Tag: Rajya Sabha

  • India Today’s Safaigiri Awards to recognise Covid warriors

    By A Correspondent

    The India Today group has announced the sixth edition of the Safaigiri Awards. This year the group will recognise Covid-19 warriors who have been leading the fight against Covid-19 from the front.

    Safaigiri AwardNominations have been invited from individuals/organisations who have contributed and brought about a significant change during this pandemic. The categories for this year are:

    •         Best State in Combating Covid-19
    •         Best Celebrity Contribution in Spreading Awareness
    •         Best Far-Reaching Corporate Contribution for a Wider Social Impact
    •         Best Testing Facility
    •         Best NGO or other Entity that Extended Timely Help to Migrants
    •         Best Innovation for Covid -Related Activity in Times of the Pandemic
    •         Best Logistics Services Provider
    •         Best NGO or Other Entity Offering Healthcare Services
    •         Best Health Manager

    Nominations with all details can be sent to safaigiri@intoday.com or they can be filed on www.safaigiri.in. The last date of filing nominations is September 12, 2020.

    This year’s jury comprises Aroon Purie, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief, India Today Group; Anu Aga, Former Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha, Businesswoman and Social Worker; Manish Sabharwal, Chairman, TeamLease Services Ltd; Dr Srinath Reddy, President, Public Health Foundation of India; Dr Devi Shetty, Chairman and Founder, Narayana Health; Dr Naresh Trehan, Chairman and Managing Director, Medanta;  Dr Gagandeep Kang, Vaccine Expert and Dr Swati Piramal, Vice Chairperson, Piramal Group

  • M V Shreyams Kumar wins Rajya Sabha bypoll in Kerala

    By A Correspondent

     

    M V Shreyams Kumar, Managing Director,  Mathrubhumi Group sailed to victory in the bypoll held for one vacant Rajya Sabha seat from Kerala.

     

    A two-time legislator, Shreyams Kumar won the Rajya Sabha seat held by his late father, MP Veerendra Kumar. The death of the 84-year-old media baron on May 28 had necessitated the bypoll.

     

    Shreyams Kumar also dons the roles of Kerala Regional Committee Chairman of Indian Newspaper Society,Vice President of News Broadcasters Association and Global Vice President of International Advertising Association.

     

     

  • RIP, Veerendra Kumar. MD, Mathrubhumi & Rajya Sabha MP

    Veerendra Kumar
    Image courtesy: mathrubhumi.com

    By Jaisurya Das

     

    MP Veerendra Kumar or Veeran uncle as I knew him was a coffee planter who morphed into a brilliant media mind.

     

    His amazing foresight and  penchant for success led him to make sweeping  changes to the Mathrubhumi media group and it grew from strength to strength in the Kerala market.

     

    While I may not have interacted with him professionally, we knew him very well and his ability to relate to different wavelengths and personalties was his hallmark.

     

    Veeran uncle had an amazing sense of humour, loved life and lived well. Interestingly, he was one of the early media owners who brought in professionals into the company who helped transform it to what it is today.

     

    His business acumen and tenacity was more than established through healthy financials year on year.

     

    Am sure his son and the media whiz Shreyams gained immense strength from his father’s mentorship. His work today bears testimony to the ideology and process that Veeran uncle brought to the company.

     

    My family joins me in praying for his everlasting peace. My heartfelt condolences to his family at this time. May God give them strength to bear this colossal loss.

     

    We will miss you, Veeran uncle. Rest well in the better world.

     

     

    Jaisurya Das is a senior mediaperson who has spent a fair number of his professional and personal time in Kerala. He has been writing for MxMIndia since 2011.

     

  • Zee Hindustan goes anchor-less

    By A Correspondent

     

    Zee Media Corporation announced last week that its Hindi news channel, Zee Hindustan, would function without any anchor.

     

    “The anchors who appear on news channels often appear to give colour to a particular story. The viewers who really want to follow, or just know about the news are left with no choice but to watch that anchor. We at Zee sensed this urgency and decided to come up with an alternative which will just give news, without any views. And this is how Zee Hindustan was born,” said Zee group chairman and Rajya Sabha MP Dr Subhash Chandra.

     

    Added Ashok Venkatramani, MD, ZMCL: “The country is heading towards the biggest election battle. In a forced opinionated environment, Zee Hindustan will definitely break the clutter and create a niche for itself amongst viewers. The news in purest form and variety of content will put the channel apart from others”.

     

    Said Purushottam Vaishnav, Editor-in-Chief of the channel: “It has been a strenuous two-month journey for all of us and my team did a commendable job in launching this channel in such a brief time. Zee Hindustan will give you news, without any views.”

