Showing posts with label The Red Room. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Red Room. Show all posts

Thursday, April 1, 2021

SABC3 rebrands as S3 with a lime green-on-blue logo and new Open Up slogan as the channel pivots towards 'progressive millennial viewers'.


by Thinus Ferreira

The South African public broadcaster's SABC3 has undergone yet another image rebranding exercise with the TV channel that will now be known as simply "S3" from April, with a lime green-on-blue logo together with the new slogan "Open Up".

S3 as the SABC's only commercial TV channel is now targeting "progressive millennial" viewers who have abandoned traditional linear television and switched to streaming services like Netflix, with the SABC that is trying to lure some of that audience to linear TV through compelling content and conversations.

SABC3's switch to S3 is part of a content offering rebuilding and market repositioning for the financially struggling channel that has seen its fortunes, allure as a viewership destination, and its ratings wane over the past decade.

As its schedule got dismantled and once popular international and signature local shows - together with anchor programming like Isidingo - got cancelled, viewers left. 

They were followed by advertisers and scorched producers, while SABC3 lost its defined channel identity and became a dumping ground for last-minute acquired sports disrupting the schedule and other shows that didn't fit on SABC1 or SABC2.

Under new channel head, Pat van Heerden, SABC3 is rebuilding and re-emerging as S3, slowly adding edgy and provocative content, and is looking to re-engage viewers - especially a younger-skewing audience with more risque programming stimulating conversation, debate and thought.

SABC3 is launching a new locally-produced telenovela by Clive Morris Productions from Monday 5 April at 19:00, The Estate to anchor its new prime-time line-up.

It's adding acclaimed foreign telenovelas like Brazil's refugee drama, Orphans of a Nation from Mondays to Wednesdays at 18:30, and Turkey's therapy clinic-set The Red Room on Thursdays and Fridays serving as the lead-in programming.

Unpacked with Relebogile Mabotja is a new local talk show for the S3 schedule that will kick off in April, promising to delve deep into topics and conversations that are deliberately chosen because they make people "uncomfortable". 

The S3 talk show will tackle often-taboo subjects with sensitivity that South Africans are either too scared or too awkward about to address or simply don't know how to talk about publicly.

In other programming changes, S3 is adding the American ITV crime drama series The Bay on weekdays at 19:30 from 6 April, while the Cardova Productions produced afternoon talk show Afternoon Express is cut down from 5 to just two episodes per week on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and moving from 17:00 to 17:30.

S3 will now have two half-hour news bulletins - one at 18:30 and another at 20:00 and will have season 36 of the American Survivor entitled Ghost Island, along with the critically-acclaimed drama series The Night Manager on Tuesdays at 21:00 and Mrs America on Thursdays.

The HBO documentary Being Serena about Serena Williams is broadcast on Thursday night at 21:00 on 7 April with the Hulu comedy Woke screened on Fridays at 21:00.

SABC3 unveiled its new S3 rebranding on Wednesday night at a media event held in Johannesburg that started late and where many guests didn't wear masks or adhered to social distancing Covid-19 protocols, with a live stream for national media watching from home that was badly produced and marred by multiple mistakes and bad production values.

Merlin Naicker, the SABC's head of TV, said that "we are creating a new SABC3 and we are taking note of industry trends and taking the schedules of SABC1 and SABC2 into consideration - the idea is to make sure that our audience will always find something that they will enjoy or that they can relate to on the SABC's channels".


Pat van Heerden said that "we're in a very congested television landscape and most of the channels that are coming in are international and when we look at that, people are reduced to an algorythm. We have the opportunity as the SABC to speak to the citizens of our country".

"We have the privilege of creating a channel which our citizens can be connected to - and that's the privilege we have: connection. When you look at international channels like Netflix they don't have that connection - that ability to speak to our audiences, to get reflections back."


A progressive millenial channel
"We're creating a channel in which our citizens belong, we have a conversation with them - and then we thought what else is out there in terms of SABC1 and SABC2? What can S3 offer?"

