Quantcast
Channel: Prasar Bharati Parivar
Viewing all 9466 articles
Browse latest View live

All India Radio presents 'Rhythms of India' ahead of 70th year of Independence

$
0
0
AIR has also planned a special 
feature to commemorate 75th year 
of Quit India Movement which 
is on August 9. 


All India Radio commenced the spirit of 70th year of independence in a unique way. In response to the clarion call by the Prime Minister of India Shri Narendra Modi in his recently concluded Mann Ki Baat, to celebrate Independence Day as a festival; the oldest public service broadcaster has scheduled a slew of programmes that will be broadcast over the month. On August 4, the broadcaster presented "The Rhythms of India", a musical feature that showcased regional folk and light music that reflects the common beat that resonates from Kashmir to Kanyakumari and Kutch to Kamarup, presented through various rhythmic instruments.

The Program was broadcasted at 9.30 pm on Indraprastha Channel (819 Khz. 366.3 mtrs). This programme was scripted and produced by Padma Bhushan Shri T.V. Gopala Krishnan. He is one of the rare musicians who is equally proficient in both Carnatic and Hindustani Vocal, mridangam and violin. 
All India Radio has also planned a special feature to commemorate 75th year of Quit India Movement which is on August 9.

Source and Credit :- http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/all-india-radio-presents-rhythms-of-india-ahead-of-70th-year-of-independence/articleshow/53556538.cms                                       Forwarded by :- Shri. Jainendra Nigam, PB News Desk, prasarbharati.newsdesk@gmail.com

DD in process of strengthening its coverage in J and K, to be completed in 2017-18: Naidu

$
0
0
Projects to set up five new High Power TV transmitters in Jammu and Kashmir are presently at various stages of implementation and are targeted for completion during 2017-18. Stating this, Information and Broadcasting Minister M Venkaiaih Naidu told the Rajya Sabha that Doordarshan at present has 243 TV transmitters of varying power functioning in border districts of the country. Strengthening of the terrestrial coverage of AIR and Doordarshan to counter foreign broadcast signal along border areas is a priority of Government and is an ongoing process.

Special packages for expansion and improvement of Doordarshan and AIR services in the border areas have been formulated from time to time, the Mnister said. All the areas uncovered by terrestrial transmission (including those in border areas) alongwith rest of the country, have been provided with multi-channel TV coverage through Doordarshan’s free to air DTH service DD Freedish. DTH signals can be received anywhere in the country including border areas with the help of small sized dish receive units. Freedish is now installing Indian Conditional Access System (iCAS) to keep track of the number of subscribers, and is also moving from MPEG 2 to MPEG 4 to enable it to increase the number of channels that can be carried by Freedish.

Source and Credit :- http://www.indiantelevision.com/television/tv-channels/terrestrial/dd-in-process-of-strengthening-its-coverage-in-j-and-k-to-be-completed-in-2017-18-naidu-160805
Forwarded by :- Shri. Jainendra Nigam PB News Desk prasarbharati.newsdesk@gmail.com

Radio Kahsmir Jammu starts special Series RIO DREAMS

$
0
0
Radio Kashmir Jammu on its Vividh Bharti Channel is starting an 18 episodes series on 31st Summer Olympic Games being held at Rio-De-Jenario. The series entitled Rio Dreams will be a live one hour long interactive phone in based programme from 11 A.M to 12 O’clockwhere analysis of India’s performance on every day will be done. Listeners can also chip in with their reactions during the programme with live phone calling. Experts in the field of games will be invited in the studios and the show will be anchored by Programme Executive Nitish Arora who has covered International Sports Events as South Asian Games for All India Radio ,which were held at Guwahati in February this year He has also covered National Games from Kerala Exclusive bites and recordings from Akashwani team that has gone to Rio will also be added attraction of this programme. The programme will also give a chance to the local talent in the field of sports to be in the studios of Radio Kashmir Jammu and interact with the listeners. The phone numbers 0191-2547029, 2563476, 2563459.

Programme head Radio Kashmir Jammu Sh.Satish Malhotra said that Olympics is a once in a four years sports extravaganza that every sports enthusiast waits for so Radio Kashmir jammu has taken this initiative to involve its listeners who are spread across a wide region of the state. He further said that RKJ will also relay live running commentaries of many matches including Hockey, Lawn Tennis and badminton and some other sports that will be made available to listeners on Medium Wave, Primary channel as well as F.M.

Source and Credit :-http://www.scoopnews.in/det.aspx?q=59140
Forwarded by :- Shri. Jainendra Nigam PB News Desk,  prasarbharati.newsdesk@gmail.com

How Einstein Thought: Why “Combinatory Play” Is the Secret of Genius...

$
0
0


For as long as I can remember — and certainly long before I had the term for it — I’ve believed that creativity is combinatorial: Alive and awake to the world, we amass a collection of cross-disciplinary building blocks — knowledge, memories, bits of information, sparks of inspiration, and other existing ideas — that we then combine and recombine, mostly unconsciously, into something “new.” From this vast and cross-disciplinary mental pool of resources beckons the infrastructure of what we call our “own”“original” ideas.................

