Showing posts with label Ratna Siriah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ratna Siriah. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2020

After launch of Zee Alem in Ethiopia Zee Africa says it's looking at further bespoke regional and language-specific channels for the continent in the future.

by Thinus Ferreira

Zee Africa, a division of Zee Entertainment Enterprises, says that it's growing collection of TV channels across Africa, is finding traction with the continent's viewers and that it's looking at possible expanding with further bespoke regional and language-specific offerings in the future.

Recently Zee Africa added Zee Alem as a new TV channel to its expanding offering on the Africa continent on 22 June 2020. Zee Alehm broadcasts in the Amharic language for Ethiopia.

"The uptake of Zee Amharic gives us the confidence to pursue more such regional opportunities.

We have tested waters in the regional space with programming in Swahili and Zulu languages and found a definite gap for Indian content," says Harish Goyal, CEO of Zee Africa & Asia Pacific.

"Zee Alem is the first channel launched in an African language and with the large amount of positive responses from our viewers, we are exploring new markets for similar launches in the future."

Zee already has two successful mainstream channels, Zee World in English and Zee Magic in French, which cater to Anglophone and Francophone viewers across the African continent.

"We have always strived to be innovative in our approach to new markets, which has opened up new opportunities to grow our local footprint on the continent," says Ratna Siriah, Zee Africa business head for Africa & Indian Ocean Islands.

Currently, there are 9 Zee channels across the continent with 6 bespoke feeds bring viewers a curated collection of the best of Indian content to Africa. 

Various Zee channels groupings are carried on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV service in South Africa and the rest of sub-Saharan Africa, as well as on StarTimes' in sub-Saharan Africa and its StarSat in South Africa; as well as on Canal+ Afrique in sub-Saharan Africa

Saturday, April 6, 2019

'The entire Soweto watches us': Zee Africa boss, Harish Goyal, on the origin-story and growth of the Zee World channel that has now led to the first-ever Bollywood drama series, Mehek, that includes an African cast.


Mehek, a new African-infused Bollywood telenovela starting on 6 April at 21:00 on Zee World (DStv 166), is an African first and marks a bold step forward for Zee World that has just turned 4 years old, testing the appetite and demand under African viewers to see black characters reflected back in Bollywood and introducing a cross-cultural love-story romance in a first-ever Africa-Bollywood drama series adaptation.

Mehek came about when Zee Africa was presented with the opportunity to adapt the Bollywood telenovela Zindagi Ki Mehek (Essence of Life) from Zee after filming in India but before the studio sets in Delhi got struck and while the Indian cast was still available.

Zee Africa jumped and in record-time got an African cast from South Africa together who went to Indian to film new scenes and an integrated story.

With new scenes filmed at a furious pace between October and December 2018 using the same directors and writers, Zindagi Ki Mehek was re-edited with the newly written script and filmed scenes to create the re-imagined and adapted version, now localised for African audiences with the Gabela family inserted.


While Mehek (still) refers to Mehek (Samiksha Jaiswal), a passionate chef who falls in love, Mehek now include the Gabela family that moved from Africa to India after son Dennis (Kamogelo Mogale) has been accused of a crime, father Eddie (Ndaba ka Ngwane), mom Leleti (Nomava Kibare) and daughter Norah (Shonisani Masutha) who falls in love with Karan.

Talent agency Thespians provided the actors for the Gabela family with agent Marius Meyer who lived together in the same accommodation in India for the duration of filming.


"Our extraordinary journey started 4 years ago on 3 February 2015 when we launched Zee World," said Harish Goyal, the CEO of Zee Africa & Asia Pacific, at Thursday evening's media launch event of Mehek in Johannesburg.

"Zee World was launched with 4 fresh hours per day, Monday to Friday. Then, within a year, we introduced our 5th fresh hour and it became 5 new hours per day during prime time during 2016."

"Then, last year we started with new content from Monday to Sunday on Zee World. We are one of those very few companies who did this where we brought fresh hours on Saturday and Sunday. So we did something that was different, and this delivered the performance" for the channel that is now available as an HD channel across sub-Saharan Africa.

