I&B Ministry moots news bulletins in private FM radio

A long-standing demand of private FM radio players is set to be fulfilled by 
the year-end. After Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) recommended 
news in private FM radio, albeit with some restrictions, the I&B Ministry has 
now reportedly given its nod to 261 private FM channels to air news and current 
affairs programmes produced by All India Radio (AIR).

Of course, the Ministry's proposal would require the signature of Information 
and Broadcasting Minister Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi, who is currently admitted at 
the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi following a cardiac 
arrest. After the Minister signs it, the proposal would require Cabinet 
clearance.

When exchange4media spoke to a cross-section of FM players and media players 
about the latest development, they were obviously positive about it, though 
most were not aware of such a proposal being made by the I&B Ministry.

Uday Chawla, Secretary General, Association for Radio Operators for India 
(AROI), remarked, "Having news or sports as an intricate part of content will 
immensely benefit the radio industry and listeners. The point of concern for 
the Government is deciding the extent to which the news broadcast should be 
allowed in this phase. In case Phase III gets delayed, we have requested the 
Government to allow the broadcast of news, current affairs and specifically 
sports in the interim."

'Value-addition to local content'

Reacting to the news, Tarun Katial, COO, Big FM, remarked, "We welcome this 
development as it adds richness to the local content on the local channel and 
would give a boost to the FM station. It would also create some kind of 
differentiation in the market. We have also prepared ourselves to fulfill these 
responsibilities and are planning to create infrastructural changes."

Vehrnon Ibrahim, National Programming Head, Radio One, said "After waiting for 
seven years, I think it is a step forward, though not a step we would like, but 
certainly a step in the right direction. I see this as an opener and not as a 
final position. I am looking forward for this and I welcome it and we are 
certainly prepared for news and current events. I suppose at some point of time 
we will have a self regulatory body."

Nandan Srinath, COO, Radio Mirchi, commented, "From the listener point of view, 
the product is certainly getting better. We at Mirchi are certainly ready and 
prepared to carry news and current affairs and look forward to this soon. If 
this allows greater stickiness of listenership and more audiences who are not 
using radio at this point of time to come into the radio fold, then there is an 
indirect bearing on the revenue stream."

Calling the move a step in the right direction, Harrish M Bhatia, COO, My FM, 
Synergy Media Entertainment Ltd, opined, "Broadcast of news will increase the 
listener base and lend more credibility, authenticity and trust to FM radio. 
Listeners will start taking FM radio even more seriously once news and current 
affairs are allowed on it."

Nisha Narayanan, Project Head, S FM, observed, "Diversification of content will 
be the direct implication of the permission to broadcast news in private FM 
stations. This will not only boost listnership, but also provide headway to 
advertisers."

Though Kunal Jamuar, GM, Madison Media, didn't see any huge value or even 
commercial implications coming to the industry, he added that "it will 
certainly give consumers a differentiated content. I don't see any major 
changes in terms of revenue".

Uday Chawla pointed out, "If you look at the TV industry, almost 15 per cent of 
revenue accrues to news channels. Improvement in content translates to more 
listenership, which translates to more revenue."

Tarun Nigam, Executive Director, India - North & Pakistan, Starcom Worldwide, 
noted, "The green signal to private FM channels for broadcasting news is 
reminiscent of the good old Akashvani days in the radio mode. Like TV has a 
bouquet of channels, radio, too, can witness an upsurge of players, depending 
on the license fees."

In contrast, Anita Nayyar, CEO, MPG, India, remarked, "Since the USP of private 
FM is music, the broadcast of news would result in dilution of programming and 
content. This is like the personification of AIR."

Is a regulatory body needed to monitor news?

Speaking on the need for a regulatory body, Chawla said, "AROI will welcome 
permission for carrying news and sports content and has offered all cooperation 
to the Government in this regard, including formation of a self-regulatory 
content control mechanism."

Radio Mirchi's Srinath added, "Since news and current affairs content would 
come from AIR, I don't see the need for a self-regulatory body. But over a 
period of time, we might see a self-regulatory mechanism."

Nisha Narayanan pointed out, "The FM players will not emulate 24-hour news 
channels, but to safeguard the interests of authentic news, a guideline should 
be charted out and should be adhered to."

The onus of coherent news broadcast is now on the private FM players. This 
proposal can be seen in the light of breaking clutter and pushing the 
contingent of journalism in the hear-hear domain. The development certainly has 
the private FM industry all excited. Watch this space for further developments.

(With additional inputs from Pallavi Goorha)

Also read:

FM players welcome Govt decision to demerge radio business

TRAI moots 26 pc FDI cap on FM radio; permission to broadcast news from select 
sources

© exchange4media 2008
(Jaisakthivel, Chennai, India)


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