Showing posts with label Botswana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Botswana. Show all posts

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Botswana to set up film commission, create film fund with help from Steve Harvey


Thinus Ferreira

Botswana's government is working to create the country's first-ever film commission, as well as a film fund, and is also busy with building out film studio capacity to rapidly expand the Southern African country's film and TV output capability.

The government is working with the American entertainer Steve Harvey and his Steve Harvey Global company, as well as Duncan Irvine, the founder and CEO of Forge Ignite Media & Entertainment, a film and TV consultancy. Irvine is the director of the Botswana Ignite project.

The aim of Botswana Ignite is to rapidly expand the country's TV and film sector, to make it commercially viable, to create local content and to aggressively attract international production work.

The project has also set up a TV academy for Botswana in the capital of Gaborone that just started offering courses in scripted and unscripted content, as well as a specialist wildlife film school in Kasane that specialises in natural history film production.

"Botswana has diamonds but we want to expand our creative industry. Steve Harvey visited and decided to help us with our vision," Goitsemang Morekisi, secretary for the ministry of state president, said at MIP Africa 2024 in Cape Town, South Africa.

"In 10 years Botswana will become one of the top film industries on the African continent," Harvey said.

"Nigeria and South Africa have a headstart by leaps and bounds in capability - make no mistake about it. They have a real film and TV industry, everything is here, they have real production companies and infrastructure - everything is here."

"What I'm trying to get Africa to understand is how to take advantage of all this rich talent that is on this continent and to get the opportunity to work," he said.


Duncan Irvine said Botswana Ignite is also helping the Botswana government to set up a governmental film rebate scheme that will be structured "to accelerate and fuel the country's film economy and for people to create production companies because local production companies in Botswana will be the engine building the next generation".

He says "Botswana has a very small but very passionate film and TV industry but it's been quite inwardly focused".

"It's been Botswana Television (Btv), YTV and that's where producers have been selling their shows to, and to South Africa in particular and some have left Botswana to go and work overseas. Part of the excitement is that we're trying to attract a lot of those experienced people back."

Steve Harvey said, "this programme we're doing here in Botswana - my goal is to take it to other countries around Africa - so that you can eventually go anywhere in Africa and be a cameraman, can go anywhere and be a set designer, you can go anywhere and do lighting".

On 12 September a Botswana adaptation of the Family Feud competition show, Family Feud Botswana, starts recording.

Steve Harvey said "next year we're going to have more studio space built. We've already located some areas and we are going to have these studios built there and then we're going to attract outside business through film tax rebates."

'The caveat is going to be: You can't bring your foreign company to Botswana unless you hire 25% local people from Botswana or else you can't do it. What are they going to say? No. They will say yes because they want the tax rebate."

Friday, March 1, 2019

M-Net looking to do a localised Date My Family version for Botswana on DStv's Zambezi Magic channel.


M-Net is looking to do another localised version of the popular South African reality series, Date My Family, this time for Botswana.

Date My Family Botswana will be broadcast on Zambezi Magic (DStv 160) M-Net's channel that MultiChoice Africa runs in countries across Southern Africa, excluding South Africa.

M-Net has invited production companies in Botswana to express interest and pitch to produce Date My Family Botswana, that has already spawned a Date My Family Zambia version currently in its second season.

Date My Family Zambia caused controversy during its first season when production participant fraud was uncovered.

In the series, a potential lover must visit three different families, before making a decision on who to date.

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

DAILY TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read from TVwithThinus - 22 February 2017.

Here's the latest news about TV that I read, and that you should too:


■ "The SABC's coverage of Jacob Zuma's State of the Nation 2017 address analysed.
Media show The Listening Post on Al Jazeera (DStv 406 / StarSat 257) looks at how the SABC and the Guptas The New Age Breakfast Briefing on SABC2's Morning Live the day after the speech was covered.

For instance: Al Jazeera finds that Leanne Manas throws president Jacob Zuma softball questions - that is until the show switches away from SABC2 (viewers) and continues to only be broadcast on MultiChoice's DStv on the SABC News (DStv 404) channel catering to pay-TV audiences.

Now suddenly "Peter Ndoro asks much tougher questions" when a much smaller TV audience is watching.


■ Television graveyard.
Millions of old TV sets are dumped and abandoned in massive warehouses across America - and the hard manual labour involved to break down and destroy or recycle old TV sets.

■ Second season of Showtime's Billions getting "a big promotional push" as if it's a new show.
In South Africa on DStv, not so much.

■ Lovely.
Matt LeBlanc eats horse penis in the new upcoming season of Top Gear starting on 8 March at 20:00 on BBC Brit (DStv 120).


■ Alberton school furious over eNCA (DStv 403) story it slams as a false report.
Marais Viljoen High School (MVHS) considering taking eNCA and eNuus on kykNET (DStv 144) to the Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa (BCCSA) after unsubstantiated, slanderous report and the apparent failure to ask the right people for comment.


■ Russia's president Vladimir Putin is obsessed with television.
Specifically in watching to see how different TV channels cover him.


■ Court papers reveal how Botswana Television (BTV) got rid of its head of news in an election year.
Koketso Joshua Ntopolelang wants his job as head of TV news and current affairs at Botswana's state broadcaster back; shows court how he was allegedly purged from BTV and moved to another government department because he could allegedly "not be trusted" during an election year in Botswana.


■ New Zealand TV is trashing up current affairs in prime time.
Strange and trashy chit-chat as actuality programming instead of news.

■ Sky News (DStv 402) anchor Dermot Murnaghan warns
that the TV news at 22:00 on British television can't survive due to falling viewership.

■ Cameroon viewers treated to TV fight.
After last week's Egypt on-set brouhaha, in Cameroon on Sunday novelist Calixthe Beyala created an "incident close to barbarism and savagery" in an on-set clash.

■ CNBC Africa (DStv 410) opens a new studio in Rwanda.
Who knew? Apparently the ABN Group running the business TV channel on MultiChoice's DStv platform opened a new studio in Rwanda's Kigali Convention Centre. Of course there wasn't even a basic press release or statement to the media.

■ Japan gives money to improve Malawi television.
Malawi Broadcasting Corporation (MBC) gets millions from Japan to improve its MBCTV broadcasting equipment in Blantyre.

■ Unnamed Indian TV anchor caught as a prostitute.
Allegedly used her good looks to become involved in prostitution at a guest house in Hyderabad; police reprimanded her for illegal activities and "advised her to pursue her anchoring career professionally".

■ A second golden age for TV news channels in America?
Viewership soars thanks to The Lorax Donald Trump.

■ The SABC has now implemented the Scisys' dira! and MusicMaster systems.
New production and playout systems used by 19 of the SABC's radio stations. Of course it's hopefully not being held together by sticky tape in the rundown SABC studios.

■ Script for final episode of The Vampire Diaries is so brutal ...
it made actor Paul Wesley cry.