आकाशवाणी कानपुर में भारतीय स्टेट बैंक ऑफ़ इंडिया की जागरूकता पर कार्यशाला

$
0
0



भारतीय स्टेट बैंक ऑफ़ इंडिया की ओर से आज आकाशवाणी कानपुर के विविध भारती केन्द्र पर सातवें वेतन आयोग की रिपोर्ट को ध्यान में रखकर एक जागरूकता पर कार्यशाला का आयोजन किया गया था ,इस अवसर पर भारतीय स्टेट बैंक ऑफ़ इंडिया की ओर से रीजनल मैनेजर प्रथम श्रीमती शशिप्रभा , श्री अजय मल्होत्रा ,प्रबन्धक आर्यनगर शाखा कानपुर के साथ,श्री महेश चन्द्र मिश्र, उनके विभाग के अन्य अधिकारी और कर्मचारी उपस्थित थे , सर्व प्रथम अतिथियों का स्वागत आकाशवाणी की ओर से श्रीमती शकुन्तला गौतम वरिष्ठ कार्यक्रम अधिकारी ने किया ,इस आयोजन में आकाशवाणी कानपुर के साथ दूरदर्शन मेन्टेनेंस कानपुर,और एचपीटी दूरदर्शन कानपुर के अधिकारियों के साथ विभाग की ओर से श्रीमती शकुन्तला गौतम वरिष्ठ कार्यक्रम अधिकारी,श्री ए आर यादव सहायक अभियन्ता श्री आशीष तिवारी कार्यक्रम अधिशाषी श्री गौरी शंकर कर्नाटक वरिष्ठ अभियान्त्रिकी सहायक ,श्री नवेन्दु श्रीवास्तव ,श्री प्रदीप कुमार ,श्री जगपाल सिंह,श्री सुनील कुमार,श्री देशराज गौतम श्रीमती विनीता शुक्ला ,श्री विनोद कुमार मिश्र ,श्री जगत पाल ,सुश्री रीता डे ,श्री सुरेश चन्द्र आदि उपस्थित थे ,लोगों ने अपने मन में उपज रही जिज्ञासाओं को पूछा और बैंक अधिकारियों ने समाधान भी दिया ,साथ में नयी योजनाओं की जानकारी भी दी , अंत में सभी को कार्यक्रम अनुभाग की ओर से धन्यवाद ज्ञापन से कार्यक्रम सम्पन्न हुआ

Contributed by :- Dr Karuna Shankar Dubey 
kdubey306@gmail.com

Snake Worship in India - An article by Jawhar Sircar

$
0
0

 Published in Ananda Bazar Patrika, 7th August 2016

(English Version)

The month of Shravan brings joy to poets and also to farmers, but it also brings numerous snakes out of their flooded homes, triggering both fear and worship. This explains why many Indians celebrate Naga Panchami on Shravan Shukla Panch ami, on the 7 th of August this year. The snake is more than just an awe -inspiring creature: it actually marks different stages in the gradual evolution of the Indian mind, over centuries and millennia.

We could begin from Janamejaya who personified the Western -Aryan hatred for the serpent, but we will reach a stage when the same animal found veneration, as Naga-raja or Manasa. The two, incidentally, are quite different, as one is a male snake and the other is surely a female deity. One can forgive this mistake, because it is not very safe to get too close to examine a snake's gender, even while worshiping. The serpent bears evidence of many conflicts, like the one between the wheat-eating Indo-Europeans of the West and the rice-loving civilisations of the East. After all, rice cultivation was hardly possible without water and this necessitated a better adjustment with eco-systems where snakes lived in plenty, but were not usually aggressive or venomous ,unless attacked. In its legends are traces of the perennial struggle between ‘formal’ and ‘folk’ cultures. Manasa in Bengal was primarily folk, but later formalized as Padmavati, who was born from Shiva’s semen that fell on a lotus plant. In many parts of western India, deities like ....


Doordarshan Coimbatore - Young India 2016 and Kisan India 2016 - Glimpses of Mega Event

$
0
0

 



 




KISAN INDIA 2016 CELEBRATIONS AT POTHIGAI.....THE GRAND EXTRAVAGANZA OF THE FIVE DAYS OF MIND BLOWING SESSIONS OF YOUNG INDIA 2016.

The last letter-writer of Jhumri Telaiya

$
0
0
 Flour merchant Jagannath Sahu may be the last letter- writer from Jhumri Telaiya. This town in Jharkhand, caught the nation’s imagination due to the flood of song requests made by its residents to All India Radio’s Hindi film song programmes till the ’80s. (Sanjeev Verma / HT Photo)

