Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts

Friday, September 2, 2022

MultiChoice powers ahead with localised content including slum-set Kenya drama Pepeta, a funeral reality series in Ghana, Crime & Justice spinoff for Nigeria and a Nollywood psychothriller miniseries.


by Thinus Ferreira

MultiChoice is powering up its investment in pan-African TV content with the pay-TV company's M-Net and Showmax divisions producing a new funeral reality show from Ghana, a Nollywood psychothriller miniseries, a Crime & Justice spinoff crime procedural for Nigeria, as well as a slum-set Kenyan crime series about an aspiring football player for DStv subscribers.

As it faces more competition from primarily global streaming rivals like Netflix Africa, Amazon Prime Video and Disney+, all rapidly expanding across the continent, MultiChoice is pouring millions into the production of localised content for its three biggest African markets - South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya - where the traditional pay-TV operator is experimenting with new formats and continuing to do more localised spinoffs of existing series for different sub-Saharan countries.

"We are increasing our investment in local content and have new shows across the board in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and our Portuguese markets to look forward to," says Yolisa Phahle, MultiChoice CEO of general entertainment and connected video.

"In Kenya, we have a new crime series called Pepeta which captures the dreams and realities of the youth in Kibera which is one of the largest slums in Africa but also known for creating top football players in Kenya."

Pepeta, which translates as "bounce" and which is produced by CJ3 Entertainment, follows the 17-year-old talented footballer Junior torn between crime and soccer, the unforgiving cop Musa, and Biki an ambitious football coach. Pepeta is loosely based on the real-life story of Harun "Rio" Wathari. 

"We also have a movie, it's called A Familiar Christmas and it's our first-ever Christmas movie for Kenya, produced by the award-winning filmmaker of our telenovela Selina."

"New content coming to Nigeria include Ditche - it is our first limited drama series," says Yolisa Phahle.

"It's a psychological thriller about a young Nollywood actress who discovers her fiancé murdered. We also have Showmax's first and exclusive Nigerian telenovela. This story is set against the backdrop of the gold-mining industry and we're launching it in the last quarter of this fiscal."

"Learning from the success of Crime & Justice in Nairobi, we're making a new series of Crime & Justice but this time it's based in Lagos where two detectives investigate cases that have been ripped from the local news headlines."

"Coming soon for Ghana is a 5-part reality show called My Perfect Funeral. It follows 5 families in Ghana as they prepare to bury their loved-ones."


Tuesday, April 5, 2022

MultiChoice's Showmax expands the video streamer's East African content slate with 4 new originals in 2022 including first Kenyan Christmas film.


by Thinus Ferreira

MultiChoice's video streaming service is expanding its East African programming slate with 4 new originals that will be released in 2022, including its first Kenyan Christmas feature film.

Showmax Kenya's other Showmax Originals include a crime drama series set in Kibera, a political thriller series set in a fictional Kenyan province, and a thriller series starring Serah Ndanu and Blessing Lung'aho.

Showmax's East African investment follows after Kenya's first Showmax Original Crime and Justice which is currently in its second season, Kenya's first Showmax Original film Baba Twins, and the drama series Single Kiasi.

Timothy Okwaro, MultiChoice channel director for East and Southern Africa, says "We have worked with new production houses to expand our genre offering to ensure that our viewers get to see the very best of Kenyan stories told in different facets of life, from thrillers to crime dramas to political thrillers".

"Showmax subscribers can look forward to compelling local stories that will definitely keep you tuned in. This slate speaks to our localisation strategy and the keen focus on working with local producers, both established and upcoming, to ensure we give our viewers what they want."

Here's a run-down of Showmax's East Africa production slate:



Igiza
Currently in production, Igiza is a 13-part thriller series that follows twin sisters, Linda and Nicole, at war after a betrayal that changes their lives forever.

Years later, one of the sisters breaks out of prison and takes over the seemingly wonderful life of her identical twin, with disastrous consequences. Serah Ndanu plays the double role of Linda and Nicole, with Blessing Lung'aho, Kevin Samuel, Emmanuel Mugo, Ainea Ojiambo, Sheila Ndanu and Torome Sision co-starring.

Igiza is helmed by Abdi Shuria, King Muriuki and Abu Melita under their company Yare Productions.


Pepeta
Slated to begin production in April 2022, Pepeta is a crime drama series that captures the dreams and realities of the youth in Kibera, known for churning out top football players in Kenya.

Pepeta follows three intertwining stories of Junior, a 17-year-old talented footballer torn between the thrills of crime and the promises of soccer; Musa, an unforgiving cop with a personal vendetta, determined to rid the streets of criminals; and Biki, an ambitious football coach determined to get Junior and his friends scouted before the barrel of the gun cuts short their dreams.

Loosely based on the real-life story of Harun "Rio" Wathari, Pepeta is being produced by CJ3 Entertainment's James "Draka" Kombo, Mwangi Rurengo and Wanja Mworia, with Damaris Irungu, Charles Ouda and Abigail Arunga as as writers.


County 49
Welcome to the political intrigues of the fictional Bwatele County, Kenya's 49th county and the nation's breadbasket, whose citizens are suffering from the high cost of living and scarce resources, despite the county’s wealth in resources.

Now against the backdrop of great civilian discontent, a disgraced security officer is compelled to save the governor, and her chief of staff, his estranged wife, from a local terrorist group, which has kidnapped them for money and revenge.

County 49 is being produced by Kibanda Pictures, with director Likarion Wainaina, director Brian Munene and producer Millicent Ogutu, and producer and actor Bruce Makau.

Brian Munene also doubles as the show's writer, alongside Voline Ogutu, Mercy Mutisya and Martin Kingondu, with John Sibi-Okumu coming on board as story consultant.


Kenya's first Christmas feature film
This as-yet-untitled project will be Kenya's first-ever Christmas feature film, and will be produced by Reuben Odanga.

Joining Reuben Odanga as the film's writer is Natasha Likimani.

