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Satellite news 27.04.04
Satellite news 27.04.04
News UK BS*yB GETS AWAY ENGLAND MATCHES In an exclusive multimillion-pound deal with the body that handles the rights for more than 30 national associations throughout Europe, S*y will now show England's opening World Cup qualifying matches in Austria and Poland later this year as well as the away tie in Azerbaijan in October. Under the new deal, S*y Sports also won the rights to three Wales games, three Northern Ireland games and two Republic of Ireland away matches. The deal means any serious England fan will have to continue subscribing to S*y Sports to follow the team's progress towards the 2006 World Cup in Germany. The deal covers 11 away games played by the home nations during the World Cup qualification period and the matches join another 15 live games already scheduled by S*y Sports, which holds the rights to home games for Scotland, Wales and the Republic of Ireland. BS*yB FAVOURITE FOR HORSE RACING CHANNEL A bid to create a new TV channel dedicated to horse racing will this week be put to the owners of the country's 59 race courses. BS*yB and Arena Leisure, the racecourse operator, will write to the courses with detailed proposals to buy the broadcast rights for British racing. Three weeks ago, Attheraces, the UK's only horse racing television channel, stopped broadcasting British races after it failed to generate the revenues expected from its interactive betting services. Attheraces was a joint venture between BS*yB, Arena and Channel 4. Despite the demise of Attheraces, comprehensive television coverage of horse racing by Satellite Information Services continued to be shown in betting shops. The competition to provide a successor to Attheraces has now become a two-way battle. BS*yB and Arena, which will keep the Attheraces brand, are competing with the Horse Racing Channel, a proposed consortium which would be owned by race courses with each holding a small stake. The Horse Racing Channel has reached agreements with eight race courses, and the Racecourse Holdings Trust, which owns 13 courses including Aintree, Newmarket, Cheltenham and Sandown Park, has expressed support. PROFITS UP AT CHANNEL 4 Pretax profit at Channel 4 almost tripled last year to £45 million, compared with a year-earlier £16.5 million, on essentially flat revenue of £770 million, CEO Mark Thompson said on April 20. The rise marks the firm's highest level of pretax profit since 1999, Thompson said. The FilmFour unit lost £3.7 million last year, compared with a loss of £28.7 million in 2002. The film venture and a now-closed horse racing channel together brought the commercial arm of the broadcaster into the red by £10.1 million last year, compared with a year-earlier £56 million loss. Channel 4 also reduced its costs by about £10 million last year even as it increased its programming budget to its highest-ever level, £457 million ($820.5 million). MBE TEAMS UP WITH A.G. MEDIA A.G. Media Group, Inc., on April 19 announced the signing of a strategic alliance agreement with U.K. based television network, Major Black Entertainment, Ltd. Under the agreement, A.G. Media's Content Services division will develop new programming for the MBE 24/7 network as well as explore other related media initiatives. The newly expanded MBE 24/7 is expected to launch in the third quarter of 2004. MBE 24-7 launched on February 16 and currently has an audience of 39 million households in the United Kingdom and surrounding European regions, Major Black Entertainment TV is Europe's first television network providing programming comprised of Black cultural content. The channel is free to air and is on both the Eurobird and Hotbird Satellites covering Europe and BS*yB TO AUCTION PREMIER LEAGUE MATCHES An auction for Premier League football will begin this week when BS*yB invites bids for a package of matches. The pay-TV broadcaster is offering eight games a season from its latest TV deal following intervention from the European commission. Brussels officials ordered a restructuring of its £1.024 billion deal with the league, which runs from next season until 2007, after describing the rights-selling process as anti-competitive. Under the terms of the compromise, BS*yB must sub-license eight "top quality" matches to a rival broadcaster. These games will be drawn from the cheapest of four rights packages featuring 31 matches kicking-off at 5.15pm on Saturdays but will include top-ranking teams. Sources close to the auction process said broadcasters would be contacted with an "invitation to tender" in the next few days. REGULATOR CALLS ON BBC TO REASSESS ACTIVITIES U.K. media regulator Ofcom, as part of its public service broadcasting review, has issued a range of suggestions for the BBC, including the possibility of distributing license fee funds to other U.K. broadcasters. Ofcom's public service broadcasting review is expected to be complete by December. It seeks to measure how the terrestrials BBC One, BBC Two, ITV1, Channel 4 and Five are living up to their public service obligations. The preliminary findings of Ofcom's review show that for the main terrestrials, audience share declined from 87 per cent to 76 per cent from 1998 to 2003. In addition, erosion was prominent in the 16 to 34 demographic, where audience share fell to 69 per cent. ITV RENEWS FORMULA 1 TV RIGHTS ITV has signed a new five-year deal with formula one boss Bernie Ecclestone, which will keep the world's premier motor racing series on the network until 2010. For the first time since it poached F1 from the BBC in 1997, ITV has negotiated a deal that allows the broadcaster to show grand prix action on ITV2 and the soon to launch ITV3, as well as its main terrestrial channel, ITV1. When the new deal begins, from the start of the 2006 season, ITV is planning to offer expanded coverage of grand prix races across all of its channels. Regards Satdude.
