Tag: Rajat Sharma

  • Uday Shankar re-elected President of IBF

    By A Correspondent

     

    Uday Shankar

    Star India CEO Uday Shankar will once again be President of the Indian Broadcasting Federation (IBF), the apex body of television broadcasters in India. At the 15th Annual General Meeting (AGM) IBF held in New Delhi on Wednesday, and the Board of Directors meeting thereafter, Mr Shankar was elected President.

     

    The IBF Board also elected Punit Goenka as Vice President – Measurement, N P Singh as Vice President – Distribution, Rajat Sharma as Vice President – Strategic Affairs and Rahul Johri as Treasurer.

     

    Commenting on the development, Uday Shankar said: “I am privileged to be trusted by the members of IBF to lead the industry body at a critical juncture when the industry needs to leap to the next level by working collaboratively with the Government and other stake holders.”

     

    The move is seen to be significant as the all-important television viewership measurement system of joint industry body BARC is scheduled to be functional in the next few quarters.

     

  • India TV annouces 2nd edition of Salaam India Awards

    By A Correspondent

     

    The second edition of Salaam India Awards 2014, constituted by India TV last year, is back to felicitate the exceptional acts of bravery exemplified by the common citizens of India.

     

    Following the ‘nationwide call for nominations’, the 2014 edition of the coveted honors is officially underway post the Jury deliberated to decide upon the distinguishing Bravehearts last weekend.

     

    Rajat Sharma

    This year’s Award Jury includes India TV Chairman & Editor-in-Chief, Rajat Sharma, Former India CEC, Dr. S.Y. Quraishi, Former Army Chief Gen. Deepak Kapoor, Ace Shooter Col. (Retd.) Rajyavardhan S. Rathore and former IPS Dr. Kiran Bedi.

     

    In line with the guiding principle for the awards, the chosen honourees are those who are not intrinsically fearless but who could selflessly win over their fears to safeguard someone else’s interest while risking or even sacrificing their own lives, in the hour of need.

     

    Ritu Dhawan

    Announcing the second edition of the honors, India TV MD & CEO, Ritu Dhawan said, “We are glad that we are again getting a chance to felicitate our real heroes, who simply inspire us all by their actions demonstrating selflessness & fearlessness, also the most important traits of a news source.”

     

    “As a leader in the Hindi news genre, it is certainly a matter of both pleasure & contentment for us to felicitate those who are not only our role models but also who bring the positive balance to humanity, our society & nation” she added.

     

    The chosen bravehearts will be honored in a glittering ceremony on Sunday, 21st September at Hotel Taj, New Delhi. Salaam India Awards will be conferred across four categories including Bravery Awards, Gallantry Awards, Jyoti Singh Awards and Special Awards.

     

    Officer’s Choice has once again decided join hands with India TV as the presenting sponsor of the initiative along with Amrapali Group as the associate sponsor. Dainik Bhaskar & Pioneer Publicity are the media partners for the initiative. Showtime Events, one of India’s premier event management companies will be managing the event.

     

  • Ajit Anjum appointed Managing Editor at India TV

    By A Correspondent

     

    In a development that could further impact the equations in the Hindi news genre, Ajit Anjum, a veteran of 25 years, has joined India TV’s newsroom as Managing Editor.

     

    Anjum, whose last stint was with BAG network as the Managing Editor of News 24 is best known for experimenting and ideating many path-breaking shows like Sansani, Poll Khol & Red Alert to name a few.  At India TV, he will be reporting to Rajat Sharma, Chairman & Editor-in-chief.

     

    Rajat Sharma

    Rajat Sharma said, “Ajit is a man of ideas, a professional with tremendous energy levels. At this juncture when India TV has successfully established itself as one of the most respected news brands in the country, his entry will definitely help us consolidate our position further.”

     

    A Ramnath Goenka Awardee for Political reporting in 2010, Anjum’s first major break with media was with newspaper Amar Ujala in 1990. His career has been punctuated with a couple of smaller stints with Chauthi Duniya & Aaj Tak, however, he has spent the major part of his career, almost 19 years with BAG network.

     

  • India TV confirms QW Naqvi’s exit

    QW Naqvi

    By A Correspondent

     

    In an official statement issued late on Monday, India TV has confirmed that Q W Naqvi has resigned as Editorial Director.

