Are channels wooing viewers with weekend adult fare?

Are channels wooing viewers with weekend adult fare?

TAM Media

An investigation by the indiantelevision.com team into the issue of "objectionable shows" on the small screen threw up some startling findings.

Was there more to I&B minister Sushma Swaraj‘s comments devoted to the elimination of obscenity from the small screen at the recently held DD Awards 2002 than pet bugbear Fashion TV?

Indiantelevision.com decided to delve deeper as to what exactly Swaraj was talking about when she said: "If this (adult fare) is all that sells, don‘t sell," she told her in absentia targets, "and we will make up your deficit in material terms."

At first glance, it would seem as if she was referring to the foreign channels like FTV. However, it is also possible that the minister might have been referring to indiscretions on the part of the ‘Indian‘ channels as well.

An investigation into the issue of "objectionable shows" on the small screen threw up some startling findings. The main one being that it is not just FTV that has "hot" shows to hock. Other TV channels have also been putting their bets on the ‘three-letter word‘ to deliver a captive audience and make no bones about it either.

Since the past few months, Zee MGM has been slowly building up a base of a loyal ‘voyeuristic‘ audience for its Saturday night 11 pm slot. The slot, known as the ‘Naughty Fun and Frolic‘ slot, also portrayed frontal nudity in films such as The Bikini Shop (26 October), Miracle Beach (2 November), To Kill For (9 November), Dream Lover (16 November), Liebestraum (23 November) and Secret Admirer (30 November).

When questioned about it last week, Zee MGM Business Head Ajay Trigunayat clarified: "Objectionable scenes are either pixilated or cut. We have a slot called the ‘Naughty Fun Frolic slot‘ wherein some of the movies mentioned above (and also screened in the Saturday 11 pm slot) can be categorized."

When questioned about the movies mentioned above, Trigunayat had said: "That must be an aberration. Whenever we have received any feedback about such lapses, we have rectified the same." Trigunayat‘s statement was borne out by the fact that last Saturday‘s late night movie Hot Bubble Gum (aired on 7 December), had all objectionable scenes either cut or pixilated.

Star Movies and HBO, which follow far stricter censorship codes, have opted for the "safer" horror route for the thrill seekers. Star Movies has also branded the post 11 pm slot on Saturdays as ‘Sat After Dark‘. It has screened sequels of movies like Psycho in the month of November. Meanwhile, HBO had also screened Psycho and sequels of Friday The 13th in November.

The indiantelevision team conducted a study on the trends in TVRs of the above-mentioned channels for the Saturday midnight slot.
Data provided by TAM Media on the ratings trends for the Saturday late night slot are revealing. The ratings (9 cities TG 4+ 26 October to 23 November 2002) of Zee MGM either surpass or compare well with Star Movies and stay clearly ahead of HBO. Also, the ratings of Zee MGM in the 11 pm slot increases on Saturdays as compared to Fridays.

Trigunayat however, asserts that it was not as if only the Saturday slot was getting strong viewership. "There are some slots like ‘Romantic Mondays‘ and the ‘Sun Down Show‘ where our programmes have higher ratings as compared to Star Movies and HBO. We have been making gains with our selection of films such as the much-acclaimed movie Traffic," he stated.

Critics might also claim that regional Malayalam language channel Surya TV (part of the Sun stable) has already been following this strategy since the past year or so. The Malayalam movies being shown on the Saturday ‘midnight‘ slot have no pretensions to quality and can only be termed as sleazy.

Another interesting aspect is that the TVRs of the programmes shown on Surya TV before and after the Saturday midnight slot dip considerably.

It is worthwhile mentioning that Asianet had stopped screening such movies ever since Swaraj declared war against such forms of broadcasting obscenities.

Local cable networks also have such slots. Hinduja Group MSO INCableNet‘s movie channel CVO has earmarked the 11 pm slot on Fridays for dishing out adult fare. CVO calls it the Hollywood Movies band.