Every town has a story it says well. Jhumri Telaiya in Jharkhand has three of them. One of them is about a man who ‘lived’ inside a radio. The other is about the man who pulled him out, and made him famous. The third story is the one I am just about to tell.Jagannath Sahu’s old radio with a pull-out aerial can be sombre, chirrupy, lively, gay. It is whatever he wants it to be with the turn of the knob. So he picks it up and takes it to the balcony of his two-storeyed house in Jhumri Telaiya, Jharkhand, that overlooks houses similar to his -- exposed brick-walls, unfinished staircases, and cheek-by-jowl balconies conducive to neighbourliness, or, at least, gossip. He balances the radio on a ledge as a neighbour asks him what is going on. He turns towards us a little self-consciously and turns the radio knob. But he catches the wrong station, the wrong sort of voice and the wrong era.
Watch: The Jhumri Telaiya love story with radio
“Ek bahuti sad raja tha aur ek sad rani thi and unki life mein excitement aa gaya jab raja ki ex beech mein aa gaya…. (There was a sad king, a sad queen and their life becomes exciting when the king’s ex enters the scene) ,” says the announcer to publicise a new TV serial, in the ‘FM Voice’ of private radio stations, mixing tongues, ratcheting up pace, and going deliberately off-kilter to strike an easy familiarity with the audience. But Jagannath Sahu, a 66-year-old flour merchant, who is probably the last letter-writer to All India Radio’s music programmes from Jhumri Telaiya, will not put up with this. He has flown with the current and also against it, but somewhere he has to draw the line.

A flour merchant in a mica town, Sahu says that when almost every hand in Jhumri Telaiya was linked to mica, he decided to open a flour mill. “But all this chatter from the radio,I can’t listen to,” he says pointedly to his grandchild standing nearby fiddling with his phone. “Not a radio listener, that one,” mutters Sahu. Class fashions culture. Culture shapes identity. The story of the unbroken musical taste of a certain generation in Jhumri Telaiya is inextricably tied with its economic history. With the laying of the railroad in Koderma (Jhumri Telaiya is in the Koderma district of erstwhile south Bihar, now Jharkhand.), the British discovered vast mica deposits in the 1890s. Chaturam and Horilram (CH) Bhadani, owners of 980 mines, were the Mica kings who turned this place in the boondocks into a boomtown in the ’50s. Entire trains would be booked to send mica from CH mines to the docks in and around Calcutta to go to Japan. Jhumri Telaiya set its clock to the siren sounding from CH factories. Jawaharlal Nehru called Chaturam ‘Nagarseth’. Chaturam’s family got Suraiya all the way from Bombay for a Jhumri Telaiya concert. Post-’80s, with the government pushing for deep mines, which meant expensive extraction of mica and the discovery of mica substitutes, many family businesses went kaput.
Music and mica
The experience of great wealth and its dissipation seems to have triggered an existential crisis, and made this small town -- still original, still enterprising -- a derivative place. When Rameshwarprasad Barnwal, a scion of another mining family took a shot at sending a postcard to Radio Ceylon and had his name mentioned in Ameen Sayani’s Binaca Geetmala, its legendary programme of Hindi film songs in the ’50s, everyone had to have theirs too. In 1957, when All India Radio began its own broadcast of old Hindi film songs (of the ’50s to the ’70s) on Vividh Bharti Service (VBS), the whole town seemed to be in the grip of an examination fever, as it were, using up inkpots and paper by the dozen. This continued till the ’80s. “The family had already earned more money than could be spent and so my great-grandfather saw it as a sign of success that he had a son who had time to sit at home and write 20 letters each day,” says Praveen Barnwal, Rameshwarprasad’s grandson, who runs a chain of schools. Jagannath Sahu, who has restricted himself to 10, feels his letters re-boot the town’s connection with India’s radio history.
“More people know of Jhumri Telaiya than Jharkhand. And all because of Barnwal’s letters to 
Ameenji and later Vividh Bharti,” says Sahu. And now due to the letters he sends? Sahu writes to Man Chahey Geet and Aap kee Farmayish hosted by his favourite announcers Shehnaz Akhtari and Mamta Singh on VBS. “With the whole of India listening, how would it sound if a person from Jhumri Telaiya chooses a bad song,” he asks. “In fact, it has to be a solid one.” He seems to prefer songs where Lata Mangeshkar is hitting a full-timbre soprano or a mezzo from films set in the ’50s. Sahu’s choice of songs may or may not make him a minority, but his choice of technology will. Looking at him is like looking at the end of a tribe.
Barnwal’s competitors were his neighbours. According to local lore, the postman was often bribed not to post Barnwal’s letters so that others would get the chance to have their names read on radio. There seems no one left for Sahu to compete with. What he does not know yet, is his name may not be heard of any more – unless he changes the way he listens to radio. By 2017, AIR will have achieved “complete FM-isation”, say officials. The reason Sahu has recently been having problems connecting to the channels he sends postcards to is because they are already on FM, which is proving difficult to pick with a medium-wave set. According to the AIR data, the listenership of its primary channels is down to 39.2% from 48%; VBS listnership has also dipped. Therefore, it perhaps needs a Jagannath Sahu more than Sahu needs it. AIR sources say the medium-wave set-up is expensive. An FM transmitter, smaller in size, can be perched atop a tower. Why won’t the Jagannath Sahus understand this and listen to radio on a smartphone instead? According to the AIR data, the listenership of its primary channels is down to 39.2% from 48%; VBS listnership has also dipped. Therefore, it perhaps needs a Jagannath Sahu more than Sahu needs it. AIR sources say the medium-wave set-up is expensive. An FM transmitter, smaller in size, can be perched atop a tower.

