Television in India: Registration For Wikiconference India 2011, Mumbai Is Now Open
Television in India: Registration For Wikiconference India 2011, Mumbai Is Now Open
Television in India: Registration For Wikiconference India 2011, Mumbai Is Now Open
Television in India
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about television in India. For a more general coverage of media in India see Indian media. Television is one of the major mass media of India and is a huge industry and has thousands of programmes in all the states of India. The small screen has produced numerous celebrities of their own kind some even attaining national fame. TV soaps are extremely popular with housewives as well as working women. Approximately half of all Indian households own a television.[1] As of 2010, the country has a collection of free and subscription services over a variety of distribution media, through which there are over 515 channels and 150 are pay channels.[2]
Contents
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1 History 2 Television channels and networks o 2.1 Cable television 3 Audience Metrics o 3.1 DART o 3.2 TAM & INTAM o 3.3 aMap o 3.4 Broadcast Audience Research Council 4 Conditional Access System 5 Satellite television o 5.1 Direct to Home 6 Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) 7 See also 8 References 9 External links
[edit] History
Terrestrial television in India started with the experimental telecast starting in Delhi on 15 September 1959 with a small transmitter and a makeshift studio. The regular daily transmission started in 1965 as a part of All India Radio. The television service was extended to Bombay (now Mumbai) and Amritsar in 1972. Up until 1975, only seven Indian cities had a television service and Doordarshan remained the sole provider of television in India. Television services were separated from radio in 1976. National telecasts were introduced in 1982. In the same year, colour TV was introduced in the Indian market. Indian small screen programming started off in the early 1980s. At that time there was only one national channel Doordarshan, which was government owned. The Ramayana and Mahabharata (both Indian mythological stories) were the first major television series produced. This serial notched up the world record in viewership numbers for a single program. By the late 1980s more and more people started to own television sets. Though there was a single channel, television programming had reached saturation. Hence the government opened up another channel which had part national programming and part regional. This channel was known as DD 2 later DD Metro. Both channels were broadcast terrestrially. PAS-1 and PAS-4 are satellites whose transponders help in the telecasting of DD programmes in half the regions of the world.An international channel called DD International was started in 1995 and it telecasts programmes for 19 hours a day to foreign countries-via PAS-4 to Europe,Asia and Africa,and via PAS-1 to North America.
Satellite/Cable homes exceeded 15% and DTH subscribers grew 28% over 2009. (However, some analysts place the number of households with television access at closer to 180 million since roughly a third of all rural families may watch television at a neighboring relatives home, and argue that Cable TV households are probably closer to 120 million owing to a certain percentage of informal/unregistered Cable Networks that aren't counted by mainstream surveys). It is also estimated that India now has over 500 TV channels covering all the main languages spoken in the nation. In 1992, the Indian government led by P. V. Narasimha Rao started a series of economic reforms including the liberalization of the broadcasting industry, opening it up to cable television. This led to an explosion in the Indian cable TV industry and saw the entry of many foreign players like Rupert Murdoch's Star TV Network, MTV, and others. Following the liberalization of the broadcasting industry, the Hong Kong-based Star TV Network introduced five major television channels into the Indian broadcasting space that had so far been monopolised by the Indian government-owned Doordarshan: MTV, STAR Plus, Star Movies, BBC, Prime Sports and STAR Chinese Channel. Soon after, India saw the launch of Zee TV, the first privately-owned Indian channel to broadcast over cable. A few years later CNN, Discovery Channel, National Geographic Channel made their foray into India. Later, Star TV Network expanded its bouquet with the introduction of STAR World India, STAR Sports, ESPN, Channel V and STAR Gold. With the launch of the Tamil-language Sun TV (India) in 1992, South India saw the birth of its first private television channel. With a network comprising more than 20 channels in various South Indian languages, Sun TV network recently launched a DTH service and its channels are now available in several countries outside India. Following Sun TV, several television channels sprung up in the south. Among these are the Tamil-language channel The Raj Television Network and the Malayalam-language netwok Asianet Communications Limited, both launched in 1994. These three networks and their channels today take up most of the broadcasting space in South India. Throughout the 90s, along with a multitude of Hindi language channels, several regional and English language channels flourished all over India. By 2001, international channels HBO and History Channel started providing service. In 19992003, other international channels such as Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network, VH1, Disney and Toon Disney entered the market. Starting in 2003, there has been an explosion of news channels in various languages; the most notable among them are NDTV, CNN IBN and Aaj Tak. The most recent channels/networks in the Indian broadcasting industry include UTV Movies, UTV Bindass, Zoom, Colours, 9X and 9XM. There are several more new channels in the pipeline, including Leader TV.