Friday, September 24, 2021

Kenya bans another yet another gay film as its censorship board calls Peter Murimi's I Am Samuel documentary 'blasphemous' for showing two men kissing.


by Thinus Ferreira

Kenya's censorship body has once again banned yet another gay film in a move that will inflict further damage on the country's struggling film and TV industry with the documentary film from Peter Murimi, I Am Samuel, that has been banned in the East African nation and slammed as "blasphemous" for featuring two men kissing.

AFP reports that the Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) on Thursday banned the "unacceptable" documentary, I Am Samuel, with the KFCB noting that "any attempt to exhibit, distribute, broadcast or possess the restricted film within the Republic of Kenya shall, therefore, be met with the full force of the law."

According to the film description of the 52-minute long I Am Samuel documentary, director Peter Murimi, chronicles the story of how "Samuel, a gay Kenyan man, balances duty to his family with his love for his partner, Alex, in a country where their love is criminalised".

In April 2018 Kenya banned Rafiki from filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu shortly before its Cannes Film Festival debut because the lesbian story contained kissing scenes.

In June 2017 the KFCB – citing bogus reasons culled from conspiracy theory websites – banned The Loud House, Legend of Korra and Hey Arnold from ViacomCBS' Nickelodeon (DStv 305) channel, Star vs the Forces of Evil and Gravity Falls from Disney XD, as well as Adventure Time and Steven Universe from WarnerMedia's Cartoon Network (DStv 301) because of "gay" content. 

In November 2017 it banned the teenage show Andi Mack from the Disney Channel (DStv 303) because one of the characters is gay.

In a statement the Kenya Film Classification Board CEO Christopher Wambua says the KFCB is banning I Am Samuel since the film is "a clear and deliberate attempt by the producer to promote same-sex marriage as an acceptable way of life".

"This attempt is evident through the repeated confessions by the gay couple that what they feel for each other is normal and should be embraced as a way of life, as well as the character's body language, including scenes of kissing of two male lovers."

"The documentary ultimately features marriage marriage of two men, and concludes with the dedication of the film to the gay community." 

Christopher Wambua says that I Am Samuel "tries to influence the viewer into believing that the older generation that was once against LGBTQ+ is slowly buying into the practice and accepting same-sex marriage as a normal way of life".

"Worse still, the production is demeaning of Christianity as two gay men in the film purport to conduct a religious marriage invoking the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit" with the KFCB noting that it finds the "the documentary not only blasphemous but also an attempt to use religion to advocate for same-sex marriage".   

The Kenya Film Classification Board added that it "welcomes local and foreign support to our budding local film industry, such funding should focus on production of content that is aligned with the laws of the country. Films that advocate same-sex marriage, homosexuality, or any outlawed practices shall not be allowed for exhibition, broadcast or distribution within the country".

I Am Samuel was already screened at several film festivals. 

In October 2020  Peter Murimi told AFP in an interview that the film is "very nuanced, it's very balanced; it's a story about a family that is struggling with this issue, having a gay son. So we'll just try our best and hopefully Kenyans will see it".


Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Netflix turns free in Africa, offers Kenyan users a free plan to binge-watch a quarter of its content.


by Thinus Ferreira

Netflix has gone free in Africa - specifically in Kenya - where users can watch as much as a quarter of the video streaming service, without ads, in a striking move that ups the ante for rivals like MultiChoice's Showmax.

On Tuesday Netflix unlocked its service in Kenya. Asked if this free plan will be rolled out in South Africa or anywhere else on the continent, the streamer told TVwithThinus that the free plan in Africa is currently only for Kenya and that Netflix's focus is currently on Kenya with no other plans around its free plan to share at this time.

Netflix's free plan in Kenya that will start rolling out in Kenya from today over the next few weeks will undoubtedly drive sampling of its service under new users, and likely convert some of those samplers to paying users.

With the free plan, users in Kenya can watch Netflix for as long as they want on android mobile phones, without paying a subscription fee. 

The free plan in Kenya allows people to access most of Netflix's shows and films ads-free, with personalised recommendations and parental controls.

Content that Netflix isn't offering for free under the free plan are indicated with a lock icon. When a Kenyan user clicks on locked content, they will be encouraged to upgrade to a paid Netflix plan.

Kenyan users of Netflix can now watch the South African series Blood & Water, Money Heist, the Nigeria series King of Boys: Return of the King and the British series Bridgerton under the free plan.  

"At Netflix, we want everyone to be able to enjoy the suspense of Blood & Water, the romance of Bridgerton, and the adventure of Army of the Dead," says Cathy Conk, Netflix’s director of product innovation.

"Now we're giving audiences in Kenya the chance to experience these stories for themselves - completely free of charge".

"If you've never watched Netflix before this is a great way to experience our service. We hope it's a great match and that many of the people who try our free plan love Netflix so much that over time they upgrade to a full, paid subscription so you can enjoy our full catalogue on your TV or laptop as well."

To sign-up for the free plan, subscribers must enter their email address, confirm they are 18 years or over and create a password. To access Netflix's full catalogue on multiple devices, users must upgrade to one of the service's paid plans.

Kenyan users watching Netflix on the free plan will not be included in Netflix's stated number of total paid users when it does its quarterly financial reports.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Coronavirus: MultiChoice drops Showmax fees by 50% in Kenya because of Covid-19 national lockdown.


by Thinus Ferreira

MultiChoice is dropping the subscription fee for its Showmax subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) service by half in Kenya because of the Covid-19 novel coronavirus pandemic with users who will effectively be paying 50% less to get access in the East African country.

With a national lockdown in effect in Kenya, Showmax has slashed subscription fees in Kenya. Showmax subscribers in South Africa and Nigeria still pay the same with no price decrease that has been announced.

In Kenya consumers who use the M-Pesa payment option will now pay Sh2 250 (R386) for a 3-month subscription but get access to Showmax for 6 months - double the period.

Consumers who subscribe to Showmax for 2 months at Sh1 500 (R257.33) will get another third additional month's viewing for free. Consumers who watch Showmax on their mobile phones will pay half of the monthly Showmax subscription fee.