"Zee came to the African continent and South Africa 20 years back. When we came 20 years ago we thought Bollywood and Indian drama will appeal to South African Indians, so we brought on channel 452 the channel ZEE TV on MultiChoice's DStv," said Harish Goyal.

"Programming was in Hindi with English subtitles and we remained happy and content for 13 years. Then we discovered that the content has a very big appeal under African viewers - African mainstream viewers who watch it."

"So we were chasing 1.5 million South Asians where actually the market was 1 billion Africans. What we discovered was that the content has to be brought in a language that Africa understands. The research that we did 7 years ago showed that there's a great cultural relevance between India and Africa - our joint love of food, music, dance, and family values."

"People thought there must be a big cultural difference between India and Africa and the answer is no; there is a very big cultural relevance. Finally, when we launched Zee World, the results show that the entire Soweto watches us,' said Harish Goyal.

"We started asking in 2016, 'When are we going to start seeing ourselves on the channel?' That is when the idea started of bringing local content to Zee World. Of course it takes time. Finally, we're starting to see African stars with Indian stars, working in India."


'We have brought Africa and India together'
Ratna Siriah, head of business at Zee Africa, at Thursday evening's launch event said "a big thank you to my marketing and programming team in Africa and the producers in Indian who made Mehek happen in a very, very short time".

"The African actors know how difficult it has been for them as well - and everyone pulled through."

"The journey of Mehek - as Harish Goyal spoke about the journey of Zee World - finally it had to come to that. Mehek is here because of the success of Zee World in Africa that we have seen," said Ratna Siriah.

"The key question we started getting from viewers was 'When will they see themselves as part of Bollywood?' I think with Mehek that is what we have finally achieved where we have brought Africa and India together on one screen."

"This has happened for the first time in the history of Bollywood series. This hasn't been done before. This is the first innovative step; something that Zee has taken."


The story of Mehek
"The story of Mehek revolves around an orphan girl called Mehek. Mehek in Hindi means 'fragrance' and you associate that word with food; the fragrance of food, the fragrance of flowers - everything that is nice and beautiful is called mehek," explained Ratna Siriah.

"So you could have a person who has a beautiful personality and I would say 'The mehek of that person is beautiful'. So it's a fragrance that comes from everything that is beautiful."

"So Mehek's whole story revolves around cooking. The story has love, it has betrayal. It has revenge, it has forgiveness. And now to add into the mix of all that we have the Gabela family from Africa that's arrived in India and they are trying to find their place in a country where the culture at the outset looks very different."

"Slowly they come to know, as we've learnt here in South Africa and Africa, that it's not all that different - that we all can live together.

"In Mehek the family's daughter Norah (Shonisani Masutha) is not at all happy when the family moved to India at all and you will see her throw all sorts of tantrums. But of course, she finds a very hot someone ..."

"The family finally makes India their home and you will see all of that in Mehek that has over 200 episodes with a new episode daily. There's a lot of drama coming in Mehek."

"The story of Mehek puts a spotlight on the connection between Africa and India," says Ratna Siriah.

"Our dances may be different, but our passion for dancing is the same. Our families may be different, but our respect for our elders is the same. Our fashions may be different, but our flair for colours is the same. Finally, our food may be different, but our love of food is the same - and that is what Mehek bring together on Zee World as our latest series."


ALSO READ: The first Bollywood TV production with African actors in the cast and filmed in India, Mehek, to premiere on Zee World in April.
ALSO READ: IN IMAGES. 30 photos of the media launch of Zee World's Mehek drama series in South Africa as the first to feature the inclusion of an African cast.
ALSO READ: ZEEL's Zee World channel celebrates 4 years in Africa with phenomenal viewership growth for its Bollywood content; first locally-produced content to be broadcast from April 2019.

Monday, April 1, 2019

The first Bollywood TV production with African actors in the cast and filmed in India, Mehek, to premiere on Zee World in April.


Mehek, a new drama series filmed in India, is set to premiere on the Indian-focused entertainment channel Zee World (DStv 166) on Saturday, 6 April at 21:00 as the first Bollywood TV production to include African actors as part of the cast.

