Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

  • MIPCOM 2000 to be held in October

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 26

    The MIPCOM 2000 (International Film and Programme Market for TV, Video and Cable & Satellite) seminar will be held at the Cannes Palais des Festivals, Paris from October 2 to Actober 6. Also MIPCOM Junior (Youth Programming Screenings) from September 30 to October 1.
    Many distinguished sepakers will make presentations at the MIPCOM conference. Participants will get to learn about the rapidly growing multi-channel environment along with rapidly developing digital and wireless technologies, broadband Internet and interactive services.

    Also, for the first time, MIPCOM will open a new exibition dedicated to the new media companies.

    For more details about the seminar visit: www.mipcom.com

  • Race on for the Sri Lankan cricket rights

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 25

    The race is on to bag the rights to telecast Sri Lankan cricket in India. The major players in the running are Sony Entertainment Television‘s Set Max channel, Zee Sports, ESPN-Star Sports and other production companies.
    Set Max, which had acquired the telecast rights for all the cricket matches played in Sri Lanka in the previous season, had paid a sum of $7.75 million to the Sri Lankan Cricket Board. Channel bosses have been making a pitch to bag the rights over the past two-three weeks. Sony Entertainment‘s Anand Desai is believed to have made a pitch, as also ESPN-Star‘s Manu Sawhney. Sony apparently has the first right of refusal for the rights.

    The Sri Lankan board is hoping to make an announcement soon. Zee Sports is in desperate need of good cricket product for its Zee Sports channel as is Sony for Set Max. If ESPN-Star bags the rights it will be in the drivers‘ seat in the Indian market as it will have wrapped up all the major telecast rights for cricket for cricket mad Indian audiences. Stay tuned.

  • Packer has a thing for the Big B

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 25

    If there is one person who seems to be smitten by the Big B‘s charisma then it has to be Kerry Packer. The Australian media tycoon, whose broadcasting company Channel Nine, has bagged the rights for the prime time slot between 7 pm to 10 pm on Doordarshan‘s Metro (DD-2) channel is actively wooing Amitabh Bachchan. Rumours are that James Packer wants him to quit the tremendously popular game show on Star Plus Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC) and move onto anchor the show Greed which it plans to introduce on the DD-2 channel for which Packer has the rights for prime time slots.

    Amitabh Bachchan is said to have signed an agreement with Star TV which restricts him from anchoring any show with a similar format on any of the satellite channels. Star says that it has extended the contract with AB from 130 episodes to 450.

    However, DD-2 is a terrestrial channel and Packer might be eager to exploit this loop hole if Star TV has not plugged it already. The show, Greed, is apparently a take off on the popular ABC show Who wants to be a millionaire on which KBC is based.

    Kerry Packer has offered sops to AB such as showing an interest in picking up a stake in the beleaguered A B Corp, formerly known as ABCL or Amitabh Bachchan Corporation Limited.

    Recently restructured, A B Corp has decided to restrict its scope of activities to producing and distributing movies after burning its hands in many other ventures like organising the Miss Universe contest.

  • MTV will join the pay-TV clan; to be encrypted soon

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 25

    Riding on the success of it‘s music channel, MTV has decided that it is the time when it can exploit its potential as a strong brand an take the pay-TV route.Speaking to The Economic Times, MTV Networks Asia president Frank Brown announced that the channel will be encrypted at the ‘right opportunity‘.

    The decision to go from free-to-air channel to pay-TV is fueled by the findings of a recent study conducted by MTV to judge its performance throughout the various countries it is aired. India was the fourth in terms of growth of the channel next only to MTV strongholds Brazil, the US and Italy. Even in terms of revenue earnings in Asia, India was somewhere on the top of its list.

    Also, close on the heels of launching MTV clothing and other branded merchandise in India, MTV will be taking the air waves by storm and will enter the radio broadcasting business. This would mean that music aficionados can tune into the FM radio channel and listen to their favourite music from MTV. This is part of MTV‘s strategy to become a 360 degree brand and extend the brand in other possible youth products.

  • Cable TV operators go on two day strike to protest against entertainment tax

    Submitted by ITV Production on Aug 22

    Cable TV operators in the metro city of Mumbai are on a two day strike to protest against a hike of 100 per cent in the Entertainment Tax levied by the government.
    This move by the cable operators was after they failed to constitutionally bar the Government of Maharashtra from increasing the entertainment tax levied on them. The cable operators had earlier petitioned in the Bombay High Court that the Maharashtra government which had promulgated the tax through an ordinance and later legislated it trough the state legislature was unfair to them as the tax on entertainment should be charged on TV set owners and that they were only being made the government collection agents.

    The government is charging the cable operators per TV set at the rate of Rs 30 in municipal limits and cantonments, Rs20 in all ‘A‘ and ‘B‘ class municipal councils and Rs 10 in other areas, an increase of 100 per cent from the earlier rates of Rs 15, Rs 10 and Rs 5. However the High Court citing past Supreme Court judgements said that the state legislature had legislative competence to enact the duty as entertainment was a taxable event. The court also dismissed the cable operator‘s petition saying that all businesses are subject to taxation and Cable TV operators are no exception.

  • Animal Planet lines up new shows; presents fresh anchors

    MUMBAI: Animal Planet has announced the launch of a new series New Faces.

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