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

MultiChoice Africa cuts DStv subscription across East Africa in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique after rival StarTimes lowers prices and as pay-TV consumers struggle in tough African economies.


MultiChoice Africa will be cutting monthly DStv and GOtv subscription fees across East Africa with DStv and GOtv consumers who will be seeing a decrease in the monthly payments in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and some Mozambique packages.

MultiChoice East Africa's decision to lower fees comes after rival StarTimes lowered prices in Kenya in April 2019 and as pay-TV consumers struggle in tough African economies.

After China's StarTimes Kenya restructured the tiered-offering of its pay-TV services in Africa's largest pay-TV market in the east of the African continent, MultiChoice is following 5 months later and is now also lowering fees.

In response to a media enquiry MultiChoice Africa confirmed to TVwithThinus that it's adjusting and lowering the monthly bill of DStv and GOtv subscribers in Kenya, Uganda, Mozambique and Tanzania.

MultiChoice will also implement a price decrease in Mozambique from September on the DStv Portuguese packages that include DStv Bue, DStv Grande+, DStv Grande and DStv Facil, although DStv Business as well as GOtv Plus and GOtv Lite subscription fees in Mozambique will increase.

In Malawi also in East Africa, MultiChoice Malawi will be increasing fees for the DStv Family and DStv Access packages only.

"Not all markets where MultiChoice Africa operates will have the same price changes as each country has different cost structures influenced by local dynamics such as inflation, content costs, foreign exchange rates, local taxes and overheads required for each business," says Reatile Tekateka, MultiChoice Africa's group executive head of corporate affairs, told TVwithThinus.

"These are taken into account when setting prices for DStv and GOtv packages. We've done a lot of research into what pay-TV costs in other parts of the world and we believe that our DStv and GOtv services offer good value for money in the countries in which we operate."

In Uganda, MultiChoice Uganda will be cutting monthly DStv subscription fees by up to a third (30%) for some packages where the price of DStv Premium, DStv Compact Plus, DStv Compact and DStv Family are all being reduced.

Kenya will see an even bigger decrease, ranging between 5% to up to almost 37%.

MultiChoice Kenya in a statement about DStv price reductions from September in that country said that "Our aim is to make great entertainment accessible to more consumers in Kenya and we believe this move will grant more of our customers access to the complete world of exciting entertainment channels at a lower price."

DStv Premium in Kenya will see a monthly price reduction of 5% on the most expensive monthly package, while DStv Compact Plus will decrease by 13.46%, DStv Compact will go down by 21% and DStv Family will see a whopping 36.84% decrease. DStv Access will fall by 5%.

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

China's StarTimes adds new Rembo TV channel in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda targeting female viewers as an entertainment reality show channel.


China's StarTimes satellite pay-TV operator active in Africa on Monday launch the new Rembo TV channel in East Africa to boost local TV content production in Kenya and announced that it will invest $1.93 million in creating local content for the channel.

So far little has come of StarTimes' former promises to create a massive new studio complex in Kenya where the Chinese operator is primarily competing with MultiChoice's DStv and the Wananchi Group's Zuku.

Andy Wang, StarTimes Kenya CEO at the media launch held on Monday in Nairobi, Kenya said StarTimes will be investing $1.93 million (R288.4 million) to create content for the Rembo TV channel and will be working with 30 content developers in Kenya.

"The company has responded to the growing appeal for authentic Kenyan content that subscribers can easily relate with as it rolls out exciting fresh shows that are expected to sustain the channel's subscriber appeal moving forward".

"Our investment in Rembo TV is a statement of our long term commitment to the Kenyan market. As the 24-hour channel goes live, we intend to be home of uninterrupted entertainment attending to our subscriber demand for reality TV shows".

Rembo TV as a general entertainment channel will target a female viewership with mostly reality shows and broadcast in 60% Kiswahili, 30% English and 10% in other vernacular languages.

Rembo TV will be available in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda across all StarTimes bouquets.

"For the longest time we know what the content journey has been like for local producers," said a StarTimes Kenya executive.

"That particular journey has always been the producer comes to us and they sell content. After they sell content, they go home. And then they wait for the next cycle where they come up with a new show, and then they still bring it back to us."

"Now this model has not necessarily worked in favour of the producer. What we've now decided to do is to actually take the producer and make them run the channel. Now that's a completely different business model," StarTimes Kenya said.

Monday, April 8, 2019

East Africa gets baking in a second localised African version after BBC Studios licensed The Great Kenyan Bake Off to Showstopper Media for a Kenya TV version.


Africa is getting a second localised version of the British The Great Bake Off reality baking competition show with BBC Studios that has licensed the format rights of The Great Kenyan Bake Off to Showstopper Media in East Africa.

Showstopper Media will produce The Great Kenyan Bake Off for broadcast later in 2019 for a Kenyan TV channel that has not yet been announced.

Selling The Great Bake Off format rights to Showstopper Media is BBC Studios' first for East Africa, and its second for Africa following The Great South African Bake Off that has seen three localised seasons produced so far by Rapid Blue and broadcast on BBC Studios Africa's BBC Lifestyle (DStv 174) channel on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform.

Kenya will be the 32nd country that a localised version of the Love Productions baking competition show will produced, this time by Showstopper that is co-owned by Daniel Prior and Kiran Jethwa.

The Great Kenyan Bake Off will have 10 episodes in which amateur Kenyan bakers will face off through having to bake through signature, technical and showstopper rounds, baking everything from local fare to world-renowned delicacies.

"The Great Bake Off has proved an international hit and continues to win new fans in every corner of the globe," says André Renaud, vice president of global format sales at BBC Studios.

"We're delighted with the news that Kenya will be getting their very own local version of the baking competition following the popularity of the United Kingdom and Australian editions of the show, which currently broadcast on DStv's BBC Lifestyle."

"The deal helps to broaden the international reach of the show, and we all look forward to growing The Great Bake Off fan base even further."

Sunday, January 20, 2019

South Africa Muslim council angry, demanding explanation after SABC News links Nairobi terror attacks in Kenya with alleged Malawi jihadists from the Yao community.