     

     

  • Marathi edition of Subhash Chandra’s ‘The Z Factor’ launched

    By A Correspondent

     

    Leading political leaders from Maharashtra came together at the launch of the Marathi edition of ‘The Z Factor – My Journey as the Wrong Man at the Right Time’. the autobiography of Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha and Chairman – Essel Group, Dr Subhash Chandra. These included NCP leader Sharad Pawar, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, and former CM Prithviraj Chavan. Popular Marathi film and television folk were also in attendance.

     

    Paying a tribute to the city of Mumbai and Marathi culture, Chandra said: “While Haryana is my ‘janmabhoomi’ (homeland), Mumbai is my ‘karmabhoomi’ (land of work). After living and working in Mumbai for the last 35 years, I feel that I have been accepted as a Maharashtrian. Mumbai is the land of dreams, where like me, millions of people strive to make their dreams come true. At Essel Group, it has always been our endeavour to preserve and promote the true essence of Marathi culture through our various ventures such as Zee Marathi, Zee Talkies, Zee Yuva, Zee 24 Taas and our Marathi films like ‘Natarang’, ‘Fandry, ‘Killa’,‘Lay Bhari’, ‘Natsamrat’ and ‘Sairat’. I am extremely grateful and humbled by all the encouragement and support that this wonderful city has bestowed on me.”

     

  • Murdoch inquiry: the murky side of media highlighted

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    The questioning of Rupert and James Murdoch in the Leveson inquiry into media ethics in the UK was undoubtedly the highlight of this news week. Both the BBC and CNN showed major portions of the inquiry live and it was fascinating to watch these two very powerful men being closely questioned on their closeness to British politicians as well as on the way they ran their business.

     

    James Murdoch followed the line he had had at the earlier Parliamentary inquiry after the phone-hacking scandal broke which led to the closure of The News of The World: he remembered nothing. This is, even though he had been the recipient of a chain of emails which explained what was going on. Murdoch the younger claimed he had not read any of the emails.

     

    Two days were devoted to Rupert Murdoch who seemed far sharper than he had been during the Parliamentary inquiry. However, he also claimed to remember nothing, in spite of there being sufficient documentary evidence to prove his various meetings with various British prime ministers. Murdoch claimed that politicians always wanted to meet editors and proprietors but that did not mean that he wielded any influence.

     

    However, by the end of the second day of questioning, Murdoch admitted that there had been a cover-up of the practice of phone-hacking in his newspapers, which went at least up to the editor and beyond. He apologised and called it a failure.

     

    The venerable and respected Harold Evans, the one editor of the Times who Murdoch sacked, was scathing in his criticism of Murdoch’s testimony and his supposed inability to remember anything significant at all, in his piece in the Guardian on Thursday.

     

    In the backdrop of this questioning were the revelations that a close aide of British culture secretary Jeremy Hunt had been leaking secret information to the Murdoch organisations about the BSkyB deal, which has since been scuttled. But with both sides of the political spectrum in Britain being in the pockets of the Murdochs, finger-pointing is going to be a little difficult. In Prime Minister David Cameron’s favour is the fact that he commissioned this judicial inquiry.

     

    The parallels with India are fascinating, if at the least because media tycoons here remain shady figures, lurking in the background, pulling strings and manipulating policies. Also, despicable as phone-hacking was, it is hard to remember the last time any newspaper really spent any effort on news-gathering. We, in India, follow the other Murdoch model – use PR agencies to get everything done.

     

    Needless to say, Indian TV was not much taken with the Murdoch case, although newspapers gave it the mandatory space on their international pages.

     

    * * *

     

    The one story which got almost no space in the Indian media, in spite of the verdict being shown live on the BBC and CNN on Thursday, competing with Murdoch, was the trial of Charles Taylor. The former Liberian president was charged with war crimes for his role in the brutal and bloody war for power in the neighbouring Sierra Leone. Although the film Blood Diamonds got considerable media attention in India, the man who was part of that horror story, was obviously not worthy of too much space. For example, The Times of India had nothing, the Hindustan Times, a brief and The Indian Express a story on the international pages.

     

    * * *

     

    Instead the Indian media had absolute hysterics about Sachin Tendulkar accepting a nomination to the Rajya Sabha. One would imagine this was the first time anyone had ever accepted a Rajya Sabha nomination (12 distinguished persons are appointed every term) for all the hot air expended on TV. Newspapers also saw this as headline news.

     

    So far of course no one knows whether Tendulkar will be a good, bad or indifferent Parliamentarian. Therefore, tedious before-the-fact discussions and camera-inspired rage are pointless. Much time was spent on why Tendulkar was joining politics. It occurred to no one that being nominated to the Rajya Sabha is not “joining politics”. That would be when Tendulkar fights an election. Many nominated members gone back to their distinguished lives after their terms finished.

     

    The only benefit of such discussions is that you see just how stupid some people are.

     

    * * *

    Sometimes I find myself in full agreement with Press Council chairman Markandey Katju that 90 per cent of Indians are fools. And most of those fools find their way to TV studios.