Music videos are another area where the channels cash in. The Star Network‘s Channel [V] has slots devoted to "hot songs". Rated R, which airs on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11 pm and makes its pitch as a show "that shows all... well almost!" Music channel Southern Spice has a daily 11 pm to 11:30 pm where such fare is aired. MTV India has been telecasting The Grind since many years.

EMEDIAPLAN SEARCH RESULT FOR TOP 3 PROGRAMMES IN SPECIFIC MARKETS FOR C&S AND ALL TV HOUSEHOLDS FOR WEEK STARTING 18 MARCH 2002
Base: C&S TV Households, All 4+, Specific Mkts

HYDERABAD C&S TV HOUSEHOLDS

1

TEFF-SANCHALANAM

Gemini TV

23/03/02,Saturday
9:03PM-11:07PM

13.58

45.89

354.71

2

MIDNIGHT MASALA

Gemini TV

23/03/02,Saturday
11:08PM-11:36PM

13.25

59.11

346.09

3

PAVITRABANDHAM

Gemini TV

19/03/02,Tuesday
9:52PM-9:59PM

11.69

36.46

305.34

HYDERABAD ALL TV HOUSEHOLDS

1

TEFF-NUMBER ONE

DD8 (Telugu)

24/03/02,Sunday
4:05PM-6:24PM

9.41

47

388.35

2

TEFF-SANCHALANAM

Gemini TV

23/03/02,Saturday
9:03PM-11:07PM

8.57

33.29

353.68

3

MIDNIGHT MASALA

Gemini TV

23/03/02,Saturday
11:08PM-11:36PM

8.36

36.85

345.02

And it‘s not just the music channels that are making merry on music. Many general entertainment channels, more so those from the south, devote their late night slot for "steamy songs".

Gemini TV (Telegu) and Udaya TV (Kannada) have programmes called Midnight Masala on Saturdays around midnight. These 30-minute duration programmes telecast film songs that include titillating ‘rain dance‘ sequences. Ratings show audiences have been lapping up this fare.

That the late night is "male time" for all channels is clear even when you look at infotainment channels like Discovery. The channel also has programmes like Sex, Dice and Las Vegas Law & Order in the post 11 pm slot on Saturdays. The themes are adult, and though there are elements of graphic content in some of the shows, there can be no faulting either the intent or quality of these programmes. The kind of advertising that Discovery‘s late night slot is also skewed towards the male, whether it be deodorants, motor bikes, cars, engine oil and the like.

So there it is, some like it hot and some not so hot. Different channels are looking at it in different ways but the target is very definitely male.

What these findings reveal is that titillating television, like in almost any other market, works in India, and gets viewers glued to their TV sets, goggle eyed, sleepy though they may be. Even in more restrictive regimes such as Singapore and Malaysia the thinking is to be more liberal as the laws have not been able to curb a large section of viewers innate urge for voyeurism.

On the government‘s part there does not seem to be too much clarity either. FTV is a case in point. Swaraj raised Cain about it for a few weeks and then forgot it for months. This works as a deterrent for a while, a week or so, following which the "skin flash" brigade bounces back even stronger.

In fact, some channel executives claim in private that Swaraj‘s diatribe against the French fashion channel was the best marketing and promotion exercise FTV could have asked for. And it cost the fashion channel zilch.

Sure TV channels have to follow programming codes of the country where they are uplinking from - which they will all say they are doing. Of course while some will adhere to it strictly, there will always be those who try to work around it. Even DD at times goes easy on its own programming code especially as far as some of the international movies it airs are concerned. Will the private satellite TV channels follow the DD code?

The fact is clear that there is a market for adult-oriented television. The government has to take a decision to treat its citizens like adults, which is presumably what everyone becomes after becoming 18. These adults can decide whether they want to watch adult oriented programming or not. Earlier this year it disagreed to the demand to allow adult oriented cinema to be shown in designated cinema halls. That is fine. If it wants to do the same with television it can choose to do so. Or it can open up like the programmers have been increasingly doing so as far as skin is concerned.