• Star hike was planned move

    The Indian Cab & Sat Reporter, indiantelevision.com's weekly subscription newsletter, had predicted earl

  • HFCL says it only wants to be DTH box supplier; not an operator

    Submitted by ITV Production on Nov 09, 2000

    Broadband player Himachal Futuristic Communications Ltd (HFCL) chairman and managing director Mahendra Nahata has announced that his company is not interested in getting into Direct to home television, either as a platform builder or distributor.
    "We are interested in supplying set top boxes to various prospective DTH operators," he told indiantelevision.com. "The pricing is around Rs 8,000-9,000 per box."

    He revealed that he is in conversation with potential DTH players to supply them with boxes. He added: "It is both an open platform without any conditional access and it can also be a box with conditional access which will have encryption system to be selected by the operator."
     

  • CNN looks set to win US election news ratings in India too

    Submitted by ITV Production on Nov 09, 2000

    BBC and Star News - eat your hearts out. CNN looks set to win the viewership battle around the US elections coverage amongst upscale English speaking Indian viewers. CNBC India is likely to be a close second.

    Did the US election capture the eyeballs of the Indian masses? Did the local news channels such as Zee News, DD, Star News, Jain TV, Sun, Eenadu find viewers? Quite unlikely but one will have to wait for the ratings reports to emerge to find out how they really fared.

    Meanwhile, the news is that CNN won the all-news-network ratings war on Tuesday in both primetime and total-day categories, while MSNBC pushed back Fox News Channel (FNC) into third spot.

    CNN garnered a 4.7 Nielsen Media Research rating and 3.7 million households in primetime. MSNBC notched up a 3.1 rating with 1.9 million household. FNC captured a 2.76 rating and 1.5 million households.

    The shares for the total-day period (6 a.m. to 6 a.m.) were as follows:

    * CNN: 2.32 rating and 1.8 million households.
    * MSNBC: 1.5 rating and 915,000 households
    * FNC: 1.39 rating and 773,000 households

    NBC led in prime time terrestrial television viewership with a 12.7 rating, an increase of 35 percent from the 1996 election. ABC with an 11.2 rating was No 2 and CBS was at No 3 with 8.4.

  • Addressability comes to the forefront

    Submitted by ITV Production on Nov 09, 2000

    Cable TV addressability has been brought out into the open. Earlier this week, an Andhra Pradesh high court has said that all subscription channels should stop charging cable operators carriage fees for those channels which consumers do not want to subscribe to, according to a report in The Economic Times.
    The short injunction was issued by a divisional bench consisting of chief justice Manmohan Singh Liberman and Justice G Raghuram on a public interest petition filed by a consumer S Subbarami Reddy against the I&B ministry, Prasar Bharti and Doordarshan. Reddy has made basic subscription networks such as Star TV, Zee TV, Sony and ESPN-Star TV a party to the case.

    The court has told subscription TV channels to back off and not collect any money from cable TV ops until the writ petition is settled in court.

    The problem with the Indian cable TV industry is that it is mostly disorganised and MSOs have little control over the end subscriber as they have not placed a set top box in his/her home which allows him/her to choose the channels he/she wants and accordingly pay for them. Only in recent times have cable TV ops starting investing in upgrading their networks making their networks return-path ready.

    An estimate is that close to Rs 5,000 per subscriber is needed to be invested in cable TV infrastructure to make it addressability-ready. Of course, the subscriber will pay for part of this investment. The key issue is whether he is interested enough to pay for set top box, especially when most of the time he is wary of paying even the Rs 100-200 that he has to pay every month to the cable TV op.

    Zee TV has been mulling addressability for a year or so. It has a Rs 25 billion project to place addressible set top boxes in subscribers homes, but has not been able to raise funds for it. There have been few interested buyers for the 10 per cent stake in Siticable it has offered in exchange for the funds it needs.

    The TV channels are expected tofight the interim order passed by the Andhra Pradesh High Court. But it?s quite possible it may be used as a landmark judgement - just like the "opening the air waves" order was in 1994 to force the government to be more liberal about broadcasting - to force a hesitant cable TV industry to change.

  • Jain TV gung-ho on DTH platform

    Submitted by ITV Production on Nov 07, 2000

    Jain Studios Ltd chairman Dr J.K. Jain is keen on setting up a DTH platform and would do so, within three months of finding a partner. He disclosed this to CNBC India during an interview.

    In a chat with moneycontrol.com, he said that: "Our DTH strategy as we see today is not to serve the interests of satelite channels but for the audiences who need an alternative to the present cable networks both in terms of a better quality and quantity of content. Moreover instead of monopolising the DTH opportunity we wish to act only as a facilitator for everybody who wants to be in the DTH business whether one is a Ku-band transponder owner or one is a satellite channel or a content provider or a member of the audience."

    He added that his company would welcome "a 20% foreign partner in our DTH venture. Even in our other projects we keep all our options open."

    Jain is believed to be close to the powers that be in the BJP. Additionally, he has in the past talked about setting up an earth station in Delhi. He runs a general entertainment and news channel, is bidding to set up several portals, and is also keen on offering free net access and bandwidth to Indian ISPs.
     

  • B4U says it is open to invest 20 per cent in DTH operation

    Submitted by ITV Production on Nov 06, 2000

    B4U Multimedia which has built up a successful music channel in B4U Music says it is interested in investing 20 per cent in a DTH platform, should it get the opportunity. The company is backed by four businessmen - Lakshmi Nivas Mittal, Gokul Binani, Bharat Shah and Kishore Lulla - and also runs an entertainment channel in India B4U Entertainment, apart from pay channels in the UK, US, and west Asia.
    Speaking to indiantelevision.com B4U CEO Ravi Gupta said: "We have certain concerns relating to the DTH notification and we will be taking them to the relevant authorities. But we have taken an in-principle decision to participate in a DTH platform."

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