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Satellite news 27.04.04 (part 2)
Satellite news 27.04.04 (part 2)
Europe FRANCE SENATE PASSES TELECOM BILL The French Senate has passed a bill which turns the telecom package - the six European Commission directives from 2002 harmonizing the regulations for telecom and broadcasting networks - into French legislation and aims to encourage competition. The bill passed includes in particular an amendment that maintains throughout a change-over period of five years the obligation on cable and satellite operators to broadcast the free-to-air terrestrial channels. This so-called must-carry rule is intended - in the context of the spread of digital broadcasting - to allow cable and satellite subscribers the time to buy a decoder. It also applies to RFO which is soon due to join France Télévisions. TV5 is also to be provided free of charge for cable and satellite subscribers. Under current rules, the cable networks have the obligation to distribute all terrestrial channels free of charge, while for satellite operators the obligation limited to public service channels only. The senators also increased the threshold at which a terrestrial television service is considered as a national service, from 10 to 12 million inhabitants. In a bid to "ensure the success of digital terrestrial television", the senators voted an amendment that states that "broadcasting television services in analogue terrestrial will cease five years after the actual start of digital broadcasts". TF1 SEEKS TO PURCHASE HISTOIRE CHANNEL French broadcaster TF1 has entered into exclusive negotiations to acquire the ailing French channel Histoire. The thematic channel, which reported losses of more than ?800,000 in 2003, has been up for sale for several months. Late last week France's AB Groupe and the French subsidiary of the National Geographic channel appeared to be the main contenders, but latecomer TF1 has secured exclusive talks. "TF1's offer was the most interesting for us financially and in terms of safeguarding the current staff structure and we have entered into exclusive negotiations with them," said Christian Vion, joint managing director of Arte France -- the public arts channel which owns 52.5% of Histoire with pubcaster France Televisions and France's public Institut National de l'Audiovisuel (INA). Started in July 1997, the Histoire channel has 3.3 million subscribers via cable and satellite and is estimated to be worth ?4 million. The deal with TF1, which also involves the takeover of 30% of the company's stake from film company Gaumont and 8.75% each from France Telecom's Wanadoo and French cable company Noos, should be completed within a month, Vion said. Meanwhile, first-quarter advertising revenue for commercial TV network TF1 increased 6.1% to ?425.1 million. CANAL SATELLITE OPTS FOR KUDELSKI MEDIAGUARD Nagra France, a subsidiary of Swiss-based Kudelski Group that develops the MediaGuard conditional access system, announced that pay-TV operator Canal Satellite has chosen MediaGuard to secure content delivery of its programming services over an ADSL network. The new service, CanalsatDSL, will be released to customers in Paris in May and subsequently to other French cities in following months. The target audience for the service is about 3 million homes and will mainly available in city centres - but not accessible by satellite. The MediaGuard conditional access solution protects content transmitted over hybrid broadcast DVB and TV-over-DSL networks. With this agreement, Canal hopes to significantly reduce content security and operational costs, as the MediaGuard will allow the company to offer either the same or different programming packages over satellite as well as over ADSL. Furthermore, the single-server architecture offers seamless pay-per-view and video on demand at a minimum cost. GERMANY PROSIEBENSAT1 LEADS TV AD MARKET Haim Saban's broadcasting group ProSiebenSat 1 surpassed rival RTL Television in Germany's TV advertising market during the first quarter of the year. According to Variety, ProSiebenSat 1, increased its audience share and saw a 5.8% boost in gross ad sales to 43.6% in the quarter to March; RTL's notched up 42.9%. ProSiebenSat 1 includes main channels ProSieben and Sat 1 as well as Kabel 1 and news channel N24. RTL operates flagship web RTL Television, RTL 2, children's channel Super RTL, VOX and news net n-tv. IRELAND S*y NEWS IRELAND LAUNCHES IN MAY BS*yB has announced that its new dedicated news service for Ireland will launch on May 10. There will be two half-hour bulletins each evening, at 19:00 and 