The Council of Muslim Theologians in Johannesburg, South Africa is angry with the South African public broadcaster's SABC News (DStv 404) that broadcast an interview with a so-called Africa analyst, Prof Izak Khomo, who claimed that there's a Malawi connection to Tuesday's horrific Nairobi attacks in Kenya.

Prof. Izak Khomo, a SABC producer, presenter and analyst for the SABC's Channel Africa radio station, claimed on SABC News in a segment that quickly went viral and that attracted a lotof criticism, that some of the jihadists that Al-Shabab used have been recruited from Malawi, specifically the Yao community.

The Council of Muslim Theologians has written to the SABC's general manager, Njanji Chauke, asking to confirm the claim.

"We have been alerted to a video clip which is purported to be an SABC News interview of an expert who makes remarks pertaining to the Somali-based Al Shabaab," says the letter written to the SABC by Uthman Chilungo, spokesperson for the Council of Muslim Theologians.

"As the video plays, the supposed expert is heard claiming the terror group's ties and recruitment among Muslims in general and the Yao people of Southern Malawi in particular."

"Please confirm if this was the actual SABC News broadcast and if so, note that we have found the remarks made by the supposed expert frivolous, troubling and lacking veracity. We will appreciate if we would be allowed to engage the said expert so that we can share in his research leading to the conclusions he has made."

"We also look forward to an opportunity of a right of reply to the comments the said expert has made," Uthman Chilungo told the SABC.

At least 21 people were killed at the luxury DusitD2 hotel on Tuesday when Somali militants stormed the hotel complex with Al Shabab that claimed responsibility for the terror attack.

Prof. Izak Khomo on SABC News said "There are Al Shabaab fighters in Tanzania, most of them are Zanzibaris, some of them are across Tanzania from Dar es Salaam area. You have got Al Shabab fighters from Uganda".

"And there are also Al-Shabab fighters from Mozambique, northern Mozambique and also from Malawi. Southern Malawi, mostly Yao, actually go to the Al-Shabab camps over there."

"But it is not only Al Shabab, that's a thing which everybody has to realise. Also we have Isis. And we have also got an Isis presence in South Africa. When I am talking about Isis, I am not talking about the Durban, the home-grown Isis, I am talking about the foreign Isis."

Neo Momodu, SABC spokesperson says "The SABC has noted media reports and enquiries. We are currently investigating the matter, before responding to the relevant stakeholders."

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Kenya abruptly bans Rafiki film from Wanuri Kahiu shortly before its Cannes Film Festival debut because the lesbian story contains kissing scenes.



Kenya's notorious censorship board has abruptly banned the film Rafiki, from Wanuri Kahiu, shortly before its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in two weeks' time as part of the growing censorship trend gaining momentum and sweeping the African continent from Nigeria to East Africa and South Africa.

Rafiki, meaning friend in Swahili, is based on the short story Jambula Tree by Uganda’s Monica Arac de Nyeko, and revolves around two girls who develop a romance that’s opposed by their families. The film has been included for screening in the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival.

The awkward banning by the East African country’s draconian Kenya Film Classificaion Board (KFCB) comes after Kenya earlier had effusive praise for the film and its inclusion in the Cannes Film Festival.

It’s similar to South Africa where the multiple award-winning film Inxeba was first lauded and congratulated by the South African government for making it to the top 9 in the Oscars’ foreign films category before suddenly falling silent with no support after it was banned with a new X18 classification by the South African Film and Publication Board (FPB) – a decision that was later overturned following an outcry by the public as well as the country’s writers, producers and organised TV and film industry.

Wanuri Kahiu who wrote, directed and co-produced the 80-minute film shot in Nairobi, told the breakfast show Morning Express on Kenya’s KTN channel on Friday morning that “unfortunately, our film has been censored in Kenya, because it deals with matters that are uncomfortable for the Kenya Film Classification Board but I truly believe that an adult Kenyan audience is mature and discerning enough to be able to watch this film and have their own conversation”.

Wanuri Kahiu said that her film is “a reflection of society, and we need to be having conversations about what is happening in our society. But unfortunately, because the film has been banned, we’ll be unable to have these conversations”. She said ” I’m incredibly disappointed, because I believe in Kenya.”

Earlier in April, Wanuri Kahiu in an interview on the Hot96FM radio station, said her film “speaks about our reality and the challenges our kids are facing and we’re trying to sweep it under the carpet and make it look like it’s not happening. Film and art should be a mirror of society and reflect on what’s happening with a view to offering solutions and guiding society to become better.”

In a televised speech, William Ruto, Kenya’s deputy president, warned that Kenyans are not only banned from watching censored films even privately, but that it is also against to law to even discuss “illegal material” once the KFCB have banned it.

Kenya’s censorship tsar, Ezekiel Mutua, in a statement said Rafiki is banned because it “legitimizes homosexuality” against the “values, cultures and beliefs of the people of Kenya” because “homosexual practices that run counter to the laws and the culture of Kenyan people”. He said “It is our considered view that the moral of the story in this film is to legitimize lesbianism in Kenya”. Rafiki contains scenes like kissing.

The embarrassing new ban will continue to drive both African and international producers, filmmakers and production companies away from Kenya and opting for other locations who are fearful that their projects, creativity, production budgets and freedom of expression are not welcome, nor respected and protected, in the East African country.

In November Ezekiel Mutua banned the teenage show Andi Mack from the Disney Channel (DStv 303) because one of the characters is gay. 

In June 2017 the KFCB – citing utterly bogus reasons culled from conspiracy theiry sites – banned The Loud House, Legend of Korra and Hey Arnold from Viacom International Media Networks Africa’s Nickelodeon (DStv 305), Star vs the Forces of Evil and Gravity Falls from Disney XD (DStv 304), as well as Adventure Time and Steven Universe from Turner Broadcasting’s Cartoon Network (DStv 301) because of “gay” content.

None of the content reasons given by the KFCB for the bans for any of these shows are true. 