Why won’t the Jagannath Sahus understand this and listen to radio on a smartphone instead?
Vinay Lal, a member of the CH clan, and the owner of one of the oldest radio shops in Jhumri 
Telaiya, says mobile towers are also finishing off the radio business. “In a town hemmed in by hillocks and mobile towers, radio signals, especially medium wave, are difficult to catch. This town used to be full of medium-wave radios but I haven’t sold a single set in the past eight years.” According to a former AIR official, even as the market is moving away from medium-wave radios, “AIR still keeps quite a few medium-wave stations alive. But how many are listening?” “We have to cater to the information, education and entertainment needs of all sections of society irrespective of gender, language or size of the community,” says deputy Director-General (Programme) Rajeev Kumar Shukla. “The number of programmes for a community of 100 will, of course, not be the same for a community of 100 crore, but we shall do programmes for both. The topographical differences of the country also means that different technology is being used for radio everywhere.”
New sounds
In towns and municipalities smaller or as big as Jhumri Telaiya, AIR is still a big deal. Manisha Jain, programme executive, VBS, Mumbai, says, “Nowadays if there are 10 letters from Yavatmal (the town in Maharashtra that matched Jhumri Telaiya for maximum number of song requests in the ’80s), from Jhumri Telaiya there is one. And Amravati is now topping Yavatmal.”Jhumri Telaiya’s new generation has newer demands and newer ambitions. They do downloads over phone and laptops. They listen to music on MP3 players. If they can YouTube a song, it’s as good as owning it. Frequent power cuts in the area may often dent these plans but listening to AIR isn’t priority. “AIR’s primary channels has no hit programmes”, claims Ramji Seth, a Class X student.

“The presentation of most of the AIR programmes is dry and they are still carrying on with Udyog Patrika or Sugam Sangeet, which my grandfather would also listen to. I don’t mind folk music but most of them are repeats,” says Praveen Barnwal. Why doesn’t he pick a pen and shoot off a letter like his grandfather did some 50 years ago? Barnwal says the family has had enough of letter-writing to last many generations. “We are from a business family, we have to give time to business,” he says getting up to show us to the door. “We have to run our schools. Choosing your words, writing letters, you know, is a really long process.”
“I’ve sent 150 more letters since we met,” says Sahu calling up one evening. “What will you be doing now?’”I ask at the end of the conversation. “Writing the next one.”

Source and Credit :- http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/the-last-letter-writer-of-jhumri-telaiya/story-fFr9DhnIu6lW9Qlwzj6gEK.html
Forwarded by :- Shri. Alokesh Gupta,  alokeshgupta@gmail.com

80 years of AIR: Legends and milestones

$
0
0
             The Broadcasting House is
       the home of the All India Radio
    office in New Delhi. AIR was born
 on June 8, 1936. (Sanjeev Verma / HT Photo)
How did AIR get its name? The answer lies in what Lionel Fielden, the first Controller of Broadcasting said to Viceroy Linlithgow after a banquet. The name, Indian State Broadcasting Service (begun on an experimental basis for two years in 1930), suggested Fielden, was rather bureaucratic. The Viceroy, rising to the bait, agreed it was a mouthful. “All India Radio,” mumbled the Viceroy after serious prompting by the broadcaster. “The very thing!” exclaimed Fielden, “and what beautiful initials!”

