Starts 3rd October

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  • Zee makes Choti Maa a daily

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 14
    indiantelevision.com

     

     


    Chotimaa Ek Anokha Bandhan

     

     

     

    There?s a glut of daily soaps. Here?s another joining that rash. Choti Maa Ek Anokha Bandhan, a remake of the super successful Tamil soap Chithi (it is running in its 440 episode), is slated to become a five-day-a-week affair (from the current thrice a week telecast now) come 17 September. Choti Maa is touted as the big driver in Zee TV?s struggle to charge ahead in the programming and viewership sweepstakes.

    Choti Maa, portrays the life of a woman of strength and extraordinary substance who seldom uses tears as a crutch, who decides a future for which she can write her own script , which she does with amazing success.

    It is a co-production between Chithi producer Radaan Mediaworks India (chaired by Radikaa & M.R.Mohan Ratha) which is looking after the creative and production aspects, and United Television (promoted by Ronnie Screwvala, Zarina Mehta and Deven Khote), which is handling the marketing, communication and promotion of the show. Schedules for shooting take the cast to Bangalore, Pandharpur,and Satara .

    Chithi has achieved phenomenal viewership and consistently makes its appearance in the top three shows in all India ratings across channels C& S homes.Zee is hoping to get the same results with Choti Maa. in the Hindi version. The channel will need all of Choti Maa?s blessings to get the results that are envisaged.

     

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  • Zee makes Choti Maa a daily

    There's a glut of daily soaps. Here's another joining that rash.

  • Scooby-Doo goes crackers over Krackjack

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 14

    It‘s a krackjack of an idea. Cookies (biscuits in India) and kids go together. Ditto with kids and Cartoon Network in India.The channel has an immense cachet with Indian kids. The managers of biscuits major Parle Products and the kid‘s channel have decided to marry, in a bid to cash in on each others‘ brand franchise.

    The wrapper of each of Parle‘s Krackjack biscuits will feature that lovable, brave but confused dog Scooby Doo. And not only that: kids will get a freebie in the form of a Scooby-Doo sticker and tatoo everytime they buy a 75 gram Krackjack pack.

    Kids will get a freebie in the form of a Scooby-Doo sticker and tatoo everytime they buy a 75 gram Krackjack pack.

    The stickers and tattoos come in more than 50 varieties. The purpose of this is that kids who identify with the character will be interested in starting their own collection. Says Parle Products marketing manager Pravin Kulkarni: "We are confident that the combination of Cartoon Network‘s hugely popular Scooby-Doo and Parle‘s Krackjack biscuits will boost our volumes".

    However, there is a rider attached: the offer is open till stocks last. So one can expect a lot of kids sending parents crackers demanding Krackjack.

    On its part Cartoon network will carry oodles of Krackjack commercials and also flog the promotion on air.

    Cartoon Network has struck similar alliances with brands such as Pepsi, Camlin Sparkles, Godrej Jumpin‘, and Coke, Cartoon Network India spokesperson Shana Lall said.

  • South Indian music channel Southern Spice launched in Mumbai

    Southern Spice is headquartered in Chennai and beams a mix of Tamil (40 per cent), Telugu (30 per cent), Kannada (10

  • IBF meeting with 3AofI and Tam, Intam on as scheduled

    The alleged TRP scam has literally become a case of the right hand not knowing what the left is up to.

  • Ad breaks took a break on the news channels

    Submitted by ITV Production on Sep 13

    In the aftermath of Tuesday‘s horrific multiple terrorist attacks on America‘s institution‘s of military and financial might, literally all eyes have been and are on the unfolding story. The US has been hit and the world is shaken to the core. Richard Sambrook, director of BBC News on the US disaster, was probably speaking for the media community at large when he said: "I doubt many of us have ever been confronted with a story of such magnitude."

    On a more banal level, there is a huge opportunity here for the various news channels due to the phenomenal increase in eyeballs that an event like this engenders.

    So have the ad sales managers been working overtime to bung in as many ads as possible? Quite the opposite actually. On the day of the attack (Tuesday) all the major news networks beaming in India opted for total and blanket news coverage without any ad breaks.

    While CNN went the whole hog (understandable it being an American news channel) and has been operating a single news service feed to all its audiences around the world and is still broadcasting without any ad breaks, the other channels began doing so from yesterday. India comes under CNN‘s South Asia service.

    Business news channel CNBC India‘s CEO Haresh Chawla pointed out that during such times as these the only issue with any news channel was to make sure that as comprehensive coverage as is possible is delivered to audiences. Queried about whether advertisers would want to position their products to cash in on the increased viewership he said the channels would not agree to it in the first place and secondly, even advertisers would be reluctant fearing a negative backlash.

    Star India‘s executive V-P ad sales, Raj Nayak, ruled out any attempt to cash in as it were on increased traffic. "As a news channel, we will not capitalise on tragedies," Nayak says. Nayak added that the logs for ad breaks were sent (to Hong Kong) 48 hours in advance, so even if there was pressure to increase ad time it could not be done at such short notice.

    Nayak added that all programming on the Star World channel was switched to Fox News once the gravity of what had happened in New York and elsewhere in America became clear.

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