Tag: Dabangg

  • It’s 50-50 music & masti with Maiboli

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Adhikari brothers – Gautam and Markand – have been true pioneers in the Indian television space. Having been among the first private and independent programmers for Doordarshan and private satellite television, the brothers went on to publicly list their company, launch a comedy channel in SAB and then sell it to Multi Screen Media (Sony), launch two other channels – Janmat which later turned into Live India and Mi Marathi, both of which were part-sold, and more recently he launched music and entertainment channels Mastiii, Dabangg and Dhamaal. Here too, he pioneered the concept of focused regional plays with channels catering specifically to certain states in the Hindi Speaking Markets.

     

    Markand Adhikari

    And now it’s a ‘Maiboli’, a Marathi humour-and-music channel that has had a quiet launch today (August 8).  “I live in Maharashtra, Marathi is my first love and we started out with Marathi-language content,” says vice-chairman and managing director Markand Adhikari. While he regrets that Mi Marathi couldn’t take off on expected lines after construction major HDIL bought majority stake, he is hopeful that Maiboli will be a success from the beginning.

     

    The reason: humour has always been the core strength of Adhikari Brothers. MaiBoli will a 24-hour free-to-air channel with music and humour in equal measure. The music will appeal to all age groups, says Anita Verma, vice-president – programming who informs that the channel’s tagline is ‘Aapli Aaplya Mansaanchi’. “Comedy will be in the form of short three-odd minute standalone skits starring well-known theatre and TV performers like Sunil Tawde, Anshuman Vichare, Pradip Patwardhan, Santosh Pawaar, Digambar Naik, Arun Kadam, Kishori Ambiye  and Vijay Patwardhan amongst others,” she says

     

    Anita Verma

    The music bands of Maiboli are designed as per the mood of the slot which suits it the best. The day hence commences with ‘Bhakticha-Thheva’ which is a devotional band of soulful and spiritual songs, followed by ‘Priteechi Jhul Jhul Gani’ of romantic numbers, ‘Mast Madmast’ band of high-spirited fast numbers, ‘Sur tech Chhedita’ of soothing and relaxing songs and  ‘Chandne Shimpit Jashi’ of classic romantic and sad songs.

     

    The distribution spread will grow across Maharashtra over the next few weeks and months and simultaneously a marketing campaign will also be initiated.

     

    “After the South and Bengal, Marathi is big for regional television,” says Mr Adhikari. And how are his other channels doing? “Mastii turned No 1 within four months and has been No 1 or 2 ever since. Dabbang has also been No 1 in UP and Bihar for two years. Marathi has been on the cards for a while, and we thought the time was right.”

     

    But isn’t everyone talking of another slowdown and liquidity crunch? “On the contrary. With digitization, things have improved and will be even better in a couple of years. In fact the In times of come, with digitization, the time for media has come. In one or two years, media will have a golden period,” forecasts Mr Adhikari.

     

    What next, after Maiboli? “We will obviously expand,” says Mr Adhikari who is simultaneously also stitching up plans for the expansion of the Governance Now magazine that he runs.

     

  • Pidilite signs Kareena’s ‘Fevicol se’ song from Dabangg 2

    By Vijaya Rathore & Ratna Bhushan

     

    In India, every brand would like to be Salman Khan. His stimulating record-busting success, his driving-the-country-crazy chutzpah, his mass hysterical rock-star appeal are sure ingredients no brand would like to let go of.

     

    Zandu reaped a windfall for Emami, the balm’s maker, with the provincial and saucy lyrics of the item number in Dabangg, Munni badnaam hui, to which Malaika Arora-Khan jigged irrepressibly with Salman into the heart of India. Now Fevicol, a brand that already has a deep connect with the country, has jumped jauntily on to its sequel, Dabangg 2, hoping that the new rustic and pert item song keeps the swelling club of Salman fanboys glued to it. Pidilite Industries, maker of Fevicol, has signed a marketing and promotion deal with the film’s producer Arbaaz Khan for the song where top actress Kareena Kapoor plays the item girl.

     

    Anil Jayaraj, chief marketing officer at Pidilite, said the association did not involve any financial deal, but the company will co-promote the song and the film, which releases on December 21, through television commercials, hoardings and other media. “Fevicol’s core proposition of bonding and sticking comes out well in the song,” he said.

     

    Shreyas Khedekar, executive producer at Arbaaz Khan Productions, said the producers did not make an effort to accommodate Fevicol in the song. “The composers came up with the suggestions and we liked it,” he said. “Unlike last time, we had a promotional tie-up for Fevicol much in advance. The idea was to avoid any complications later,” Khedekar said.

     

    Last time, they did not take permission from Emami to use Zandu balm in the song that made Munni badnaam, and the Kolkata-based company had served a legal notice on the production house.

     

    Later, both parties settled the dispute amicably and decided to use grabs of the chartbuster song for Zandu balm’s promotional campaigns. Emami also signed Malaika Arora as the brand ambassador for the balm.

     

    Pidilite’s Jayaraj said that while Fevicol has done in-film placement in several movies, including recent ones such as Son of Sardaar and Golmaal, this is probably the first time the brand has become part of a Hindi song’s lyrics. Adman Piyush Pandey, head of creative agency Ogilvy & Mather, said the brand Fevicol was mentioned in a Tamil song a couple of years ago.

     

    “When translated, the line in the song meant ‘I want to plant Fevicol kisses on your cheeks’,” he said. “Even news headlines have used the word several times to convey the sense of bonding and sticking. We don’t mind this,” said Mr Pandey, who has been instrumental in boosting the Fevicol brand through a series of clutter-breaking ads.

     

    The song in Dabangg 2 goes: ” Angdaaiyan leti hoon mein jab zor zor se, Ooh aah ki awaaz hai aati road se, Mere photo ko seene se yaar, Chipkaale sayiaan Fevicol se…” The brand has no problem if somebody uses it to stick a photo on one’s heart. “As a brand we don’t take ourselves too seriously,” Mr Pandey says.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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