     

     

    Ritu Dhawan
    Rajat Sharma

    Ritu Dhawan, India TV MD & CEO confirmed the development. “We have accepted his resignation and asked Naqvi to serve his notice period,” she said, adding: “We are surprised at the reasons being attributed to it in the social media. Such reasons are baseless, and we condemn the effort being made to use it for political gains.”

     

    India TV Chairman Rajat Sharma added: “There is a continuous attempt by some people to defame electronic media which has been officially condemned by broadcasters. We in the news media have covered several elections in the past and will cover many more, we cannot allow our industry to become a tool in the hands of interested parties during elections.”

     

    Mr Naqvi, a seasoned campaigner in news television, had joined India TV in October 2013. While we are not sure of where he’s moving next, there are rumours that he may be in discussions with a political party to contest the elections.

     

  • India TV refreshes look. New studio, mike ids greet viewers

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading Hindi news channel India TV has given itself a full scrub. The channel greeted viewers this morning (Monday, December 16) with an all-new look. The logo which was unveiled last Friday is now housed in a refreshed channel.

     

    The new look has been designed by Renderon Broadcast Design, a US-based packaging firm has Fox News and NBC amongst its clients. India TV’s new logo has been designed by brand strategy firm DY Works.

     

    The India TV news presentation moves to a highly sophisticated double storey set, designed and executed by Broadcast Design International (BDI). Mike Baker, former Lighting Director, BBC was flown in for lighting the new set. The new look for India TV mikes has been designed by Germany’s Schulze-Brakel that specialises in collateral design for microphone IDs.

     

    Ritu Dhawan

    Talking of the revamp, India TV Managing Director and CEO Ritu Dhawan said: “It is the result of months of seamless planning and execution. The channel will soon launch a 360-degree marketing campaign to promote and reinforce the rejuvenated programming and packaging. The campaign will elaborate and capture the thought and philosophy behind the revamp across mediums,” she added. It may be recalled Eleven Brandworks was retained as the channel’s creative agency a few months back.

     

     

     

    Rajat Sharma

    As is known, Editor-in-chief Rajat Sharma has revived his popular show Aaj Ki Baat- Rajat Sharma ke Saath.  Mr Sharma’s nightly programme will lead the refreshed look. Meanwhile, Editorial Director QW Naqvi, widely credited with the success of Aaj Tak and a team of experienced editors, producers, presenters and creative writers have recently joined the channel to execute changes in the content.

     

  • India TV gets sent for polls, refreshes new top deck for newsroom

    By A Correspondent

     

    This is what news channels would call a ‘Diwali’. The big day is coming up and before the festivities begin in right earnest, it’s get to clean up the house and make it sparkling and bright.

     

    QW Naqvi

    After bringing in QW Naqvi, India TV has announced a round of senior-level announcements. First off is Amitabh, who after spending 18 years with Aaj Tak, joins as Senior Executive Editor. Then there’s Pranay Yadav coming in as Executive Editor. He returns to India TV after a stint at TV 9 and Shivendra Kumar, who was earlier with ABP News, joins as Deputy Executive Editor.

     

    The newsgathering team of India TV is now led by Executive Editor Rahul Choudhry who also comes from Aaj Tak. The team is supported by Political Editor Sukesh Ranjan who was with IBN 7. Choudhry is also joined by his Aaj Tak colleagues Shamsher Singh as Editor – Current Affairs, Prateek Trivedi as Associate Editor and Sundeep Sonwalker as Deputy Editor.

     

    The content style of the leading channel has changed to in-depth coverage and deep-delving analysis, informs a communiqué.

     

    Rajat Sharma

    Editor-in-chief Rajat Sharma will now be on primetime with ‘Aaj Ki Baat – Rajat Sharma Ke Saath’. Mr Sharma, who resumes a daily news show after a gap of over four years, said: “The India TV newsroom is fully charged to capture the excitement of upcoming general elections. Extensive plans have been made to report, analyse and present the battle for the next Lok Sabha to our viewers.”

     

    “Our viewers can rest assured of most accurate and responsible news reporting, which will further cement our leadership position in Hindi News genre,” said Editorial Director QW Naqvi.

