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  • Film investors, filmmakers to be on a single platform on 27 April in Mumbai

    MUMBAI: On the occasion of the ‘International Conference on Film Finance’, to be held for the first time in India at

  • Sony Pictures TV licenses 'Unforgettable' to Star

    Submitted by ITV Production on Mar 10, 2012
    indiantelevision.com Team

    MUMBAI: Sony Pictures Television (SPT) has licensed the series ?Unforgettable? to several broadcasters across Asia-Pacific including Star in India, Wowow in Japan and TVNZ in New Zealand.

    ?Unforgettable? will air from 8 May on Star, this summer on Wowow and later this year on TVNZ. The series will also return in Australia on NINE next week. Around the world, the series has now been sold in more than 150 countries.

    SPT senior VP distribution, Asia Pacific Angel Orengo.Orengo said, "SPT consistently offers audiences compelling, engaging, high-quality programming and Unforgettable delivers just that. Its mystery and originality coupled with the smoldering smarts of lead character Poppy Montgomery will continue to grab the attention of millions of viewers across our region."

    ?Unforgettable? follows Poppy Montgomery as Carrie Wells, an ex-cop with a special gift: she remembers everything she?s experienced in perfect detail. Specifically, Carrie has hyperthymesia, an extremely rare condition in which the brain recalls detailed events by date, often back to childhood. When a tragedy brings her back in touch with her ex-boyfriend (Dylan Walsh), now an NYPD detective, he convinces her to use her incredible memory to help solve big-city crimes.

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    Sony Pictures
  • Unlocking new opportunities via satellites: SES Sr VP Commercial Asia-Pacific and the Middle East Deepak Mathur

    Indian TV viewers and Internet surfers never had it so

  • 2011: Getting ready for the next growth phase: Discovery Networks Asia-Pacific SVP and general manager (South Asia) Rahul Johri

    2011 was a year of dynamic transformation for the indus

  • Web reportage included for Asia-Pacific MDG Awards

    Submitted by ITV Production on Mar 17, 2007
    indiantelevision.com Team

    NEW DELHI: Internet based materials have been included in the First Asia-Pacific Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Media Awards aimed at honouring outstanding reporting/writing on the MDGs in print, radio and TV.The Asia Pacific Institute for Broadcasting Development will be the Secretariat for the Awards which have been instituted through a tripartite initiative of the Bangkok-based United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP), the UN Development Programme (UNDP), and the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

    The MDG Media Awards are aimed at encouraging journalists to put a human face to the MDGs in the region, demonstrating how stories about extreme poverty link to the MDGs. The Awards carry a prize of US$7,000 for first prize winners in each category, and a US$2,000 prize for runners-up. Entries close 15 April 2007.

    The competition is open to all print, radio and TV producers/journalists from public service broadcasting organizations, private networks and free-lance producers, and web-based news services covering the Asia and the Pacific.

    The inclusion of web-based materials follows requests from media networks. Articles published on a web site fall within the print category. Videos published on a web site fall under the TV category. In both cases, web-based materials must be publicly available on the internet throughout the competition period (January 1, 2006 to June 30. 2007). Any entrant can submit a maximum of two web-based articles and up to two web-based videos. Entries can be in English or the local language, with an accompanying English translation.

    Web-based works are judged ?as-in?, that is, as they appear on the web site. DVDs or CD-ROMs with an off-line replication of a web site will not be accepted. Web-based works have to be live and on-line.

    Each entry has to be secured with signed authorization from the creator (author and/or producer) as well as from the current owner of the intellectual property rights on the work (the employer), and must be authentic in all its parts: text, pictures, audio, video and other multimedia elements.

     

    Entries for broadcast will be accepted in various formats, such as documentaries, special and feature reports, current affairs programme, dramas, or a series of ten-minute feature reports etc. They should be at least 15 minutes long to give substance to the presentation of the topic. For print, formats can be a special report, feature and investigative piece.

    Entries for broadcast will be accepted in various formats, such as documentaries, special and feature reports, current affairs programme, dramas, or a series of ten-minute feature reports etc. They should be at least 15 minutes long to give substance to the presentation of the topic. For print, formats can be a special report, feature and investigative piece.

     

    Entries can focus on any one of the eight MDGs. The United Nations Information Service has suggested some ideas which include a person or family?s struggle to ease hunger and fight disease (MDG Goal 1), success story of an AIDS victim and the role government, civil society and other institutions play into that family?s ordeal (MDG Goal 6), young peoples concerns with climate change and air quality (MDG Goal 7), or rural children trying to obtain education (MDG Goal 2). Reference to the MDG goal is mandatory.

     

  • Rising number of SMEs drives growth of Asia-Pacific VSAT market

    MUMBAI: The Asia-Pacific VSAT (very small aperture terminal) market is firmly in its growth stage, and has come to r

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