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MUMBAI: TinselVision(TM), an online video-on-demand
(VoD) service will deliver Indian television
and Bollywood film content to more than 40 million
persons of Indian origin living overseas.
The
program will air free of charge, at tinselvision.com,
in the free content zone of the broadband IPTV
service, along with popular programs from Zoom
TV.
"Stopping
short of describing our free content as 'podcasts'
or even user-submitted, shared videos,"
says Saad Shervani, VP of Content of the company,
"our viewers and the marketplace should
anticipate an explosion of free content offerings
on our service. From our own production to the
high-quality shows offered by our partners under
our ad-share model, to obtainment of exclusive,
viral shorts and enabling submissions from our
community, we will be delivering a compelling
and sticky panoply of free Indian and South
Asian content."
The
November premiere of Inside Tinsel will showcase
the latest Bollywood gossip and news -- keeping
TinselVision viewers up-to-date and in-the-know
on new movie releases, exclusive celebrity interviews
and behind-the-scenes events. In addition to
the latest star scoops on who's doing what,
and with whom, the "access Bollywood"
program will offer in-depth looks at Tinsel
Vision programming, service features, unique
promotions, unprecedented contest prizes and
engaging goings-on. Inside Tinsel airs semi-monthly
through the end of the year and, weekly beginning
in January 2008.
TinselVision
has signed a 13-episode deal with highly-regarded
Camera Art to produce the show's initial season.
Camera Art's co-founder and director, Rajan
Kapoor, is leading the Inside Tinsel project,
and produced the new channels positioning
and commercial video assets. Speaking of the
deal and his
relationship with the online entertainment destination,
Kapoor says, "I'm partial to feature-length
film projects these days but, recognized that
special something with the TinselVision team
and market vision that was genuinely attractive.
Television
host Mini Mathur will host the show. "We
spend
so much time focused inwardly on our home audiences
here in India, we too frequently forget there
are tens of millions of our friends and family
and compatriots living overseas with a longing
for original, familiar programming made easily
accessible to them abroad, she said.
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