AIR was born on June 8, 1936. Urdu humourist Sir Syed Ahmed Shah Bokhari (before the formation of Pakistan in 1947) was the first director general. PC Chowdhuri was independent India’s first DG. The AIR signature tune based on raag Shivaranjini was composed by Walter Kaufman, a director of music at AIR, a Czech Jew who had fled Europe fearing the Nazi onslaught. AIR played a sterling role during Partition and the refugee influx, uniting families. Accessed by just 4,000 radio-sets in 1947, on June 3, AIR broadcasted Mountbatten, Jinnah and Nehru’s declarations on India’s partition. Gandhi visited AIR only once -- on November 12, 1947 -- to broadcast a message from Studio 3 to refugees arriving in Haryana from Pakistan.
Artiste Madhu Malti (85), then a 16-year-old who got paid Rs 15 per programme (at 17, she got her first three-month contract and was paid Rs 150), recalls the yeoman service AIR did at that time. By the ’50s, she was a star of its radio plays and a top announcer receiving fan-mail of 4,000-5,000 letters a week with three assistants for sorting them! Dadima Jaagi and Awaaz ki Dulhan were some of her best plays. “The latter was broadcast eight times in two years on request,” recalls the artiste.
Melville de Mellow (inside the announcer’s booth),
a former Armyman, was known as the
Voice of AIR in the Fifties.
Here, he is seen on an out-of-office
assignment. He is remembered for
 a seven-hour running commentary during
Mahatma Gandhi’s funeral. (Photo courtesy: AIR)
Melville de Mellow, a former Armyman, who turned out to be AIR’s iconic newsreader, did the seven-hour running commentary for Gandhi’s funeral.
Newsreader Surojit Sen was the first foreign correspondent to reach Dhaka after the Indo-Pak war in 1971 and interview the top leaders of newly-founded Bangladesh.Author Nirad C Chaudhuri was an AIR news editor in the late ’40s. The News Divison people at AIR were always an independent bunch, writes KG Joglekar, a former director of the division, in Sakshi, an Aakashvani magazine. “We were neither burra sahibs nor babus but professionals who had strayed into government service…We dressed differently and were at times irreverent in our talk.” After independence, AIR also played a vital role in bringing music, which used to be patronised by princes, to ordinary homes.
One of the most influential figures
in Hindustani vocal music and the
founder of the Indore Gharana,
Ustad Amir Khan (second from right)
at an AIR programme. (Photo courtesy: AIR)
In the ’50s, the AIR National Orchestra (Vadya Vrind) was set up. Pandit Ravi Shankar was its director from 1949-56. Vividh Bharati Service (VBS), AIR’s hit channel for Hindi film songs, started in 1957. Pandit Narendra Sharma was one of its stalwarts. Since 2008, VBS programmes have been available on DTH, making it a 24-hour music channel. AIR’s unique youth service, Yuva Vani (YV), was set up on July 21, 1969. It was both a youth hang-out and training ground. In its glory years, the English section was managed by the trinity of Rita Mukherjee, Avik Ghosh and Noreen Naqvi. Naqvi, in fact, was the first woman director general of AIR. No longer a channel, YV now lives as a daily programme on AIR. Theatre artist Sunit Tandon, quizmaster Siddhartha Basu, politicians Sitaram Yechury and Anand Sharma and PSBT director Rajeev Mehrotra were active YV participants. Actress Lillete Dubey’s was a YV romance; she met her husband, Ravi, a fellow participant, on a YV programme. Author Amitav Ghosh was a campus reporter for its Roving Microphone programme.

“On Roving Microphone, we caught things of interest in town. We even interviewed children selling flowers at traffic lights. We asked them what they had to say about their life. They were scared to say and we were scared to ask, as, in a sense, what we were probing could reveal a critique of the government, but it opened up things,” says Rita Mukherjee. “In Firing Line, we put a person at the centre of a controversy on the mat and had young people question him/her. For example, if there was a medicine scam, we could have the health minister in the studio. The idea of journalism was to make the government function, so that those in power could be made accountable to the people.” Usha Puri who started with YV in the ’80s, eventually moved to the English Talks section on Delhi station: “I inherited a staid schedule and decided to turn things around in content without touching basic format,” she says. In the Sunday programmes broadcast during vacations, there were, for instance, young students teaching other young people how to make Dutch omelettes over the radio or literally taking them for a walk in the Delhi zoo with background sounds of quacking ducks and orangutan grunts. “Or, we just took any newspaper subject and turned it around with any number of spins,” adds Puri. “At the time when artificial yellow colouring was found in ladoos, I told Sunit (Tandon) to talk of the colour yellow and he spun it really well -- ranging from yellow and black taxis to yellow stockings from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.” AIR, indeed, opened the gateway for people who wanted to be electronic broadcasters.

Now a staple of all television news channels, AIR was the first to introduce hourly news bulletins in the ’80s. The ’90s was the time when Prasar Bharti Corporation took control of AIR and Doordarshan (DD). AIR also began to face competition from private radio stations.One FM station, however, is like any other, says Sunit Tandon. “Commercial broadcasting won’t go niche and do drama or high-quality literary shows or preserve classical and folk music the way AIR does. At the end of the day, it’s about civilisational values, not film songs.” In the 2000s, AIR began to adapt itself to new technology. It launched digital satellite home service to cater to all of Indian subcontinent and South-east Asia. FM 2 channel (later called FM Gold) also started its broadcast. AIR broadcasts in 23 languages and 146 dialects. It has 419 broadcast centres. AIR’s official app, All India Radio Live, offers 13 channels. Two lakh hours of AIR programmes are in the process of being digitised. The total Air budget is at present 1,700 crore of which 23% (400 crore) is spent on programming. Out of the programming budget, 8.25% is spent on news and 41.5% on entertainment. It’s big push now is for “complete FMisation” by 2017.

Source and Credit :- http://www.hindustantimes.com/art-and-culture/80-years-of-air-legends-and-milestones/story-fg9nhYC1ceqI1suLSuzb5N.html
Forwarded by :- Shri. Jainendra Nigam ,PB News Desk,       prasarbharati.newsdesk@gmail.com
Also Forwarded by :- Shri. Alokesh Gupta ,alokeshgupta@gmail.com

रचना :उपभोक्ता हितों को प्रभावित करते ये विज्ञापन !