However, because these channels have only one channel feed into Africa, it means that Naspers’ MultiChoice and individual channel distributors, in order to remove the content for Kenya, have been forced to remove the content for DStv subscribers across the entire Africa, including countries like South Africa.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

YOU CAN'T MAKE THIS UP. Pirate Kenyan who stole DStv signals, decided to sue MultiChoice for allegedly illegally breaking into his house. Here's what the judge said.


A Kenyan man who pirated the DStv signal and illegally resold it and who then had the audacity to sue MultiChoice for allegedly illegally breaking into his home during a raid, has now had his case tossed by the Kenyan court.

Jeffrey Sila Ndungi (32) is currently serving a 10-year sentence in a Texas jail in the United States after he was found guilty of theft and cheque fraud in 2012 but that didn't prevent Jeffrey from also dragging MultiChoice to court.

MultiChoice and Kenya's Copyright Board (Kecobo) in 2015 raided Jeffrey Sila Ndungi's home where MultiChoice and Kecobo confiscated the equipment that he was using to pirate the DStv signal in Kenya and reselling it to people who were not direct DStv subscribers but wanted to watch DStv.

Besides Kenya, Jeffrey was also involved in illegal TV signal piracy in North and West Africa and that criminal case in Kenya is still pending, as well as a similar one in Nigeria.

Kenya's Business Daily reports that Jeffrey decided to drag MultiChoice and the Kenya Copyright Board to court, claiming damages for the alleged illegal breaking and entering to stop his alleged TV signal piracy.

He claimed that MultiChoice in Kenya broke into his home without a search warrant.

Now Kenya's high court judge Chacha Mwita has dismissed his suit.

In his ruling judge Chacha Mwita says "having carefully considered the petition, the evidence and the law, I am not satisfied that the petitioner has proved either that his constitutional rights were violated or that he suffered any damage."

According to Mwita that Kenyan law allows the police to arrest, without a warrant, any person suspected of having committed an offence under the country's Copyright Act.

Thursday, April 12, 2018

TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read from TVwithThinus - 12 April 2018.


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

■ The BBC's rauchy drama Versailles cancelled after viewers quickly tired of the pornographic scenes in the United Kingdom and France.

■ Australia's TV industry is highly concerned about that country's broadcasters who want the Australian government to decrease the amount of local children's programming and local drama they're supposed to produce.

■ Should TV series like Little Britain and The Simpsons change with the times?

■ Russia's REN TV thrown out of the hospital where a former Russian spy is being treated after he was poisoned as the REN TV reporter and cameraman wandered through corridors at the Salisbury District Hospital.

■ Causing a splash: BBC presenter Mike Bushell ends up in the deep end during a live swimming pool TV interview.

■ Zimbabwe's censors ban all TV and radio adverts for prophets and "traditional healings".
Ironically Zimbabwean viewers will still be able to watch charlatan shows like Spirit on the FOX Life channel that is available on both KwesĂ© TV and DStv Zimbabwe.

■ ZEE Entertainment does a programming upfront in Nigeria about upcoming shows on Zee, Zee World, Zee Bollymovies and Zee's other TV channels.

■ TV viewers in Kenya furious over the broadcast of a Kiss condom commercial on television.
Kenya's belligerent censorship tsar Ezekiel Mutua says the country's censorship board will go to court to ban broadcasters from showing the condom advert.

■ Expensive free speech in Tanzania: Bloggers in Tanzania now have to register and pay $900 per year.

■ Shocking new TV show in Belgium breaks viewership records as a comedian tell jokes in the horrifically cruel show called Taboo, about paraplegics, amputees, and all kinds of minorities including gays, dwarfs, the poor, the fat, blind people, people with mental illness and even children without arms.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Shocking Africa TV censorship continues as Kenya's top 3 TV stations remain blacked out and off-air for a 5 day.


Shocking Africa TV censorship continues with Kenya's 3 biggest TV stations that remain on black out and censored after the dictator Kenyan government of Uhuru Kenyatta forced NTV, KTV and Citizen TV off the air on Tuesday.

The Kenyan TV channels - carried on MultiChoice's DStv and GOtv pay-TV platform by DStv Kenya and other pay-TV providers like Zuku TV, StarTimes and Bamba TV - have been censored for 5 days now because Uhuru Kenyatta's scared government was fearful that the channels would broadcast the symbolic inauguration ceremony of the opposition leader Raila Odinga.

The shocking Kenya TV black out continues despite an urgent order by Kenya's High Court on 1 February ordering the government to end its censorship, for the TV stations' signals to be restored, and for the government not to interfere with the operations and broadcasts of KTN, NTV, and Citizen TV pending a full hearing.

Judge Chacha Mwita, in a case filed by Royal Media Services and the Africa Digital Network (ADN), issued an order "stopping the government or its agents from stopping or interfering with the petitioners exercising of television broadcasting freedom. They are also restrained from interfering with the petitioners’ transmission sites in Limuru or any other place in Kenya."

Kenya's propaganda regulator, the Communication Authority of Kenya was also ordered to "immediately restore and stop interfering with the independent TV signals on Signet, Zuku, GOtv, DStv, StarTimes and Bamba TV".

Kenya's state-owned and pro-government TV channel KBC, and the privately owned and also pro-government K24 TV that have links with Uhuru Kenyatta's family, both remain on air.

Kenya's trash-dumb and propaganda-filled Interior Ministry secretary Fred Matiangi had the audacity to say in a statement that if Kenya's TV stations broadcast the faux swearing-in ceremony - considered by the government as an "attempt to subvert or overthrow the government" that it "would have led to the deaths of thousands of innocent Kenyans".

Kenya's propaganda tsar, Joseph Mucheru, Kenya's minister of information, communication and technology, said his government's censorship of media and TV is "a security issue".

The unprecedented Kenya media censorship is shocking for the East African country that has been one of the few brighter beacons on the African continent, besides South Africa, as far as media freedom is concerned, with the draconian and dictatorial blackout that is a huge step back for Kenya's democracy and its public perception as an open society.


Kenya journalists are calling for an end to the "unprecedented intimidation of journalists".

The Media Council of Kenya calls the move by Kenya's dictatorial government "the the greatest threat and assault on freedom of expression and media in Kenya's recent history".