"We're looking at becoming a progressive millennial channel in which we're speaking to the generation that has to face the future, that has to work in this economy, and we thought how can we become part of the conversation in terms of becoming future-fit - and that's what we're doing."

"SABC3 is opening up a dialogue, a dialogue about being a citizen, being conscious, being environmentally friendly, looking at the crises facing the planet; and then looking at what global entertainment can we offer citizens basically for free that you have to pay on subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) services for," Pat van Heerden said.

"This is your public broadcaster giving you fantastic programming and curating a dialogue with our audiences."

"What we're done is to look out into the rest of globe and take programming from Australia and New Zealand, Canada, Brazil, Turkey - and we've really selected programmes that we think will speak to someof the issues that we have in our country and some of the things that we like to celebrate."

"Locally, we're looking at some dramas and building prime time with a new daily drama called The Estate."


Opening up
Pat van Heerden said the new slogan of "Open Up" is "about opening up about discussing our differences, finding commonality, opening up to seeing the rest of the world, opening up to their stories and seeing ourselves as global citizens".

About the switch to a lime green S3 logo on blue, Pat van Heerden said S3 is "not a natural history channel but we will be conscious about the environment". 

"We want to do entertaining programming around environmental issues. You have thrillers being made in Australia, you have a thriller from Brazil set in an eco-warrior landscape, so it's about the content but entertaining content."


Wednesday, March 31, 2021

SABC3 adds the telenovelas Orphans of a Nation from Brazil and The Red Room from Turkey from April to join its locally-produced The Estate.


by Thinus Ferreira

SABC3 is adding two foreign telenovelas in April to complement its new locally-produced telenovela, The Estate, with both Orphans of a Nation from Brazil and The Red Room from Turkey joining the channel's schedule.

Orphans of a Nation (Órfãos da Terra) created by the Emmy Award winners Thelma Guedes and Duca Rachid tells the harrowing love story set within the modern-day context of refugees and immigrants from around the world who leave their countries for various reasons.

Orphans of a Nation that won an Emmy for best telenovela in 2020 starts in war-torn Syria and follows characters as they flee as refugees to Brazil. The telenovela will be broadcast from Mondays to Wednesdays from Monday 5 April at 18:30.

In the telenovela, Laila (Julia Dalavia) and Jamil (Renato Góes) arrive in Brazil to try to live the love that united them while they were still in the Middle East but she is a Syrian refugee and he is an employee of the powerful Sheik Aziz Abdallah, who forcibly took Laila as one of his wives.

"Orphans of a Nation has a great big love story at the centre of it but it also manages to place the drama in the real world of our time," says Pat van Heerden, SABC3 channel head.

"It awakens in us a sense of our connections as a country to the plight of our own refugees in South Africa that too have their love stories and pain from fleeing their native lands."


On Thursdays and Fridays at 18:30, SABC3 is scheduling the Turkish telenovela The Red Room (Kirmizi Oda) that premieres on Thursday 8 April and that is set inside a therapy clinic.

The Red Room - so-called for the colour of the practice's therapist Doctor Hanim (Binnur Kaya) - is based on the real-life experiences of an Istanbul doctor and writer Gülseren Budayicioglu.

"Thematically the show deals with the idea of confronting past trauma to be able to come into one’s full potential life - it depicts woman dramatically dealing with past abuse to want to live again," says Pat van Heerden.

"All of the fictional characters dramatized stories are based on real-life characters. This show will go out twice a week and it is meant to connect with the present South Africa we live in, where so many women live with abuse in their daily lives – here in The Red Room we see dramatic stories of hope and recovery."

The episodes are built around harrowing stories of the patients, while at the centre of the drama is the team of therapists in the clinic, and their own personal issues. These stories will be familiar to women, men and even children around the world and will open the eyes of many more.

"The Red Room is about reaching out as a real public service broadcaster to show a programme about overcoming violence and trauma in a community through therapy," says Pat van Heerden.

Orphans of a Nation and The Red Room lead into The Estate at 19:00 as SABC3's new locally-produced telenovela that replaces Isidingo.