mid-Day detailing INCableNet‘s litany of woes vis-୶is broadcasters, but with particular reference to Star, appeared to point to the fact that consumers could expect a switch-off any time in the next few days. The advertisement said Star had issued a notice to INCableNet that unless the MSO increased monthly payments, it would not be able to provide signals w.e.f. tomorrow, 9 July.
The ad also made a strong plea for the introduction of conditional access systems (CAS) at the earliest as the only way to resolve this matter in the long term.
Close on the heels of his much talked about comic role in Awara Pagal Deewana, Paresh Rawal has added another feather to his cap. The veteran actor has turned TV producer. His first offering as producer is a tri-weekly laugh riot-Shubh Mangal Savadhan that starts telecast from 15 July on Sahara TV.
Apart from this sitcom, Rawal‘s Playtime Creation is also working on three other projects - a soap, a religious thriller and another comedy. All these projects are likely to be on air in the next one year, Rawal says. Gradually, the company also plans to foray into tele films and then films. But isn‘t the company being overly ambitious, given the state of the industry? "Well turning TV producer was no doubt, a tougher experience than my struggle to make it as an actor," Rawal says, only half in jest.
A still from Shubh Mangal Savadhan
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At a press conference called to launch the serial, the veteran actor was at his witty best.
Asked why he chose marriage as the topic of his first serial, Raval replied: "Shaadi has got maximum spice compared to any other event." But then why is he cautioning people - Savadhan - against marriage? "Well, I felt it was my responsibility to caution people against treading the path we took and suffered," Raval replied.
Raval‘s fans will however be disappointed to know that he will not be starring in the serial as he feels his present movie commitments will not allow him sufficient time to act in TV serials.
On his choice of Sahara TV, Raval said it was a rapidly growing channel that had been immensely receptive and supportive to them.
Playtime also started a trend of sorts by also launching the website devoted exclusively to the serial - www.smsthecomedy.com
For acclaimed actor turned debutante producer Paresh Rawal, interactivity is not just a buzzword. He takes it to a whole new level in what is his first production for Sahara TV - Shubh Mangal Savadhan (SMS). In what is claimed to be a first, SMS has a website exclusively dedicated to the show. Created wholly in flash, yet quick to access, the website has a mix of information about the serial, insights into the cast, the usual freebie downloads, and a specially created videogame which can be played online. The idea of creating a website like this originally came to producer Hemal Thakkar (partner of Paresh Rawal), says Rawal
Click here to access www.smsthecomedy.com |
There has been a major reorganisation at Hinduja Group MSO INCableNet in its senior management structure. INCableNet president Rajiv Vyas now has sole operational charge of INCableNet and has been promoted to COO IndusInd Media & Communications Ltd (IMC). INCableNet is the operations arm of IMC. Out of the equation are the two other power centres in INCableNet ? CEO Ram Hingorani and CFO S Vardhan. Both have been transferred to Hinduja House. Hingorani is now vice-chairman IMC in a non-executive capacity (he was executive V-C IMC before the restructuring), while Vardhan has returned to parent company HTMT as executive director. Vardhan has been replaced by Srinivas Pala.
Talk of internal feuding among these three has long been there in the industry and it may well have been to resolve this that the restructuring was done.
The aim of the meeting is to discuss issues relating to set-top boxes, a necessary accessory once the conditional access system which the government, particularly I&B minister Sushma Swaraj, is keen to bring about, is implemented. A senior BIS official told indiantelevision.com today that the 12 July meeting (to be held a day after the apex body of electronics goods manufacturers, CETMA, holds a seminar on the TV industry with broadcasting industry representations) will discuss the various comments which had been invited on the technical parameters set by BIS for manufacturing of set-top boxes and decide the future course of action.
According to the BIS official, the feedback on the draft standards and specifications circulated earlier has been "favourable and positive." "Most of the feedback has agreed to what we had said with few suggestions coming on some minor technical issues," the official said, adding: "Hopefully by mid-August, BIS would be able to finalise the document which will be the industry standard." However, before CAS is implemented, certain amendments in the Cable TV (Networks) Regulation Act, 1995, facilitating CAS, will need the nod from the Indian Parliament‘s Upper House (Rajya Sabha) where the Bharatiya Janata Party-led NDA government does not have a majority.
I&B ministry sources have indicated that the passage of the Cable TV Amendment Bill in the Rajya Sabha would be fairly easy during the monsoon session of Parliament scheduled to begin later this month. However, critics maintain that despite the I&B ministry‘s optimism, certain politicians in the government have not been in favour of CAS.
The BIS official also added that the decoding technique of each channel as and when CAS is implemented would be "proprietary in nature" where the broadcasters will exercise control through the multi-system operators.
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