$
0
0
आम लोगों की यह धारणा है कि इन्द्रप्रस्थ (देश की राजधानी दिल्ली) की राजगद्दी पाने का रास्ता उ.प्र.से होकर ही जाता है ।कुछ हद तक यह सही भी है क्योंकि अधिकांश प्रधान मंत्री उ.प्र.ने दिए हैं।इस सूबे की राजनीतिक ही नहीं,सामाजिक-साहित्यिक,आपराधिक,प्राकृतिक लगभग सभी हलचल राष्ट्रीय फलक पर हमेशा सुर्खियां बटोरती रही हैं।इन दिनों सूबे की राजधानी यहां से छपने वाले प्रिन्ट मीडिया की आपसी प्रतिद्वन्दिता के चलते लोगों की चर्चा, आकर्षण और कौतूहल का विषय बन चुकी है ।अजीब बात है ना कि "आइना खुद अपने आपको आइना दिखा रहा है।"

मामला कुछ यूं है कि सूबे का सबसे ज्यादा सर्कुलेशन वाला अख़बार कौन है इसका श्रेय यहां से छपने वाले लगभग हर अख़बार लेने को आतुर हैं।अपने दावों के समर्थन में कोई ए.बी.सी.तो कोई ए.एस.सी.आई. तो कोई आई.आर.एस. जैसे सर्वे का सन्दर्भ दे रहा है।पाठकों की तो बल्ले बल्ले है क्योंकि "तूं आगे कि मैं आगे के "वाले इस कम्पिटिशन में उनको पांच रुपये तक पहुंच चुके मूल्य वाले पेपर इन दिनों ढाई से तीन रुपये में पढ़ने को मिल जा रहे हैं।हां,यह दूसरी बात है कि अख़बार वाले इस ऐलानी जंग में कभी कभी पूरा -पूरा पेज अपने दावों को पेश करने में बर्बाद किए जा रहे हैं।इसी तरह के "ऐलान- ए- जंग"की एक और कड़ी के रुप में पिछले हफ्ते सूबे के लोगों को एक नये प्राइवेट रेडियो चैनल के दिग्भ्रमित कर देनेवाले विज्ञापनों से कुछ दिनों तक जूझना पड़ा ।मसलन,शाहरुख ने इतनी फिल्मों में राहुल का किरदार निभाया,राहुल के डांस ग्रुप में इतने लोग थे,अरे रे रे गाने में अरे शब्द इतनी बार बोला गया,फिल्म दबंग में मुन्नी इतनी बार बोला गया है,छेदी सिंह के गैंग में इतने गुंडे थे,फिल्म दबंग में भैय्या जी स्माइल इतनी बार बोला गया,आदि अजीब और ऊल जुलूल प्रश्नों में पाठकों को उलझाए रखा गया ।बाद में पता चला कि यह प्रसारण की दुनियां में उतरने वाले किसी नये पहलवान के प्रचार कैम्पेन का एडवेंचरस हिस्सा था ।हद तो तब हो गई जब उसने एक दिन अख़बार के पहले पेज पर बड़े बड़े शब्दों में घोषणा कर डाला कि "आज से बाकी रेडियो बन्द !"कुछ और भी भ्रामक तथ्य अपने समर्थन में उन्होंने दिये हैं जैसे उनकी यह घोषणा कि वे पहली बार रेडियो पर रामायण देने जा रहे हैं।शायद उन्हें इस बात का ज्ञान नहीं है कि आकाशवाणी से मानस गान की संगीतमय प्रस्तुतियां एक लम्बे अरसे से होती चली आ रही है ।

उपभोक्ता हितों को बुरी तरह प्रभावित करने वाले ऐसे विज्ञापनों पर अंकुश लगने की आवश्यकता है ।सम्बन्धित एजेन्सी जब अपने विवेक से काम न कर सकें तो किसी न किसी नियामक संस्था को हस्तक्षेप करना ही चाहिए ।ख़ास तौर से प्राइवेट रेडियो चैनलों से प्रसारित हो रहे घटिया ऐंकरिंग,बाज़ारू डायलाग,द्विअर्थी संवादों और मुर्गी मुर्गा बनाने वाले प्रसंगों सहित ऐसे भ्रामक विज्ञापनों के मामलों में सतर्कता बरती जानी चाहिए ।

ब्लाग रिपोर्टर -  श्री. प्रफुल्ल कुमार त्रिपाठी,लखनऊ ।मोबाइल नं0 9839229128 
darshgrandpa@gmail.com

WELCOME NEW MEMBERS

$
0
0
Name
NABA GHANA BISOI
City of residence
Designation
Phone
Email
Date of Birth
How can you contribute

Name
NABARANGPUR, ODISHA  
Reporter and Stringer
9668781465 
bisoinaba@gmail.com  
30.07.1982 
Inform others to join

GUPTA RAVINDRAKUMAR S.
City of residence
SHRIRAMPUR MAHARASHTRA
Designation
Listener/Viewer
Phone
Email
Date of Birth
How can you contribute
9850828473
guptaravismc@gmail.com  
17/10/1964 
Form local AIR/DD Clubs/Listener Forum 

Name

SANT RAM
City of residence
Designation
Phone
How can you contribute
GHAZIABAD
UDC
9013191728  
Inform others to join  

Name

MURALIDHAR MADINOOR
City of residence
DHARWAD
Designation
Phone
How can you contribute
Engg.  Asst.  
9448717134
Form local AIR/DD Clubs/Listener Forum  

Name

NAGRAJ BHAT   
City of residence
Designation
Phone
How can you contribute
DHARWAD
Technician     
9448837875    
Inform others to join    

Name

  AMRIT KUMAR MINJ
City of residence
Designation
Phone
Email
How can you contribute
  AMBIKAPUR   
  Engg.Asstt.    
  9329463369  
  minjak2@gmail.com
  Inform others to join     

If You too want to join PB Parivar Blog,

 just click HERE

Journeying With Mahasweta Devi Full Film

$
0
0

This Documentary Film, Journeying With Mahasweta Devi Directed by Joshy Joseph and Produced by Drik India is a wide-angle entry in to the writerly activist’s......