The landmark drama series for Zee World includes African actors Shonisani Masutha, Kamogelo Mogale, Ndaba ka Ngwane and Nomava Kibare and will broadcast 7 days a week on Zee World.

In February Zee World celebrated its 4th anniversary as an African TV channel run by ZEE Entertainment Enterprise Ltd. (ZEEL), with the channel that has shown a steep upward growth in ratings and revenues over the past 4 years.

Mehek revolves around an aspiring chef looking for love, as well as the various members of a black family from Africa looking for a better life in India, faces the various challenges and tribulations this new journey brings as well as unexpected romantic entanglements.

Mehek is the story of a young girl from Delhi, whose love for cooking is closely tied to her mother's memories. She was raised by her aunt, Kanta, after her parents died. Then there is Shaurya (Karan Vohra) a rich and arrogant restauranteur. Their paths cross, leading to an unlikely relationship - but all is not what it seems.

Meanwhile Eddie Gabela (Ndaba ka Ngwane), a successful businessman from Africa moves to Delhi with his wife Leleti (Nomava Kibare), daughter Norah (Shonisani Masutha) and son Dennis (Kamogelo Mogale).

Dennis has been implicated in a serious crime and whilst the family knows he's innocent they are helpless to save him from these false accusations and decide to leave Africa for his safety.

Norah's love life, however, takes an interesting turn when she meets and falls in love with Karan in India. Their relationship is a colourful imbalance of love and betrayal as the couple forges a life together in India in a groundbreaking Africa-meets-India storyline.

"Mehek represents an important and evolutionary part of Zee World's commitment to providing relevant, exciting and innovative content to its viewers," says Harish Goyal, the CEO of Zee Africa & Asia Pacific.

"Zee is proud of this production and of our African actors; furthermore, it will undoubtedly set a strong foundation for similar productions in the future."

Ratna Siriah, head of business at Zee Africa, says "The decision to develop a Bollywood production with African actors stemmed from Zee World's unequivocal success in Africa and the love showered by our audiences for the channel".

"Zee World has enjoyed tremendous growth throughout the years and Mehek was the obvious next step."

Aletta Alberts, MultiChoice's executive head of content strategy, says "The MultiChoice Group understands the importance of local content to our subscribers".

"As Africa's leading content producer and most loved storyteller, we are delighted that our channel partners such as Zee share this in this vision and investing in showcasing local talent in new innovative ways."

Friday, August 12, 2016

BREAKING. Gary Alfonso the (3rd) new Africa boss for FOX Networks Group, appointed as general manager; Khosi Khanyile upped to marketing director.


Will it be third time lucky? Gary Alfonso has been appointed the new boss of FOX Africa's business in South Africa - FOX's 3rd boss in 3 years.

Both previous FOX bosses in South Africa, Hannelie Bekker and Ratna Siriah, respectively lasted only 5 months and 4 months and left without a word from FOX.

It means that Gary Alfonso, a former CNBC Africa (DStv 410) and BusinessDayTV (DStv 412) executive, will break the record if he manages to make it to January 2017 in his new position.

Gary Alfonso who has more than 3 decades of TV broadcasting experience, joins FOX from the Nigerian broadcaster Gotel Communications, where he was the chief operating officer (COO).

It was quite an embarrassment for FOX Africa and the FOX Networks Group (previously FOX International Channels until January 2016) in June when FOX and MultiChoice teamed up for an Empire and DStv media blitz for stars Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard to South Africa and had no local top executive.

Gobsmacked TV critics and media suddenly had to hear from Adam Theiler, the executive vice president for FOX Networks Group for Europe and Africa at the official Empire and DStv press conference who flew in for the occasion since Ratna Siriah dropped FOX after just 4 months and went back to Zee Entertainment.

Now, after a FOX Africa management vacuum of 5 months with no permanent head, Gary Alfonso is taking over as general manager of FOX Networks Group's restructured African business that includes the various FOX supplied TV channels and National Geographic Partners.

Gary Alfonso will report to Adam Theiler.

