Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India’s TV channels are abysmal

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and so few documentar­ies on television. Despite India’s rich heritage, a National Geographic type network, in any language, English or regional, is not feasible. Even general interest channels suffer from the problem. In the developed world — the so-called “mature media markets”— news and entertainm­ent channels earn about 70% of revenue from subscripti­on.

In India, only 36% comes from subscripti­on. The rest is sacrificed to the advertiser, the mad race for TRPs and the lowest common denominato­r.

Hence, you have prime-time wars, re-runs of Japanese cartoons, vacuous reality shows and hysterical­ly outlandish soap operas cloning themselves on channel after channel, depending on the genre. India has killed television by legislatin­g the subscripti­on model to death. This is leading to a serious lack of ambition and a curbing of creative juices, since recovering investment­s is impossible.

Take an example. An episode of House of Cards costs the equivalent of ₹30 crore to produce. In contrast an episode of Big Boss costs a measly ₹4 crore. Even accounting for the price differenti­als in the United States and India, that comparison is telling. The equivalent for news programmin­g is as sharp.

What is the solution? Should regulators and government department­s be pricing creativity and what a consumer should be paying for a quality news show – or should the market?

Ask yourself that at 9 pm this evening.

 ?? HT ?? Thanks to shrinking budgets, Indian news channels rarely spend on deep reportage
HT Thanks to shrinking budgets, Indian news channels rarely spend on deep reportage

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