Obituary - Notable sports commentator of AIR Cuttack Gopal Choudhury expires

$
0
0


Notable sports commentator of All India Radio (AIR), Cuttack Gopal Choudhury died at a private nursing home in the city last evening. He was 89. Choudhury, a veteran sports journalist, was undergoing treatment for geriatric diseases for the last few months.

Born on June 30, 1927, Choudhury joined AIR, Cuttack in 1950. He was soon recognized as a good commentator, news reader and translator. Choudhury became popular between 1958 and 1968 in the field of regional news editing and reading. He became a household name from 1995 to 2000 by delivering commentary in AIR for regional, national and international sporting events.

This apart, he has written four useful books on sports.

Prasar Bharati Parivar condoles the demise of Shri Gopal Choudhary and prays for the peace of departed soul.

Obituary - Luku Sanyal, pioneer in English news and Doordarshan anchor dies at 75

$
0
0


Elegant and erudite, Luku Sanyal, the first English news reader in Mumbai who graced television screens in the 70s and 80s with her poise and crisp voice, passed away early on Sunday. She was 75. Sanyal breathed her last at a suburban hospital in Andheri. Known for her impeccable diction and voice, the Doordarshan anchor had been in plays on All India Radio Kolkata since she was 13. She was deeply involved in theatre and was even offered a role by legendary Bengali filmmaker Satyajit Ray in one of his movies. She shot to fame after she was chosen to share a panel with eminent theatre personalities – Dolly Thakore, Partap Sharma, Gerson DaCunha and Nirmala Matthan – as a newsreader for a Mumbai-based English channel. Born in Kolkata and trained Kathak and Bharatnatyam dancer as well. She is survived by her daughter Shona.

After completing Masters in English in 1964, Sanyal went on an extensive study tour to Europe. She started working as a junior lecturer in KC College in 1972, and retired as head of the English department of MMK College in 2001. It was in the 70s that Sanyal hit the television screen. After the initial hard luck, her first shot on live television came as she interviewed Harbance Kumar, a West Indies-based film producer. She was the unanimous choice of selectors who were looking for news readers for a daily English news channel from Mumbai in 1974. Sanyal became a distinct part of the panel comprising Gerson DaCunha, Partap Sharma, Nirmala Matthan and Dolly Thakore.
She commanded the viewers' attention with her impeccable diction that perhaps came from her study of the language. Meanwhile on Sunday, tears and tributes flowed for the much-adored Sanyal, with hundreds of her students taking to the social networking sites to express their thoughts and emotions. "It's like a library has burned down. She laid the basic foundation for many journalists and was one of the rare people to get an A+ grading by Doordarshan for her work. She insisted on right pronunciation and language, and keeping the root and culture of every subject and word intact. She's a true example of human resilience in the face of pain and suffering that she had to face in bulk," said her former student Preksha Malu.

Prasar Bharati Parivar condoles demise of Luku Sanyal and prays for the peace of departed soul and strength for the bereaved family.

Source and credit :- http://scroll.in/latest/813471/luku-sanyal-mumbais-first-english-newsreader-dies-at-75 and http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-tributes-pour-in-as-legendary-news-reader-writer-luku-sanyal-passes-away-2242324
Forwarded By :- Shri. Alokesh Gupta ,alokeshgupta@gmail.com

Design Competition for Logo for Technology Centre - Prize Rs. 30,000/-, Last date 16 Aug 2016

$
0
0


The Technology Centres and Ministry of MSME calls for a nationwide design competition for Logo through public competition for the development of identity and branding of the organization capturing and promoting the main value/s of the organization. Accordingly all Resident Indians (Professional artists/ agencies and Non-professionals) are hereby invited to participate in a competition for design of the logo..............
 ....
The last date of submission is 16th August, 2016.

Prize
The selected entry will be awarded a prize of Rs. 30,000/-.

Source and full details at : https://www.mygov.in/task/design-competition-logo-technology-centre/

More than 64 per cent Indians listen to FM radio every day

$
0
0
More than 64 per cent of the people in India listen to FM radio every day, according to AZ Research's Radio Listener's Research Report, confirming that despite being one of the oldest media radio stands tall in terms of reach. The increased acceptance of FM radio is attributed to the ease of access. The study burst the myth that radio was largely consumed by SEC C consumers. While only 51 per cent from SEC C indulged in radio, a whopping 72 per cent of SEC A and B listened to radio on a daily basis. Another interesting revelation was the behaviour of the listeners. 