The FOX Networks Group runs channels like FOX, National Geographic and Nat Geo Wild on MultiChoice's DStv; FX, Nat Geo Gold, BabyTV and Fox Sports on StarTimes Media SA and On Digital Media's (ODM) StarSat; and FOX Crime on both operators that's reportedly soon going to be replaced with the FOX Life channel.

FOX Networks Group has meanwhile promoted Nami Patel in London from vice president for business development in Europe and Africa, to chief financial officer (CFO) based in the United Kingdom.

Meanwhile the FOX Networks Group's South African based marketing manager Khosi Khanyile has been promoted to director of sales and marketing.

"Our genre defining brands are market leaders in Africa, delivering year on year growth over the past three years," says Adam Theiler in a statement announcing the appointment of Gary Alfonso.

"Gary Alfonso's 29 years of leading industry experience will continue to drive our success, evolving our businesses to meet the changing media landscape as we bring the best in entertainment, factual and sports programming to audiences across the continent".

In the statement Gary Alfonso says: "Working with the highly talented team in the FNG Africa office, I look forward to helping the business increase its regional footprint, in a challenging and dynamic media environment".

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

THE EMPIRE STRIKES PERFECT: The 6 reasons why MultiChoice and FOX Africa's Empire press conference was the best one in years.


On Monday I attended a press conference in Johannesburg for the hit American TV drama Empire on FOX (DStv 125 / StarSat 131) and full credit where credit's due: It was good. In fact, it was excellent - the best press conference for a TV show that I've went to in 8 years.

Empire's press conference (more accurately an open-floor round-robin interview session if you want to be technical about it) with stars Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard who both jetted into South Africa for the week - took place inside one of the new auditoriums (my second time sitting in it) at MultiChoice City in Randburg, the home of DStv.

FOX and MultiChoice's Empire media event for press to ask questions was absolutely stand-out: a perfect parfait.
Structurally, functionally and optically, MultiChoice was absolutely fantastic and did the media engagement event line item by line item in the "best practice" way American television does it and how I've experienced it several times there.

It really resulted in a highly professional, very smooth presser from where I sat and experienced it.

Here's 6 things that MultiChoice, the FOX Networks Group (FNG), and other stellar objects all in the same orbit got right and all worked together to create a truly splended and far, far better press conference and talent-sit interview session for a TV show than what I've personally experienced anywhere in South in years:

1. Having it at MultiChoice.
These things usually (99.5%) take place at uptey-da, boutique-style, 5-star hotels with lots of hoo-haa, fake hugs and phoney air-kisses.

Holding it at MultiChoice City not only lent it importance, it also made it more formal.

With a proper, functional and right size theatre auditorium with cinema-like ambience and seats, it signaled that it's not some champers guzzling party but a "this is where you sit, this is where we sit" press conference.

Of course it helped with security too, since its a more secure location. Those inside the complex were vetted and gained entry through a list, meaning the management, security and marketing teams had macro containment and could focus on managing the micro.

By having it inside MultiChoice City, MultiChoice and FOX got a higher all-round degree of ensuring no psychos or possibilities of violence or other incidents, and could focus on minimising the incidents of the trash who always want to touch the talent (of course there was again one who just couldn't help himself).

(Funnily enough also, it didn't stop the hawkish bodyguards inside the auditorium from making distracting and very obvious Madonna-type "vogue"-ish hand signals to each other from side to side throughout).

Having it at MultiChoice it also meant easy access to the press waiting area with catering and all other things on hand like a wristband-entry only section with a neat craft table with coffee, juices, croissants and muffins.

The whole support structure from all of MultiChoice's various divisions was literally on hand to swoop in and be hands on and deal with any eventuality which isn't so possible at a hotel.

2. The stars.
Many are the grumpy cats I've had to interview over many years. And I'm not talking SPCA. I'm talking real-life people. Being a star and famous doesn't always necessarily mean sunny like a Teletubby.

Irrespective of how nice you might or try to be as an interviewer, or how you modulate your non-verbal behaviour, what you say, and even how you say it, some TV talent just won't be nice back. And by won't be nice back I mean won't come to play and do a nice and useful interview.

