Of course, the first meaning is clear, to anyone who doesn't believe in Santa 
Claus, that this 'support' to industry does not come without a price. As they 
say, who makes the bed lies in it.... and then other things happen. 

Mind you, this one takes the cake for sheer hypocrisy. There seems to be plenty 
more cake going around, however, in this arc of the airwaves rainbow. 

The entire development debate is stalled over this kind of essential structural 
roadblock to participatory democracy.

 Vickram
http://communicall.wordpress.com
http://vvcrishna.wordpress.com




________________________________
From: sajan venniyoor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: CR India <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, 10 November, 2008 14:31:40
Subject: [cr-india] "FM players welcome political ads on radio"

It's amazing how scre... skewed a sense a priorities our broadcasters as well 
as policy makers have, when political advertising on radio means more to them 
than independent news. "Raking in the revenues", says the article below, 
approvingly. 

Even as they slobber over the Rs.60 crores worth of ads that political parties 
will give them, I wonder if anyone cares for the principle, stated by the US 
Supreme Court and quoted by the Indian SC, that "It is the right of the viewers 
and listeners, not the right of the broadcasters, which is paramount." In 
India, the right of the listener seems to come a long way after the rights of 
the broadcaster, the advertiser, the marketer, the regulator and the vendor.

Sajan

FM players welcome political ads on radio; print players unperturbed
Shruti Tripathi, Nov 10 2008, exchange4media

Leveraging radio as a platform for political advertising has been a 
long-standing demand of the industry as radio caters to 99 per cent of India's 
population. With the I&B Ministry giving its nod to political advertising on 
radio, the hear-hear medium is expected to rake in the revenues. However, the 
need of the hour is clarifications from the Election Commission so that radio 
is optimally utilised with the upcoming Assembly elections.

exchange4media spoke to a cross-section of people in the media fraternity to 
gauge their reactions to this development. While the radio players were 
optimistic about the move, print players say they don't feel any threat.

Nisha Narayanan, Project Head, S FM, opined, "Although this move boosts the 
revenue potential, we should maintain decorum so as to ensure that we don't 
become a medium to patronise mud-slinging of political parties. The ads should 
be development-based and potent with information. However, we need 
clarification as to how the political ads will be monitored. Will the election 
commission take forward the TV experience of vetting the ads before 
broadcasting? If yes, how will they monitor it centrally and regionally? Also, 
political ads are time-bound."

Raking in the revenues

Prashant Panday, CEO, Radio Mirchi, said, "Radio being allowed to air political 
ads were long-awaited. Radio Mirchi was aggressively pushing the case for the 
same. At the juncture of the economic meltdown and the elections looming large, 
this comes as a good development. Political parties will chart out an ad budget 
of roughly Rs 300-500 crore, out of which Rs 50-60 crore will be invested in 
advertising on radio."

Monica Nayyar Patnaik, Director, Eastern Media Ltd, too, stressed that radio 
should not be neglected as a medium to broadcast political ads. "Radio barons 
are as responsible as any other media player, so why are they singled out? The 
need of the hour is an immediate call by the I&B Ministry so as to make use of 
radio in the upcoming elections. No doubt political advertising on radio will 
generate revenues, but it is like any other jingle on the radio," she added.

Anand Chakravarthy, Vice President - Marketing, Big FM, noted, "With the 
prevalent festive season, radio has inventory opening up for advertising. So, 
political ads on radio are like any other gateway for revenue. With the 
Assembly elections round the corner and Lok Sabha elections next year, all 
political parties can utilise radio as an efficient medium owing to its 
widespread reach."

The Multiplier Effect
Vineet Singh Hukmani, CEO, Radio One, said, "Our inventories are in a good 
position as Radio One devotes 9 minutes an hour to advertising. Therefore, 
political advertising will easily fit in the picture. In addition to this, 
conglomerates who own a print publication and radio channel will be at a better 
footing vis-à-vis revenues as political parties will advertise in both media. 
This will also boost the contingent of the small players of radio."

According to Ranjan Bargotra, President, Crayons Advertising, "The obvious 
implication of this move is the revenue hike in the radio sector. 
Interestingly, political ads broadcast on radio will complement other media. 
Conglomerates who own a radio channel and a newspaper would benefit the most."

With the exorbitant investments expected in political advertising on radio 
despite the economic meltdown, the print industry remains unperturbed.

Ravi Dhariwal, CEO - Publishing, Bennett, Coleman & Co, said, "I don't think it 
will make any difference to the print industry. With TV coming in, print wasn't 
impacted initially. They will create advertising fit in every medium. It is a 
welcome move." Shashi Shekhar, Editor, Amar Ujala, too, was of the same opinion.

KK Goenka, Vice-President, Prabhat Khabar, said, "We welcome the decision of 
allowing political ads on radio. It is a big step and will benefit the radio 
industry. There is, however, no threat to the print players as radio has a 
different segment and a different target audience."

Tarun Nigam, Executive Director, Starcom MediaVest Group (North), too, felt 
that this move would not affect other media. He said, "Radio is a very 
localised and effective medium. Both the media have there own importance. The 
overall chunk of print will get impacted."

Mona Jain, India Head, Strategic Investments, India Media Exchange, said, "The 
radio industry will gain a lot by this move. I don't think it will have an 
impact on the other media."

A widely welcomed move, now the onus of clarifications to the radio 
broadcasters is on the Election Commission. The election regulatory body needs 
to intimate the radio players as to whether they would follow the TV guidelines 
or whether radio will have separate guidelines.

(With additional inputs by Pallavi Goorha)


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