|
Lists - don't we
just love them, the best of..., the worst of..., the what
not... But one list that everyone wants to be on is the
one that defines the most powerful personalities whose comings
and goings left an indelible impact during the year. Indiantelevision.com
has made its own Top 20 power list for 2003. Here we present
the first 10 of the Top 20 for 2003. The selection is purely
subjective and in no particular order we might add so don't
read anything into the way the names stack up. So here goes
with the first 10 of our Top 20!
RAVI SHANKAR PRASAD
RSP
as he is known went through a mixed year. For one, he was
all charged up about taking forward his predecessor Sushma
Swaraj's legacy that of bringing in the pay television regime
into India through conditional access. Second he also wanted
to work closer with industry on pushing Indian entertainment
and cinema globally. Thirdly, he was tested when the controversy
around how much foreign direct investment should be entertained
in television channels cropped up.
He did pretty badly with the first for most part of the
year. So bad that he was desperately looking for a fig leaf
to cover his CAS faux pas as the year ended. CAS had become
a helpless case with no one apart from a handful of players
taking any interest in the issue. And for all purposes RSP
had backtracked on his earlier pronouncements that CAS was
good for the consumer.
The second, as a cheerleader for Indian entertainment globally,
he did rather well. He jet-setted to many an international
festival and forum, was even seen rocking with the rest
of the Indian film and entertainment fraternity as they
tried and presented a united face for entertainment globally.
Dressed in a dapper suit and with a clipped though rather
soft voice, RSP can impress some.
On the third issue the I& B minister stood up quite
well. He, along with his ministerial team and with a little
help from a shaky Indian media industry, forced Star TV
to find an Indian ally and cede equity control in its news
channel, Star News. Which Star did when it brought in Aveek
Sarkar as 74 per cent owner. As the year was ending Prasad's
attention was diverted towards creating a successful news
channel under the DD News umbrella. In an election year,
the government may well need all the propaganda machinery
and voice it can pull together. The year also saw him boot
out his DD director general SY Quraishi, leaving the pubcaster
in the hands of Prasar Bharati CEO KS Sarma.
SUBROTO ROY
What
the Sahara shree will be remembered for in 2003 is the manner
in which he put all his might behind The India Media Group
(IMG), a "club" of Indian media barons lined up
against the foreign onslaught (read Rupert Murdoch and his
pan-Asian venture Star and news channel Star News). What
had piqued him was the information given to him that it
was Star TV and Murdoch which had surreptitiously brought
in a copyright infringement suit against his dream TV project
"Karishma - a miracle of destiny", a programme
featuring Bollywood stars. Author Barbara Taylor Bradford
finally lost the case which alleged that Sahara had pinched
the "Karishma" story for the expensive series
from her novel "A Woman of Substance" but the
delay and not so brilliant content led to the show not shaking
up the ratings.
The failure of "Karishmaa" has not deterred Roy.
He handed over control of the Sahara network to his son
Sushanto Roy. And undeterred the duo along with the programming
team are pursuing their dream of bringing in a paradigm
shift in television through the use of renowned Bollywood
stars, rather than those from television. 2004 is expected
to see Sridevi starring in a new series. Amitabh Bachchan
is expected to front a show. If the initiative works, it
could well catapult Sahara to the forefront of the television
sweepstakes. The channel carries some world class docudramas
which have won accolades from several quarters.
2004 is also likely to see a flurry of local news channel
launches from the Sahara stable as Roy continues with his
much propounded vision of having a news service for each
state apart from a national channel. Additionally, expect
some activity from the group on the sports front, considering
the manner in which he has been feting the members of the
Laureus Sports Foundation in his Amby Valley project.
SMRITI IRAANI
Actress,
celebrity endorser, activist and now political cheer leader,
Smriti Z Iraani has come a long way from the Femina Miss
India participant that she was. Today, as Tulsi, she is
among the most recognised faces on television and extremely
venerated too. But the lady is pragmatic, articulate and
clear in her thinking and hopefully will not allow all the
fawning that has followed her success to go to her head.
She became a mother for the second time mid this year and
she juggles her career as an actress, wife, mother, activist
and political cheerleader with aplomb.
One act she definitely cannot follow however, is as India's
answer to Oprah Winfrey. The holier than thou attitude she
takes with the participants of her talk show on SAB TV "Kuch
Diiil Se" pretty much puts paid to that.
PETER MUKERJEA
His
skills came to the forefront in the Star News case, the
Radio City case and in his quest to stave off CAS in the
form the government wanted to launch it. Because Star Plus
continued at its top perch in the Hindi entertainment sphere,
it made rivals afraid. So much so that The Times of India
started a campaign to ensure that life was made difficult
for Star as far as both radio and news broadcasting were
concerned.
But in both cases with cajoling, explanation, Mukerjea
and his COO Sameer Nair, along with the legal functionaries
of the company, spent many an hour painstakingly explaining
away every point rivals and the government raised. Mukerjea
went to the extent of bringing in professionals and giving
them equity to comply with the restriction of foreign investment
in news channels. When these professionals were unacceptable
to the government after being prompted by rival media groups,
he called on Bengal media baron Aveek Sarkar and gave him
equity to the extent of 74 per cent in the news channel.
Additionally, he also spent a large part of his year in
marital bliss and also making presentation after presentation
to the government about the futility of launching CAS in
the manner that was being planned. He succeeded in getting
the government to agree to a partial and phased rollout.