Empire's Taraji P. Henson however is a gem  and a real talker (and journalists love those)! She brought the funny, the one-liners, the zingers, the quotables (and journalists love those even more!) and deeper moments of reflection perfect for the inside pages of any magazine from Vanity Fair to Bona.

Although not as verbose, Terrence Howard also impressed me. He even managed to somewhat alter some my pre-conceived perceptions I had of him. I think differently of him than what I did a week ago.

Like Bill Clinton and Oprah, Terrence Howard looks you intently in the eye, specifically. He did so every time a journalist asked a question and kept looking at the person he spoke to.

Each time he took a second to think and gave real answers. It came across that he thought about, and gave thought to, what he wanted to share.

Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard were already liked (dare I even say beloved by some), but they went beyond being mere dolls in a storefront window to be stared at and perhaps admired for how they look and what they portray.

They spoke with such conviction and through what they gave journalists by speaking a lot, they gave reasons for the media to actually really care and tell their stories.

3. The moderator.
With years of unmatched experience the best facilitator and press conference moderator within South Africa's TV industry is M-Net's head of publicity Lani Lombard.

Nobody else comes even close to keeping control, laying down the law, going through house rules, knowing every single journalist by name, specifically designating and directing what journalist can ask a question and overall running a tight ship, and holding press conferences like its on CNN while the rest of the biz mostly often preside over painful zoo-like, free-for-alls they also call "press conferences".

With Empire, MultiChoice SA's general manager for marketing, Nomsa Chabeli-Mazibuko was the moderator. She wasn't a Lani, but she did terrific in her first time I've seen her moderate a press conference.

Journalists got house rules from her and the FOX executive, Adam Theiler (the executive vice president for FOX Networks Group for Europe and Africa) and Mark Rayner (MultiChoice South Africa CEO) as well as the talent were all properly introduced and got a chance to make speeches.

(One thing that was very odd and almost embarrassing was that the FOX Networks Group had no local South African executive or figure head on hand or talking, since Ratna Siriah who was appointed as the new next general manager for FOX in Africa bailed recently after just 4 months on the job - the second person appointed in the position to abruptly just leave FOX within two years, just like her predecessor. As a result it was conspicuous that Adam Theiler couldn't, and didn't, thank any manager for Africa since there isn't one.)

Nomsa Chabeli-Mazibuko proceeded to ask a round of actually relevant questions first - questions that didn't come across as soft-ball pandering questions but questions that a journalist would conceivably actually ask - and then she opened the floor to questions from journalists.

Mics circulated, she explained upfront that a chance will be given for photos at the end, and she then followed through at the conclusion with a specific 2-minute photo call in front of the step-and-repeat.

It was literally textbook perfect, with MultiChoice executing it basically to the tee in terms of the American junket style playbook.

Nomsa Chabeli-Mazibuko was a solid moderator with no waffling and no confusion.

Running a kindergarden - in this case a cinema filled with press (who often have short attention spans especially when they see shiny things) - is no easy feat and she did it with alacrity and precision without being heavy-handed. A gold star for her.

4. About an hour.
The press conference ended minutes shy of an hour. It was way more time than what I expected the press corps to get.

The result however was an abundance of actual content and copy for print and visuals for video.

It wasn't the usual slam-bam-goodbye and both Taraji P. Henson and Terrence Howard did a deep dive with their answers to some of the questions. That helped to move the interview session beyond the frivolous, often superficial level that these things very often are, to a real interview with substance.

Whether they went into overtime deliberately or didn't know, or if it was always planned as an hour, it contributed to making the event incredible and elevated the MultiChoice and FOX presser to something I've rarely seen done for television in South Africa.

Also, there wasn't the slightest sense of urgency or irritation from the talent or the cattle callers - something I always sense and pick upon as the interview duration progress and which is a normal thing.

Whether concern about the time ticking by was really absent or just well-hidden, the end result was great.

5. Peripherals.
The mics caused slight feedback, but hey, there were mics! (Often journalists must make do without any. And notice the plural.