     

    Ritu Dhawan

    Commenting on the new appointments, Ritu Dhawan, MD & CEO, India TV said: “When the channel announced the appointment of QW Naqvi as the Editorial Director in October, it was always on cards that the content team will be further strengthened to gear up for the biggest event in news genre, the general elections slated for 2014, to begin with.”

     

    “All such efforts are a testimony to our commitment to broadcast a perfect mix of news, views and analysis to our ever-evolving audiences and we are sure that we will be able to create and maintain a perfect content mix,” she added hinting at more defining announcements, beyond appointments, to follow soon.

     

  • Aaj Tak veteran QW Naqvi joins India TV as Editorial Director

    By A Correspondent

     

    QW Naqvi

    In a development that could have a far-reaching impact on the equations in the Hindi news genre, Q W Naqvi, former head of the TV Today newsroom, has joined India TV as Editorial Director.

     

    Mr Naqvi, who left the India Today group last year, was rumoured to have joined G Krishnan, in a news channel venture. With Mr Naqvi taking up this assignment, there is uncertainty on the status of that start-up. At India TV, he will be reporting to Rajat Sharma, Chairman & Editor-in-chief.

     

    Rajat Sharma

    Welcoming Mr Naqvi, Mr Sharma said: “Naqviji is a hugely respected professional, with his experience, knowledge and enigma, we definitely see India TV growing faster than ever in its quest to reign supreme in the Hindi news genre and beyond. With elections round the corner, I think we are on are way, to create a right mix for our viewers and advertisers alike.”

     

    Commenting on his appointment, Mr Naqvi said, “This opportunity comes as a huge prospect for me to contribute towards furthering India TV’s charge for cementing its leadership position in the news genre.”

     

    Starting his career in 1980 as trainee journalist in Hindi with the Times of India group, Mr Naqvi has worked at Navbharat Times, and later the ABP group’s “Ravivar”, where he was Chief Reporter. Before moving to Aaj Tak, he was part of the team that started Hindi daily Chauthi Duniya.

     

    Interestingly, it was in Mr Naqvi’s tenure at Aaj Tak that India TV emerged as a potent force in the Hindi news genre and in fact for a period, even surpassed the leader in ratings. Naqviji, according to those who have worked with him, say he is an excellent newsroom strategist. “He can think like the youngest person in the newsroom and add to the overall energy of the channel,” said a former colleague.

     

    Meanwhile, India TV has been putting finishing touches to its elections programming and has simultaneously also worked on elevating its image through a slew of high profile events and initiatives (Disclosure: India TV had sponsored MxMIndia’s self-defence workshops in media agencies earlier this year).

     

     

     

  • India TV announces Yuva Awards

    By A Correspondent

     

    India TV has announced the first Yuva Awards, planned to honour India’s future by instituting recognition for the most promising young faces of the nation.

     

    Positioned as an aspirational salute to youth icons who have shown exemplary leadership and extraordinary excellence in respective fields with achievements much bigger than their age, the awards will be given in six categories: Politics, Sports, Music, Film, Television and Business.

     

    The honorees for the inaugural annual property by India TV will be decided through a stringent process involving tabulation and stratified research by a renowned international research agency, India TV viewers’ votes and jury deliberations.

     

    The high-powered jury will be chaired by Sarod Maestro Ustaad Amjad Ali Khan. The panel includes personalities like sporting legend Kapil Dev, Padma Shree Vandana Luthra and Professor Pushpesh Pant. Noted media personality and Chairman & Editor in Chief of India TV, Rajat Sharma, will also be part of the jury.

     

    Announcing this, Ritu Dhawan, MD & CEO, India TV said, “Yuva Awards is a humble attempt to inspire the iconic potential of young indians who will take our nation to newer heights. These youth icons will be those who have already displayed enormous potential and made it big at their young age. They have created benchmarks in their respective fields and brought pride to our nation.”

     

    The awards ceremony will be held in New Delhi on February 18, and will be telecast live on India TV.

     

  • Paritosh Joshi: So you want a job in the Media?

    By Paritosh Joshi

     

    MBA from a leading business school in the American Midwest, two years with a boutique investment bank in Boston and then this young man lands up for a chat about what he needs to do to get a job in the media.