"This shutdown erodes the gains so far made in developing a free and responsible media industry and should never happen in a robust democracy that Kenya boasts of," the Media Council of Kenya said in a Facebook post. "As guaranteed by the Kenyan Constitution, media freedom should be guarded jealously at all times."

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Kenya's TV channels censored and abruptly taken off the air before swearing in ceremony of opposition leader Raila Odinga.


International news wire services reported on Tuesday that several of Kenya's local TV channels were censored and abruptly taken off the air as part of a draconian government black-out ahead of the Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga getting sworn in as president on Tuesday.

Several of Kenya's TV channels were abruptly yanked off the air on Tuesday morning to prevent any broadcast of the ceremony to Kenyan viewers, that is set to take place in Nairobi's Uhuru Park.

Radio Africa's Bamba TV was blacked out on Tuesday morning just minutes after Kenya's private channels, Citizen and NTV, were also abruptly censored and shut down. Inooro TV was also shut down, along with several Kenyan radio stations.

Besides Bamba, pay-TV providers including MultiChoice Kenya's DStv Kenya, and Zuku TV lost the transmission of several channels, with DStv telling viewers "apologies for the interruption in your viewing. We are working on the problem".


"The Communications Authority of Kenya has switched off Citizen Television and Radio in most parts of the country over the coverage of the swearing-in plan," the Citizen said on its website.

Kenya's dictatorial Communications Authority (CA) told TV stations that live television coverage of the swearing in ceremony was banned.

Nation Media's free-to-air platforms are also shut down because of the shocking censorship in the East African country.

Kenya's government warned the country's media not to cover Tuesday's event.

Kenya is experiencing political upheaval after president Uhuru Kenyatta won a re-run of the country's national elections on 26 October 2017 - an election that Raila Odinga boycotted and calls "a sham".

Kenya's press is supposed to bring and show readers, listeners and viewers the news, whatever it is - whether its comfortable or uncomfortable to see.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Kenya bans Disney Channel show Andi Mack from DStv for the entire African continent, including South Africa.


In Africa's growing TV censorship problem Kenya has banned the Disney Channel's (DStv 303) tween series Andi Mack, making it the latest TV series that MultiChoice says won't be broadcast on DStv - not just in Kenya but blocked for the whole of Africa.

MultiChoice and Disney won't broadcast Andi Mack in Kenya or anywhere else in Africa - including South Africa - following news that the show will introduce a gay story line.

The Kenya move is effectively blocking the show from being broadcast anywhere on the continent, including countries like South Africa, since the Disney Channel (DStv 303) has only one channel feed into the continent.

Andi Mack is the latest show getting banned on the continent after last week's announcement that a main character will come out as gay, with Disney telling TVwithThinus that Andi Mack won't be broadcast on DStv.

Over the past two years especially Nigeria and Kenya's censorship boards have been ramping up bans on TV shows.

With distributors often only providing one satellite channel feed into Africa for their channels – for instance Disney Channel – a block and ban of a show for one country means its taken off air for the entire continent even in countries where content are not censored.

The Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) banned Andy Mack, with KFCB boss Ezekiel Mutua saying "any attempt to introduce gay programming in Kenya will be met with the full force of the law".

"When it comes to protecting children from exposure to bad content we are resolute and unapologetic. Gay content will not air in Kenya, period."

Pay-TV operator MultiChoice running the DStv service that carries Disney Channel (DStv 303) in Africa says in a statement "MultiChoice has consulted its channel provider, Disney and would like to confirm that this show was not scheduled to air on any of the Disney channels on DStv".

The Walt Disney Company Africa in response to a media enquiry from TVwithThinus says "Andi Mack will not be broadcast through DStv, however we are exploring alternative ways to make the series available to its fans in South Africa".

Disney says that "while our shows are developed for global audiences we are committed to respecting each market’s cultural sensibilities, compliance rules and regulations. Disney Channel in South Africa serves multiple countries across Africa and the Middle East, each with its own regulations to which we adhere". 

In June Kenya's KFCB - using completely bogus reasons culled from fake internet stories and saying the animation shows are "pro gay" - banned The Loud House, Legend of Korra and Hey Arnold from being shown on Viacom International Media Networks Africa's Nickelodeon channel on DStv.

It means it's not watchable for anyone in Africa.

Star vs the Forces of Evil and Gravity Falls from Disney XD (DStv 304), as well as Adventure Time and Steven Universe from Turner Broadcasting’s Cartoon Network (DStv 301) channel in Africa were also banned.

In July 2016 VIMN Africa said it would censor and not broadcast an episode of The Loud House featuring gay dads on DStv in any country following complaints in Africa.

In May 2016 NBCUniversal International Networks was forced to pull the second season of I Am Cait from E! for the entire Africa after a sudden TV-ban in Nigeria.

In October 2015 Discovery Networks International was forced to remove the transgendered docu-series I Am Jazz from TLC for the whole continent, also following a Nigeria-ordered ban.

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Netflix on why it isn't paying the South African Film and Publication Board licensing fee: 'We don't have to pay those fees'.


Netflix, on why it isn't paying the licensing fees for its content made available in South Africa to consumers as required by the South African Film and Publication Board (FPB), has a quite blunt response: "We don't have to".

Netflix says the global video streaming giant doesn't believe that it has to pay South Africa's FPB anything.

Netflix that has so far refused to register with the FPB since it launched in South Africa and across Africa in January 2016, "owes" the FPB more than R1.59 million in unpaid licensing fees.

The FPB screens and provides an age restriction and parental guidance system to content as part of its content classification system.

MultiChoice for its DStv satellite pay-TV service including DStv BoxOffice, and Apple iTunes are paying their FPB licensing fees.

So are the subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) services like Naspers' Showmax and PCCW Global's ONTAPtv.com.

The South African Film and Publication Board recently released a draft review of its licensing fee tariff scale for online distributors in South Africa, suggesting adjustments that will end up costing Netflix even more to have its content be available in South Africa.

The South African government is furthermore hell-bent on "regulating" global online video services like Netflix and YouTube.