With a lot of roving mics and with handhelds for the talent as well as lapel mics it cut down on in-between lag time to get mics to people.

People sat still until the very end. None of the usual trash-rash of press idiots who show up and leave to go and feed or liquor up (there wasn't any) while they're supposed to work.

All the small things were meticulous. Which meant that the big picture was great.

6. A box set.
Why on earth MultiChoice and FOX decided to give attending media a gift, I don't know - getting access to talent and TV executives and being able to do an interview or to see a TV show's set is the gift.

Yet, as press filed out of the auditorium into the MultiChoice City atrium they were handed a beautiful ribboned gold and black box.

So unnecessary, but yes, very beautiful.

It wasn't a box set of Empire season one or two, but was ... well, actually I haven't yet opened mine yet.

It's silly, but literally I don't want to mess up the gold ribbon. Other journalists told me its a bottle of Moët and glasses.


Well done, MultiChoice and the FOX Networks Group in Africa.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

MultiChoice's DStv Content Showcase in Mauritius 2015: A summary of the programming upfront and news so far: Day 3


So MultiChoice is having a MultiChoice Content Showcase at the Outrigger Mauritius Resort & Spa in Mauritius.

South African press and TV critics not welcome and not told about it beforehand. I'm covering it anyway since there's a lot of must-know television and channels news that pertains to South Africa and the broader TV industry, and that's noteworthy.

For day 1 and day 2 news and stories check here with links to further articles.


Thursday 3 September
The morning kicked off with a Zee World (DStv 166) presentation. Sadly and unprofessionally, no information was issued to press not actually at the event.

(It's honestly exactly what I expected and thought of first, and thought would happen when I first heard about it taking place - PR people off on a junket and care a bat's behind about what happens to actualy information dissemination).

Zee World Africa apparently says it will be bringing Bollywood to Africa and start to produce content in Africa for the channel. But I have literally nothing to share.

Besides perhaps that Zee World is working on bringing "classics" (whatever that is) like The Promise to the channel. There will also be older movies coming to Zee World. It sounds wonderful.

Zee World (that by the way dumped the PR agency two months ago that they've been using) also didn't respond to a direct media enquiry I made this afternoon. My guess is that Zee World marketing Linda Oliphant is herself in Mauritius.

Here is some of what Ratna Siriah, Zee World business head had to say.


Likewise nothing from Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa) who played games with media on Wednesday night like slushing and lip synch battles and provide channels like MTV, MTV Base, BET and Comedy Central.

"Viacom will be premiering loads of fresh new content across all our channels on the DStv platform in the coming months and we can't wait for Africa to see," said Nickelodeon marketing manager Lindi Davids. Beyond that no programming specifics or information ... nothing.


Meanwhile MultiChoice Africa CEO Tim Jacobs started sitting for interviews (like this one explaining why MultiChoice hiked prices by another 15%) . He says DStv subscriptions wwill come down again after the just introduced 2nd price hike of 15% if the Kenya Shilling recovers against the US Dollar.

It follows yesterday's panel discussion and media conference in which Tim Jacobs said this and this about South Africa's ShowMax and this about piracy and the possibility of offering a sports DStv bouquet.


A+E Networks UK who had panelists like Sarah Williams-Robbins did a presentation on Thursday morning as well. Information in a well-timed press release was also issued to South African press.

Noteworthy announcements include the renewal of Pawn Stars South Africa on History (DStv 186) for a second season; a special episode of Fifth Gear which will form part of the new season also coming to History, Lifetime (DStv 131) lifting its ratings 50% quarter to quarter, and the two upcoming special O.J. Simpsons hidden tapes documentaries for October on Crime+Investigation (DStv 170).

Nothing from A+E Networks UK about apparently looking for local African stories to possible produce and put on History.


Turner Broadcasting System (TBS) did a Fun Factory presentation for channels like the Cartoon Network (DStv 301) and Boomerang (DStv 302) this afternoon.

An Evening with Disney - a lawn movie screening with picnic baskets - is set for Thursday evening.
[Here is a run-down of how that went.]

Disney will present on Friday morning.