• Airtel DTH and ESPN Star Sports smoke peace pipee

    MUMBAI: It was a spat, which was in the works for almost six months.

  • Digital TV homes to double in Eastern Europe

    MUMBAI: Rapid conversion means that the number of digital homes in Eastern Europe will nearly double between 2012 and

  • Former Walt Disney India head Mahesh Samat opens up about Epic TV

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 15, 2013
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: Mahesh Samat has a distant look in his eye as he speaks. "TV content has been commoditised in India," he says. "It is positioned like Hindi cinema was in the seventies and eighties where a certain class of viewers simply did not go to the cinema. Then came multiplexes and content, which drew back viewers to the theatres. I am hopeful of bringing about a shift in the kinds of content and narratives that television viewers get on their screen."

    The former head of Walt Disney India has cobbled together a group of investors among which figures Anand Mahindra (in his personal capacity) to fund a company Epic Television Networks Pvt Ltd which is setting up a new channel. It plans to tap into the new digitising cable TV ecosystem and DTH and take advantage of the opportunities that these are offering.

    Called Epic TV it is a bringing to fruition of a passion for history that Samat has had ever since he can remember. "I am fascinated with our rich historical past and numerous fictionalised stories can be told over the various eras," he says. "And this is what we are hoping to put forth in our programming."

    Samat has brought in former YRF TV head Ravina Kohli as development head, apart from senior programmer Aparna Pandey to work on content and packaging, Kohli and Samat have been meeting with TV producers on various programme proposals. "We will have three hours of fresh programming every day," says Samat. "Our shows will be different from what India has been watching."

    Amongst the shows being developed is one based on a novel by Indu Sundaresan called The Twentieth Wife which tracks a young widow named Mehrunissa, daughter of Persian refugees and wife of an Afghan commander, who goes on to become the empress of the Mughal Empire under the name of Nur Jahan by getting married to emperor Jehangir.

    He is loathe to reveal any financial investments, adding that his business model is a flexible one. "We are working with various alternative scenarios. We expect the channel to be on air by August. We will examine our progress by December and plan further from there. Our focus currently is on putting everything together."

    Samat says his company will work very closely with partners and not have a traditional organisational structure like other private satellite channels have. "We are in a new era of digitisation. We want to bring about a paradigm shift," he professes.

    Spoken like a true pioneer.

  • Airtel DTH: Q4 2013 revenues & subs up, losses down

    MUMBAI: That the DTH market in India is doing well, is something that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai

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    MUMBAI: DTH TV in India is doing very well thank you.

  • Comedy Central's laughter riot

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 03, 2013
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: Viaom18?s 24x7 English comedy channel Comedy Central will be bringing to its viewers a chuckle fest on Sunday 5 May to celebrate laughter day.

    The channel will be airing a series comic shows from across the world like Coupling, Little Britain, Popcorn TV, Whitney and Are We There Yet, Anger Management and Comedy Central Presents special with the Ministry of Schitick.

    The comedy fest will run from 11.00 am to 9.00 pm and will be sponsored by Lays.

    The channel is promoting the fest on the digital platform through it?s official page on Facebook and Twitter.

    Comedy Central in India is a localised version of Comedy Central which first began in the United States in the 1990s and in India on January 23 2012. The English language comedy content programming with the options of the audio language feeds on direct- to- home (DTH).

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