22:00, which will cover news, sport and weather across the country. At weekends a 'Review of the Week' will be shown at 19:00 and 22:00. Over two-thirds of all households in Ireland will be able to receive the new S*y News service via cable/MMDS or satellite. Irish expatriates in Europe who wish to receive S*y News Ireland should tune to Astra 2D at 28.2 East, 12.207 GHz V, SR 27500, FEC 2/3. The service is free to air. ITALY EU CENSURES BERLUSCONI Italian prime minister and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi was censured by the European Parliament on April 22 for maintaining undue control over Italian broadcasting despite pledging three years ago to divest his media interests. The Parliament vote in Strasbourg was passed despite Berlusconi's Forza Italia party attempting to derail the action by attaching some 338 amendments. The censure resolution calls for laws to prevent politicians or candidates from having major media interests and urges the European Commission -- the European Union's executive authority -- to draft a proposal to prevent media monopoly abuses. The resolution said Berlusconi has failed to honor the pledge he made when he became prime minister in 2001 to resolve the conflict of interest on media ownership. The report says he has increased his controlling shares in Mediaset, Italy's largest private television group. And the report says there are repeated and documented instances of governmental interference, pressure and censorship of the corporate structure and schedules of the RAI public television service. THE NETHERLANDS KPN TO INCREASE DIGITENNE STAKE Dutch telecom operator KPN aims to increase its holding in digital DVB-T television provider Digitenne. KPN currently has a 30 per cent stake in the company and hopes to increase that to 49 per cent in order to compete with cable providers who provide TV to 97 per cent of homes in the Netherlands. The Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs must first approve such a move, but three years ago had restricted KPN to a 30 per cent holding in the company. Nozema, the Netherlands Broadcasting Transmission Company, currently has a 30 per cent share in Digitenne, NOB has a further 30 per cent and public broadcasters the remaining ten per cent. SPAIN REGIONAL GOVERNMENTS AGAINST DTT PLAN Spain's regional Governments are challenging the Central Administration over the recently-approved Local DTT Technical Plan. The Regional Authorities of Catalonia have appealed against the new local DTT rule arguing that the allocation of multiplex has been very unfair to Catalonia. The new legislation, approved by the former conservative Government, allocated 266 multiplexes throughout Spain, of which 20 were granted to Catalonia, fewer than expected. In its appeal, the Catalonian Government has asked for more multiplexes as those 20 only represent 7.5 per cent of all multiplexes, despite the fact, according to it, that around 13-14 per cent of all local television stations are currently operating in this region. The Government of Andalucia has also announced a similar appeal against the local DTT rule. As a result, the new socialist Government is considering changing the local DTT legislation and putting aside the Technical Plan approved by the previous Administration. SOGECABLE LOSSES UP Leading pay-TV operator Sogecable, owner of digital satellite platform Digital Plus and terrestrial pay-TV channel Canal Plus, has declared a loss of ?47.7 million in the first quarter of the year against ?17.2 million the same period last year. The company, however, managed to increase by 41 per cent its net turnover reaching ?379.4 million. Revenues per subscriber grew by 44 per cent up to ?287.5 million due to the complete migration of former Via Digital's subscribers to Digital Plus. As of March 31, Sogecable had 2.27 million subscribers, of which 77 per cent, subscribe to Digital Plus and the rest to the analogue version of Canal Plus. The ARPU reached ?50.7 per month, against ?43.5 the previous quarter. SWEDEN MTG REPORTS HIGHER PROFITS Swedish media group Modern Times Group MTG reported on April 20 an operating profit (EBIT) of SEK85 million on net sales of SEK1,571 million for the financial period January-March 2004. Both operating profit (EBIT) and net sales for the three-month period increased, respectively from SEK80 million and SEK1,513 million, as compared to the corresponding period in 2003. The company said that it would continue investment in programming to drive ratings and increase the share of viewing for its pay-TV. Regards Satdude.
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