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| A Snapshot of Indian Television History |
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| Television
in India has been in existence for nigh on four decades. For the first 17 years,
it spread haltingly and transmission was mainly in black & white. The thinkers
and policy makers of the country, which had just been liberated from centuries
of colonial rule, frowned upon television, looking on at it as a luxury Indians
could do without. In 1955 a Cabinet decision was taken disallowing any foreign
investments in print media which has since been followed religiously for nearly
45 years. Sales of TV sets, as reflected by licences issued to buyers were just
676,615 until 1977. |
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| Television
has come to the forefront only in the past 21 years and more so in the past 13.
There were initially two ignition points: the first in the eighties when colour
TV was introduced by state-owned broadcaster Doordarshan (DD) timed with the 1982
Asian Games which India hosted. It then proceeded to install transmitters nationwide
rapidly for terrestrial broadcasting. In this period no private enterprise was
allowed to set up TV stations or to transmit TV signals. |
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| The second spark came in the early
nineties with the broadcast of satellite TV by foreign programmers like CNN followed
by Star TV and a little later by domestic channels such as Zee TV and Sun TV into
Indian homes. Prior to this, Indian viewers had to make do with DD's chosen fare
which was dull, non-commercial in nature, directed towardsonly education and socio-economic
development. Entertainment programmes were few and far between. And when the solitary
few soaps like Hum Log (1984), and mythological dramas: Ramayan (1987-88) and
Mahabharat (1988-89) were televised, millions of viewers stayed glued to their
sets |
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| When,
urban Indians learnt that it was possible to watch the Gulf War on television,
they rushed out and bought dishes for their homes. Others turned entrepreneurs
and started offering the signal to their neighbours by flinging cable over treetops
and verandahs. From the large metros satellite TV delivered via cable moved into
smaller towns, spurring the purchase of TV sets and even the upgradation from
black & white to colour TVs. |
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| DD
responded to this satellite TV invasion by launching an entertainment and commercially
driven channel and introduced entertainment programming on its terrestrial network.
This again fuelled the purchase of sets in the hinterlands where cable TV was
not available. |
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The initial success of the channels had a snowball effect: more foreign programmers
and Indian entrepreneurs flagged off their own versions. From two channels prior
to 1991, Indian viewers were exposed to more than 50 channels by 1996. Software
producers emerged to cater to the programming boom almost overnight. Some talent
came from the film industry, some from advertising and some from journalism. |
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| More and more
people set up networks until there was a time in 1995-96 when an estimated 60,000
cable operators were existing in the country. Some of them had subscriber bases
as low as 50 to as high as in the thousands. Most of the networks could relay
just 6 to 14 channels as higher channel relaying capacity required heavy investments,
which cable operators were loathe to make. American and European cable networks
evinced interest, as well as large Indian business groups, who set up sophisticated
headends capable of delivering more than 30 channels. These multi-system operators
(MSOs) started buying up local networks or franchising cable TV feeds to the smaller
operators for a fee. This phenomenon led to resistance from smaller cable operators
who joined forces and started functioning as MSOs. The net outcome was that the
number of cable operators in the country has fallen to 30,000. |
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| The rash of players
who rushed to set up satellite channels discovered that advertising revenue was
not large enough to support them. This led to a shakeout. At least half a dozen
either folded up or aborted the high-flying plans they had drawn up, and started
operating in a restricted manner. Some of them converted their channels into basic
subscription services charging cable operators a carriage fee. |
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| Foreign cable
TV MSOs discovered that the cable TV market was too disorganised for them to operate
in and at least three of them decided to postpone their plans and got out of the
market.. |
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| The
government started taxing cable operators in a bid to generate revenue. The rates
varied in the 26 states that go to form India and ranged from 35 per cent upwards.
The authorities moved in to regulate the business and a Cable TV Act was passed
in 1995. The apex court in the country, the Supreme Court, passed a judgement
that the air waves are not the property of the Indian government and any Indian
citizen wanting to use them should be allowed to do so. The government reacted
by making efforts to get some regulation in place by setting up committees to
suggest what the broadcasting law of India should be, as the sector was still
being governed by laws which were passed in 19th century India. A broadcasting
bill was drawn up in 1997 and introduced in parliament. But it was not passed
into an Act. State-owned telecaster Doordarshan and radiocaster All India Radio
were brought under a holding company called the Prasar Bharati under an act that
had been gathering dust for seven years, the Prasar Bharati Act, 1990. The Act
served to give autonomy to the broadcasters as their management was left to a
supervisory board consisting of retired professionals and bureaucrats. |
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| A committee
headed by a senior Congress (I) politician Sharad Pawar and consisting of other
politicians and industrialist was set up to review the contents of the Broadcasting
Bill. It held discussions with industry, politicians, and consumers and a report
was even drawn up. But the United Front government fell and since then the report
and the Bill have been consigned to the dustbin. But before that it issued a ban
on the sale of Ku-band dishes and on digital direct-to-home Ku-band broadcasting,
which the Rupert Murdoch-owned News Television was threatening to start in India.
ISkyB, the Murdoch DTH venture, has since been wallowing in quicksand and in recent
times has even shed a lot of employees. But News Corp has been running a C-band
DTH venture in the country which has around 20,000 subscribers. |
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| In 1999,
a BJP-led government has been threatening to once again allow DTH Ku-band broadcasting
and it has been talking of dismantling the Prasar Bharati and once again reverting
Doordarshan's and All India Radio's control back in the government's hands. Some
things change only to remain the same. |
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| For yearwise updates on how the television
landscape has been evolving click below... |
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| Do you have
any other insights on how television developed in India that may have not been
posted on this page? Do you disagree with anything that is mentioned in this short
snapshot? | Feel free
to POST
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would like to collect and consolidate information around the development of television
in India so that it can become a reference point for students, academics, consumers
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here. | |
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If you are interested in getting more detailed
information on the history of Indian television please send an email to editor@indiantelevision.com,
television@vsnl.com,
or call +91-22-2673 0660, Fax: +91-22-2674 0644 or post to
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Goregaon Bus Depot, New Link Road,Goregaon West, Mumbai - 400 104. |