     

    It is still easy to think there is a clear demarcation that sets the media apart from the rest of the world. Aamir, Ashton, Arnab and Aishwarya are in the Media. (They don’t even need surnames to identify them). Media people ‘need no introduction’. Us grunts have nothing worth introducing and thus, don’t need to be introduced.

     

    Or is it so simple?

     

    There were the Media people but they were few and readily identified as such. M J Akbar dazzled us with his insight in columns for a newspaper he edited. Rajat Sharma put people into the dock, quite literally, as he hosted a talk show. Derek O’Brien got all of us furiously scratching our heads even as he quizzed school kids. Madhuri Dixit sent testosterone levels into orbit merely by counting from 1 to 13. And Lalu had to invoke Sridevi’s cheeks in search of a universally comprehensible metaphor for Bihar’s roads.

     

    Then Tim Berners-Lee came along and changed everything, although for years after he thought up hypertext in an obscure corner of CERN, we would scarcely have known it.

     

    By the late 90s, regular blokes discovered that it was possible to find a wider audience for their periodic rants on WWW than they previously could muster around a water cooler or in a cafe. The web log, then portmanteau-ed to weblog and finally truncated to blog was born either in 1995 or 1997 (you can find an interesting history here).

     

    Then blogger came along in 1999, bang in the heady days of the Dotcom Boom and setting up a blog became Luddite-proof. From the very beginning, the blogging community had a wide range of interests and capability. The largest majority would create an account in an idle moment never to visit it ever again. A few would invest time and effort in their posts and endeavour to reach out to an audience with regular, engaging updates. Remember that these were people operating far away from the conventional notion, but what they were doing was indisputably publishing.

     

    Everyman had just stormed Fortress Media.

     

    It began with the written word. Soon enough, authors had found ways of adding pictures to their words. And the web was becoming more clever all the time. It was able to transport not just text but sound and video too. Also, devices to record audio and video had started to shrink in price and size even as they got massively more powerful, thus putting near professional quality sound and image acquisition within reach. Events unfolded at a rapid pace thereafter. Amazon pioneered a lightweight handheld device for reading digital publications. The Kindle was a runaway success and for the first time, books could be self-published by anyone with a good idea and capable penmanship without ever being imprinted onto the dead-tree medium. Soundcloud allowed wannabe speakers, singers and instrumentalists to distribute their art and craft without surrendering themselves to the crafty gnomes of the music industry. Youtube opened doors for every standup comic, ballerina, burlesque queen and cute kitten to show off its talents on glorious Technicolor video.

     

    But wait, we were talking about an investment banker contemplating a career in the media. So what’s with this long riff about what we now refer to, rather condescendingly I might add, as User Generated Content?

     

    Well, it wasn’t just individuals that got inspired to start using the all new powers of WWW to talk to their “Audience”. Businesses of every stripe saw the opportunity too. To be rather more honest, what they saw was consumers – happy and irate, sounding off about their brand experiences in these wide open spaces and were left with little choice but to deal, for better or worse, with what they were getting. Surely we’ve all heard the now almost apocryphal story of Coca Cola’s attempt to take down a fan page on Facebook that spectacularly backfired? To the point where they had to pretty much say ‘Let bygones be bygones and let’s be friends’? (Moral: Don’t clobber, co-opt).

     

    You see what’s happening here. Companies and brands were becoming broadcasters and publishers.

     

    At no time before in the history of our human civilization has communication across every conventional fence and barrier been so easy, inexpensive and by implication pervasive or ubiquitous. And barring the rare exception, individuals and entities find it more productive to be participants in this endless feast of reason and flow of soul than mere mute spectators. There’s even a taxonomy to describe different levels of involvement with media: Paid media are, as the name suggests, those that you have to buy access to. Earned media are where the media voluntarily carry news or content about you. Finally, owned media are, again as evidenced by the name, those that you own and control. Who doesn’t want earned and owned media?

     

    And what was it that we were talking about when we began this ramble? Ah, yes. A job in the media.

     

    I told the young man, he could stop looking. After all, every job- FMCG, Banking, Automobiles, Telecommunication, <insert randomly chosen industry name here> eventually, was going to be a job in the Media.

     

    Paritosh Joshi was until recently CEO, Star CJ. He has been a marketer, a mediaperson and a key officebearer on industry bodies. He is Strategic Advisor, Ormax Media. He can reached via his Twitter handle @paritoshZero