And by the time the new year came around CAS had more or
less been called off. All in all a victorious year for Mukerjea,
whose network is numero uno in television in India and second
in the media sweepstakes as a whole.
SAMEER NAIR
Star
India COO Sameer Nair had his hands full in 2003. With his
boss Peter Mukerjea preoccupied with keeping the company's
flanks safe from the attacks that were being directed its
way, it was Nair who had hands on charge of the network.
Whether advertising, marketing, ad sales or distribution,
Nair was involved on all fronts.
But if there has been one standout success story that Nair
has for the network, it has surprisingly been on the distribution
front. Last year Star's distribution revenue was Rs 2880
million ($ 60 million) but this year it has risen by close
to 40 per cent to Rs 4000 million, according to industry
sources. Coming at a time when the distribution ramp up
story in India was associated more with Sony on the back
of the cricket (as too the additions of the Discovery channels
and premium movie channel HBO), Star's performance is all
the more creditable.
Among the main initiatives that Nair instituted on the
distribution front was the linking of a cut in overall per
subscriber rates to significant increases in declarations.
A doubling (100 per cent increase) of declaration was "rewarded"
by a halving of the network rate from Rs 60 to Rs 30.
While Star had mixed results with this initiative when
dealing with the big MSOs, it did taste success on this
front everywhere else and Star today claims that it has
a subscriber base of 10 million. Nair's target for the year
- to expand it to 14 million.
There is also the small matter of introducing more trend-setting
programming on the network so that Star's lead over its
rivals does not diminish that Nair will be playing a whole
load of attention to.
TARUN KATIAL
He
was in the news for the wrong reasons. His departure from
Star India. The 29-year old walked out of the network which
had nurtured him and he had nurtured for at least a couple
of years. His skills as a programmer are unquestionable,
going by the way Star continued to rock in 2003.
The big news in the New Year was the Young Turk's joining
rival Sony as executive V-P programming and response.
The big question however, is what differentiators can Katial
introduce into the programming matrix at Sony from what
he served up at Star. More of the same will definitely not
do if Katial expects to wean away audiences from the lot
that is currently comfortably ensconced in the Star Parivar's
plotlines.
PRANNOY ROY
He
had sworn to give his former partner a run for its money.
And he did just that when he launched two news channels
24x7 and NDTV India. Dr Roy was hampered for a part of the
year as Raj Nayak, who joined him as CEO of the ad sales
and marketing company that was formed post the split, was
locked in a court scrummage with his former employer Star,
which had refused to let him go so easy.
By the end of the year, however, Dr Roy's channels had
firmly established themselves. In 2004, the big fight for
Hindi viewer mind space among private news channels could
well be a three-horse race between Aaj Tak, Star News and
NDTV India.
RAVINA RAJ KOHLI
This
tough-as-nails lady did it. Against all odds, she successfully
launched Star News in the year. It took a lot of doing:
setting up the infrastructure, putting together a team.
Of course people sniggered that she was paying attention
to cosmetics, but the results showed and rivals soon followed
sprucing up the style and clothes sense of their anchors
and their news sets. Her tactic of launching a Hindi service,
with a smorgasbord of coverage which included the high lights
and living seems to be working.
As the year ended Star News was holding on to the No 2
slot behind Aaj Tak the leader, though NDTV was snapping
at its heels.
ALEX KURUVILLA
His
biggest claim to fame is that he heads MTV and that he constantly
makes it to Page 3 in Bombay Times. Kuruvilla manages to
pop up in many a frame pictured in theTimes of India rag.
Be it at a rugby match, or at a pub party or at a dog race,
Kuruvilla makes it a point to be there. It probably is part
of his job profile, which he is living up to quite well.
He has managed to keep MTV on top of the charts, as a leader,
though some people would like to give the credit for that
to the creative head honcho Cyrus Oshidar. Kuruvilla also
pulled off a coup of sorts by flagging off the music industry
awards, the Immies in partnership with the IMI.
HARISH THAWANI
If
there's one thing you cannot accuse Nimbus promoter and
founder Harish Thawani of is that of being a man who gets
cowed down by a challenge. In fact, the man who has made
billions of rupees out of sports television and events thrives
on achieving the impossible. 2003 saw him achieve that by
successfully raising advertising money out of the World
Cup Cricket telecast on Doordarshan when he had Sony Entertainment
lined up against him as a major rival. Thawani had only
rights to live coverage of 16 matches during the World Cup
and daily one hour capsules of the 43 one dayers. He read
the fine print in the contract between DD and the rights
owners and managed to pull in the deferred telecast of the
other 26 matches, much to Sony Entertainment's discomfort,
and threw them in as a sweetener to his advertising partners.
Thawani achieved another milestone during the year: he
hired a CEO for Nimbus, long standing friend and professional,
Akash Khurana. He stepped away from operational control
and took on the title of chairman, preferring to spend time
overseas trying to shake up the sports business globally.
As the year ended, his company was in the process of unveiling
spanking new premises for his Nimbus group with sauana,
jacuzzi, exercise lounges, cafetarias and what have you.
2004 should see Nimbus and him take a further leap forward
onto the international film distribution and production
front.
Coming up next to complete our Power Personalities 2003
are:
Subhash Chandra, Kunal Dasgupta, Raghav Bahl, Aroon Purie,
Ramoji Rao, Ronnie Screwvala, Anuradha Prasad, Dayanidi
Maran, Aveek Sarcar and Ekta Kapoor. Stay Tuned...
Back to New Year index page
|