The department of communications will shortly release a draft Audio-Visual and Digital Content Policy for SA in parliament for public comment.

Other African nations likewise want Netflix as a global video golden goose to pay up in terms of license fees or be gone.

The Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) for instance has threatened to ban Netflix over its refusal to be "properly licensed" in Kenya and called Netflix "a threat to moral values and national security" in the East African nation.


On Wednesday Netflix spoke to South Africa media and answered questions from the press at its first Netflix House SA media event in Cape Town and TVwithThinus asked Netflix why it isn't paying the FPB licensing fee as required.

"We're an over-the-top (OTT) service, we're not a broadcaster; we're not licensed spectrum, or granted specific wavelengths to broadcast on," said Yann Lafargue, manager for technology and corporate communications at Netflix for the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region.

"We're also not linear television where we have obligations to have certain content, with regulations and content quotas. We're omnipresent, so basically it's a different ball-game - and we don't have to pay those fees."

Yann Lafargue said "some of them argue that we should, and we are in contact with them. We do believe that we do not have to do that. And that's the same case in many countries in the world where they have content regulation and there's questions about ratings, or censorship."

"There's always a wish from a regulator to try to get power from things like video streaming services, and we're trying to move away from that because we do think that the content matters and we try not to censor content in general."

"If we have to pay a fee and its legally binding, we always respect the laws of a country where we operate. Right now, we don't have to."

"To be fair, the amount we should pay isn't necessarily big, but it's the question of why pay something if you don't have to?"

"We will rather invest the money in a local Netflix original show or content, like a Trevor Noah stand-up show rather than just put money where we don't have to."


'We don't want a cumbersome system'
When TVwithThinus asked if Netflix doesn't believe that something like the South African Film and Publications Board should set local parental and age restrictions for films and content that's suitable for South Africa's unique socio-demographic and cultural circumstances, Yann Lafargue said Netflix self-regulates.

"In some cases where there's something different we will have a discussion with the ratings board, and in some countries they are stricter than others. Like in Singapore for instance, or South Korea, they are very stringent."

"You can have a 12 [parental guidance] for something and then it's going to be 18 for that somewhere else. We're trying to make sure that we're empowering customers based on the country."

"There's no point in us forcing something down your throat if we think we're not ready. So we're open to discussion," said Yann Lafargue.

"What we don't want is to have - imagine, we have thousands of titles on Netflix - is to have a cumbersome system where you have to give them the content, and they need to watch it and decide whatever, and to then be consistent. It's complicated."

"It's a bit messy so we're trying to do things by ourselves. But what we're doing in some markets is we're trying to show them, and ask 'For those shows, what would be the ratings?' And we try to self-right ourselves to close the discrepancy."

"So we're trying to understand, and to be a good company and good corporate citizen in general."

"If someone thinks that if there's violence or nudity, automatically it needs to be [age restricted] above 16 we'll do it, we have no issue with that," said Yann Lafargue.

"We want the freedom to regulate ourselves. When there's layers of complexities it's never good; it's just slowing the technology; everything."

"Imagine if you have that [process of screening] and then you need to wait 6 months because they don't have the capacity or the bandwidth to watch all the content of 650 shows - not even talking about the licensed shows we have there, then you become again a second-ranked citizen because of your own regulator. And then there's again the issue of piracy."   

Thursday, June 15, 2017

BREAKING. Kenya abruptly bans 6 'pro-gay' kids cartoons on Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network that are allegedly 'glorifying homosexual behaviour'.


Kenya's censors have abruptly banned 6 alleged "pro-gay" kids cartoons on Nickelodeon (DStv 305) and Cartoon Network (DStv 301) and ordered MultiChoice to immediately stop showing these cartoons on DStv that is "normalising, glamorising or even glorifying homosexual behaviour" and damaging "family".


ALSO READ: Here's the ridiculous reasons Kenya's censors gave for banning the 7 cartoons.


Kenya is following Nigeria's censorship move where TV-bans on content in that country on channels ranging from Nickelodeon and E! Entertainment to TLC Entertainment have seen content being removed from MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform for the entire African content and affecting all of the continent's viewers since the channels often only have one channel feed for Africa.

The Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) says the Nickelodeon cartoons from Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa), Loud House, The Legend of Korra and Hey Arnold, as well as the Cartoon Network shows Steven Universe, Adventure Time and Clarence from Turner Broadcasting have contravened classification guidelines.

The KFCB claims these 6 cartoons "are intended to introduce children to deviant behaviour".

The KFCB in a statement says these cartoons "are obnoxious and inappropriate material" and that it "targets children and seeks to impair their moral judgment on the institution of family".

"The board has written to MultiChoice, the owners of DStv, to cease with immediate effect the airing" of these shows.

Nickelodeon for instance previously showed a drag queen character in its series Bubble Guppies and a same-sex kiss in The Legend of Korra.

The KFCB in its statement says "the children's programmes are laced with retrogressive and bizarre messages intended to promote the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) agenda in the country."

The crux is that VIMN Africa, Turner Broadcasting and MultiChoice can't remove these shows from the channels for just Kenya, and that Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network and DStv are in the content and entertainment providing business - not the censorship and taking content away business.

MultiChoice Africa in a quick response to a media enquiry on Thursday afternoon following the KFCB banning decision, told TVwithThinus that it can't yet comment on the details but that the pay-TV provider learnt of the existence of from the KFCB letter and that MultiChoice Africa is "currently investigating the matters raised in the letter".

VIMN Africa in response to a media enquiry says that it will pull the Nickelodeon shows in Kenya.

"We acknowledges the concerns expressed by the Kenyan Film Classification Board. While we explore a variety of options, we will suspend the shows in question in Kenya."

"Although Viacom International Media Networks Africa and Nickelodeon Africa are committed to diversity and inclusiveness, VIMN also respects the varied cultures and regulatory codes of the markets in which we operate. In markets where broadcasting codes allow, we will be making the content available on catch up services."

Turner Broadcasting EMEA responsible for the Cartoon Network channel in a statement in response to a media enquiry, tells TVwithThinus "inclusivity is core to our values and this is evident across many of our shows and characters".