Source and credit :- http://www.business-standard.com/article/management/more-than-64-per-cent-indians-listen-to-fm-radio-every-day-116080700638_1.html 

Forwarded By :- Shri. Jainender Nigam, PB NewsDesk, prasarbharati.newsdesk@gmail.com

Central government wants its employee to take part in adventurous sports

WELCOME NEW MEMBERS

$
0
0
Name
BESI  
City of residence
Designation
Phone
How can you contribute

Name
BHOPAL  
Existing Employee  
7354376510
Inform others to join    

HARISH KUMAR  
City of residence
REWARI  
Designation
Hindi Translator  
Phone
Date of Birth
How can you contribute
9013495816   
03/03/1977  
Inform others to join   

Name

PRADEEP  
City of residence
Designation
Phone
Email
How can you contribute
NEW DELHI  
Listener/Viewer
9868206406   
pradeepmtech68@gmail.com      
Form local AIR/DD Clubs/Listener Forum

Name

PADMAVATHI  
City of residence
HYDERABAD  
Designation
Phone
Email
Date of Birth
How can you contribute
Listener/Viewer(Teacher)
9985530029    
padmadg@gmail.com     
21-8-1960   
Contribute to Blog by authoring stories    

Name

FEDRIC TARIANG       
City of residence
Designation
Phone
Email
Date of Birth
How can you contribute
JOWAI      
UDC
9436310177   
fedtar@gmail.com     
27-09-1965
Inform others to join           

Name

THUPTAN JAMBA  
City of residence
Designation
Phone
Email
Date of Birth
How can you contribute
TAWANG     
PEX
9436051359  
Thuptenjamba@rediffmail.com    
05/12/1968  
Inform others to join     

If You too want to join PB Parivar Blog, just click HERE

Lecture regarding nuances in broadcasting in local language.

$
0
0


AIR FM LRS Dharmapuri,Tamil Nadu broadcasting on 102.5 MHz is gaining popularity among the local youth especially the college-goers. In this connection AIR FM LRS Dharmapuri was invited to exhort the nuances in broadcasting in local language(dialect) which customise the programmes among the local audience very easily. Therefore a lecture was arranged by a literary association of P.M.P college of Dharmapuri on 4th of August 2016 at 2.30 pm. On behalf of AIR Shri.R.Murali PEX CO attended the event and the students were elaborated on the nuances of broadcast language with special reference to LRS and it was more an interactive session and it also demonstrated that youth have a passion in listening to FM Radio inspite of the vibrant emergence of social media.

Contributed by :- PEX AIR Dharmapuri ,airdpiprog@gmail.com

A Festival Of Talk Theatre jointly organised by AIR Pune and UPASANA

$
0
0
Shri. P.L.Deshpande and Shri. Shambhu Mitra





 AIR Pune and UPASANA - a cultural forum from Pune city, jointly organised the Shrutir Aashore-2016 Part II on 6th August 2016 from 6 PM to 9 PM. Earlier (Part I) a Festival of Talk Theater (Shruti Natak) was organized on 6th and 7th February, at AIR Auditorium. The event intends to encourage and popularize the creative vocal medium of expression including drama, recitation, script reading, vocal collages etc.
The concept of audio drama or Talk theatre as it is known across the world has emerged with radio broadcasting. In this century AIR has popularized it in a big way, especially in Bangla and Marathi languages which are the two languages chosen for the festival.
Event started with lighting of lamp and then welcomes speech from shri. Ravindra Khianis ADG (P) & Head of Programme. Shri. Chandrakant Kale was felicitated 'P.L.Deshpande' award for life time contribution to Marathi Drama by Shri. Ashish Bhatnagar DDG (E) and Head of AIR Pune. 'Shambhu Mitra' award for lifetime contribution to Bangla Sruti natak was declared and will be conferred on Shri. Jagannath Bose (in Kolkata at latter date). Participation from practising Talk Theatre group in the city in Bangla and Team from Uvavani AIR Pune entertained the invited audience by their performance during the event. Marathi Shruti Natak "ALIYA BHOGASI' written by Late P.L.Deshpande was presented by Uvavani team of AIR Pune comprising Sujay Jadhav, Pranita Bhujabal, Gaurav Shimpi and Shridhar Kulkarni (who also played a role of script writer and director). Music composer was Madhuja Pargaonkar. It was followed by Shruti Upasthapona"ANDHOKARER KATHOKATA" by UPASANA forum, Pune. Then Smt. Mooly Datta of Mumbai presented Ekak Shruti "OEDIPOUS ...TOMAAR PAAP” This festival brought Marathi and Bangla Talk Theatre artist together hence they learnt from each other. 
Smt. Joytsna Keter PEX AIR Pune was coordinator of this event. Smt. Gauri Lagoo hosted the programme. Technical assistance was extended by Shri. Ravindra Ranjekar (AE) and his team comprising Shri. Latpate, Shri. Pardeshi, Shri. Ghatole and Shri.Raut.
Viewing all 9466 articles
Browse latest View live