[edit] DART
During the days of the single channel Doordarshan monopoly, DART (Doordarshan Audience Research Team) was the only metric available. This used the notebook method of recordkeeping across 33 cities across India.[3] DART continues to provide this information independent of the Private agencies. DART till this date is the only rating system that still measures audience metrics in Rural India.[4]
[edit] aMap
In 2004, a rival ratings service funded by American NRI investors, called Audience Measurement Analytics Limited (aMap) was launched.[11][12][13] Although initially, it faced a cautious uptake from clients, the TAM monopoly was broken. What differentiates aMap is that its ratings are available within one day as compared to TAM's timeline of one week.[12]
The idea of CAS was mooted in 2001, due to a furore over charge hikes by channels and subsequently by cable operators. Poor reception of certain channels; arbitrary pricing and increase in prices; bundling of channels; poor service delivery by Cable Television Operators (CTOs); monopolies in each area; lack of regulatory framework and redress avenues were some of the issues that were to be addressed by implementation of CAS It was decided by the government that CAS would be first introduced in the four metros. It has been in place in Chennai since September 2003, where until very recently it had managed to attract very few subscribers. It has been rolled out recently in the other three metros of Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata. As of April 2008 only 25 per cent of the people have subscribed the new technology. The rest watch only free-to-air channels. As mentioned above, the inhibiting factor from the viewer's perspective is the cost of the STB. The information and broadcasting ministry set March 31, 2015 as the deadline for shift from analog to digital systems. Digitization, where the feed will be received through set-top boxes, is expected to be executed in phases and the four metros of Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai have to shift to digital addressability by March 31, 2012. Phase II will include 35 cities with population of more than one million, such as Patna, Chandigarh, Pune and Bangalore by March 31, 2013. All urban areas are expected to digitize by November 30, 2014 and the remaining areas by March 31, 2015. [15]
Tata Sky Dish India These services are provided by locally built satellites from ISRO such as[16] INSAT 4CR, INSAT 4A, INSAT-2E, INSAT-3C and INSAT-3E as well as private satellites such as the Dutch-based SES, Global-owned NSS 6, Thaicom-2 and Telstar 10.
Dish TV Tata Sky Airtel Digital TV Sun Direct Reliance Big TV Videocon d2h DD Direct +
The rapid growth of DTH in India has propelled an exodus from cabled homes, the need to measure viewership in this space is more than ever; aMap, the overnight ratings agency, has mounted a peoplemeter panel to measure viewership and interactive engagement in DTH homes in India.[18] 18 March 2011 saw India's first self produced dolby 5.1 surround telecast on Star Plus on a show titled Maayke Se Bandhi Dor mixed by Nitin Kumar Gupta.
estimates broadband penetration of TV households to increase from 4.2 percent in 2009 to 13.4 percent in 2013.[20]
List of Indian Television Channels Indian soap opera DTH Operators in India Digital Cable Operators in India Multi System operator Web Multi System operator
[edit] References
1. ^ In India, the Golden Age of Television Is Now New York Times 2. ^ 23.77 mn DTH subscribers by June 2010: Trai Business Standard 3. ^ Identity and Consumerism on Television in India AEJMC Archives 4. ^ DART report shows DD scoring high among rural audiences 5. ^ a b c Why is TRP a contentious issue? Screen India 6. ^ Company Profile tamindia.com 7. ^ How real is Tam/Intam rating? The Times of India 8. ^ TRP rating: The slip is showing Business Standard via Rediff.com 9. ^ Security Check: TAM, INTAM Try To Ensure Data Sanctity Express cricket 10. ^ Quibbles apart, TAM is only currency industry can use indiantelevision.com 11. ^ New TV rating system to challenge TAM monopoly The Times of India 12. ^ a b aMap brings TV ratings online Hindu Business Line 13. ^ a b Ratings cos fight for market share Business Standard 14. ^ rival to stare TAM in eyeball Financial Express 15. ^ http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/TV-signals-to-go-digital-by2015/articleshow/7421490.cms 16. ^ "Indiantelevision dot com's Satellites over India". Indiantelevision.com. Retrieved 2008-09-06. 17. ^ http://businesstoday.intoday.in/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&issueid=89 &id=15742&Itemid=1§ionid=25 18. ^ aMap secures Tata Sky DTH audience measurement biz And Recently Videocon has launched D2H Indiantelevision.com 19. ^ TV & Video Portals in India International Television Expert Group 20. ^ Broadband Penetration Forecast for Indian TV Households (2000-2013) International Television Expert Group
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