• AIR gets 4.7 MHz spectrum for FM services

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 25, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    NEW DELHI: All India Radio has a spectrum of just 4.7 MHz exclusively reserved for its FM services and will need more spectrum to achieve its objective of setting up 385 new FM transmitters in the Twelfth Plan to increase the FM coverage to India?s 90 per cent population.

    Information and Broadcasting Ministry sources said that only 100 to 103.7 was presently reserved exclusively for FM broadcasting services by AIR.

    In contracts, 103.7 t0 108 MHz and 91.5 MHz to 95 MHz is exclusively reserved for expansion of the private sector FM services.

    At present, AIR FM reaches out to 41.43 per cent population and 29.18 per cent area. This is part of the total AIR coverage of 91.87 per cent area and 99.19 per cent population.

    Even prior to the 12th Plan scheme, FM Transmitters of varying capacities are being installed in 224 more places throughout the country by AIR, apart from 40 MW transmitters. This will take the coverage to 38.75 per cent area and 53.53 per cent population including villages and hamlets.

    The sources said 87 to 91.5 MHz and 95 to 100 MHz is shared between Fixed/Mobile and FM broadcasting services. But Fixed/Mobile Services have priority over FM broadcasting services.

    Meanwhile, 531-1602 kHz (Medium Frequency) is an exclusive band for radio broadcasting according to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). AIR gets allocation for Medium Wave radio services. Furthermore, 3-26 MHz (High Frequency) is an exclusive band for radio broadcasting and AIR gets allocation for Short Wave radio services.

    In addition, AIR is also using the Insat satellites for linking/feeding of programmes to various stations in the country through S-Band: 2550-2590 MHz (Transponder S-1); 2590-2630 MHz ((Transponder S-2); and C-Band : 4105-4145 MHz.

    The sources said the assessment of spectrum requirement for broadcasting and radio is done by Wireless Planning Coordination Wing (WPC) of the Department of Telecom through a Committee under the chairmanship of Wireless Advisor while drawing up of National Frequency Allocation Plan. The NFAP 2011 is the latest frequency allocation plan.

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    Radio
  • Balaji Telefilms Group CEO Puneet Kinra quits

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jun 04, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: Balaji Telefilms Group chief executive officer Puneet Kinra has quit and will join the film-focused private equity company which will be floated by the promoters of the company, a source in the company revealed on condition of anonymity.

    Kinra has been group CEO Balaji Telefilms since October 2008. He had joined the company from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) where he was working as associate director of its Investment Banking practice.

    Prior to joining PwC, Kinra worked in a boutique investment bank focused on Telecom and Media. He has experience in domestic and cross border transactions in Media, Healthcare, Real Estate, Retail, Pharma, Communications, Technology, FMCG and Manufacturing.

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    Puneet Kinra
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  • India yet to have a cogent national media policy: Ansari

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jan 17, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    NEW DELHI: Vice-President M Hamid Ansari has expressed regret that India has not yet had an informed debate in the country on the issue of multiple-ownership and cross-ownership nor a cogent national media policy that covers all platforms, which he says is at variance with the practice of other developed democracies.

    Ansari said the impact of the emergence of a handful of media conglomerates spanning the entire media spectrum in moulding public opinion, generating political debate and safeguarding consumer and public interest is a moot question.

    He added that the matter assumes urgency in the wake of moves towards consolidation in the media sector. While the entry of large corporate houses into the media sector is to be expected, especially to address the growing capital requirements, ensuring transparency and instituting effective and independent oversight in consultation with the industry could address such concerns.
     
    Speaking after presenting the Ramnath Goenka Awards for Excellence in Journalism instituted by the Indian Express group, he said the best guarantee for safeguarding the public interest is to have strong and independent-minded editors but they were becoming an endangered species. Slow erosion of the institution of the editor in Indian media organisations is a reality. When media space and media products are treated solely in terms of revenue maximisation strategies, editors end up giving way to marketing departments, he added.

    He noted that convergence between news media, entertainment and telecom has eroded the demarcation between journalism, public relations, advertising and entertainment. He said the public purpose of journalism that guided people in an earlier era had changed.

    "But in a changed and changing world, it would be useful to remember that vibrant journalism in a democracy is watchdog journalism. It monitors the exercise of power and influence in society and stands for the rights and freedoms of citizens. It informs and empowers citizens rather than entertains and titillates them," he said.

    Vibrant journalism is based on professional ethics and should be the rule in a democracy, rather than the exception it has come to be. "Our media, and democracy, are fortunate that we have shining examples of journalists who not only embody the ethical dimension but sadly also laid down their life for the same," he added.

    The media plays a major role in informing the public and thereby shape perceptions and through it the national agenda. Adherence to accepted norms of journalistic ethics and maintenance of high standards of professional conduct is deemed to be a natural corollary.

    He noted that the structural biases of the development process have favoured urban areas over rural ones, metropolitan areas over other urban areas, English-speaking over those speaking other Indian languages, the middle and upper classes over the others who constitute the vast majority of our citizens, and the service sectors over other areas such as agriculture.

    These biases have prompted the media to resort to ?sunshine journalism? where the focus is on the glass that is quarter-full rather than that which is three-quarters empty! When this occurs, the role of the media as a defender and upholder of public interest does get dented and relegated to the background.

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    M Hamid Ansari
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    MUMBAI: Telecom brand MTS has signed Bollywood icon Imran Khan as its brand ambassador.

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