"At the same time, in Africa, as in all markets, we always seek to be respectful of local cultures and sensitivities, whilst remaining true to our shows that we know fans all over the world love. We constantly review feedback from our audiences to ensure that this is the case and this is a responsibility that we take extremely seriously," says Turner Broadcasting.


So far the Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) and the KFCB CEO Ezekiel Mutua have not responded to emailed media enquiries about the KFCB's decision to ban the 6 cartoons.

The KFCB and Ezekiel Mutua was asked how it derived at the cause for the ban of each of the 6 cartoons listed - especially given that some of the shows ended in 2014 already - and that some contain no on-screen offensive content.

The KFCB was also asked what the KFCB's definition of "family" is and when this definition was decided upon.

The KFCB was asked why the Kenya Film Classification Board outright bans content if it says its a "classification board", and at what period the KFCB saw the 6 cartoons, since some haven't been broadcast on the various DStv channels currently or recently.

In July 2016 VIM
N Africa said it is censoring an episode of The Loud House on Nickelodeon and won't be broadcasting it on its channel on DStv in Africa since it featured animated gay dads.

In May 2016 NBCUniversal International Networks was forced to pull the second season of I Am Cait, a reality show about the transgendered Caitlyn Jenner – formerly known as Bruce Jenner - from E! Entertainment making it unavailable for the entire Africa, after complaints and a DStv TV-ban in Nigeria.

In October 2015 Discovery Networks International was forced to censor and remove the transgendered teen docu-series I Am Jazz from TLC Entertainment from the channel carried on DStv across the entire Africa just before it was to begin broadcast, following censorship in Nigeria.

M-Net that has regionalised channel feeds for South, East and West Africa has been altering and self-censoring its East and West channel feeds for M-Net (DStv 101), the now shuttered M-Net Edge, and its other M-Net packaged channels by keeping controversial shows like American Gods away from East and West Africa and not programming the transsexual model agency reality show, Strut on its version of the VUZU AMP channel outside of South Africa.

Friday, February 10, 2017

DAILY TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read from TVwithThinus - 10 February 2017.

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

■ 66% of Indians admit they've watched illegally downloaded TV content.
Two thirds of Indians say they've watched pirated content although 71% say they know its illegal.

■ American breakfast show struggles to "produce" its presenters.
Former producer explains the never-ending mistakes Good Morning America's producers are making, from camera angles and guests to not letting the presenters be themselves.


■ Malawi's communications regulator wants to expand the African country's TV studio capacity.
With 25 TV stations, Malawi is struggling in meeting local TV content requirements because of a lack of basically everything and critical thinking skills. (Perhaps South Africa's Hlaudi Motsoeneng can go help?)


■ The "lost" season 8 of Star Trek: Deep Space 9 and the science fiction show's secret history.
 DS9 writer reunite for a new documentary, What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek Deep Space Nine, detailing what the 8th season would have been about, what the first season 8 episode would be like, complete with interviews with the cast and crew.


■ Why the offices of Nigeria's CoreTV pay-TV broadcaster was sealed last week.
Meanwhile the office was broken into and broadcasting and other equipment stolen.

■ Creator of new drama series Legion on FOX (DStv 125 / StarSat 131) explains ...
what's going on with the confusing first episode.

■ In Kenya consumers are ditching TV for online despite the high cost of data.
And advertisers are leaving television and following them there.

■ Meanwhile, 2 years after the Kenyan government shut down analogue terrestrial broadcasting, a whopping 1.5 million Kenyans now have no access to TV because they don't have digital terrestrial television (DTT) because set-top boxes (STBs) are too expensive.

■ Sir David Attenborough has a snail named after him.
He's the narrator of Planet Earth II on BBC Earth (DStv 184).

■ Bloomberg Television (DStv 411 / StarSat 264) launches new hourlong show Daybreak: Australia.
Betty Liu in New York and Haidi Lun in Sydney are anchoring and South Africans can watch it at midnight.

■ MultiChoice Namibia to upgrade its existing education centres at schools.
The pay-TV platform will do improvements over the next 3 years at its existing MultiChoice Resource Centres across Namibia.

■ Animation show Pat the Dog coming to Boomerang (DStv 302).
Turner International has picked up the show.

■ What do you not get and is missing from TV channels in Uganda?
Weather reports! Why are local TV stations in Uganda not doing weather forecasts?

■ TV team from Swedish SVT broadcaster sentenced to community work after convicted of human smuggling.
Reporter Fredrik Onnevall, his cameraman and interpreter brought a 15-year old refugee boy from Syria to Sweden in 2015.

■ Viacom is keeping its latest TV shows away from streaming services.
Viacom says it won't be undercutting pay-TV operators by making its new TV shows available to people who don't pay for pay-TV.

■ Swaziland's trashy public broadcaster, STVA, has been embroiled in lurid allegations of corruption, mismanagement and scandal for months.
Amidst rot at Swazi TV, the suspended CEO recently threw out the finance head. Add staff being unpaid and paid late for month, love affairs the CEO admitted to on live TV, the hiring of relatives, buying bad content, business class travel to Europe for studies with no qualifications, irregular appointments, and the use of company vehicles for personal use.

Meanwhile Swaziland's government, is banning the public from knowing what's in a government inquiry report into the struggling broadcaster, with the ministry of information and communication saying the inquiry's report will be kept secret from Swazis. And sadly even the PR person at STVA appears to be incompetent.

■ Some people are cancelling their Netflix subscriptions over trailer for a new series.
Dear White People sparks outrage as Netflix users say they're cancelling their subscriptions. Producer says he wants the unseen in the culture to be seen.

■ How Netflix finds your happy binging place.
What you watch causes algorithms to put you in one of "1 300 distinct taste communities".

■ How television has taken on new meaning in Donald Trump's America.
From The Young Pope to The Man in the High Castle, from Scandal (The Fixer) to The Handmaid's Tale and South Park, American TV shows are now viewed through the additional filter of the belligerent Donald Trump being America's president.