FICCI Frames 2023: Jyoti Deshpande & Apurva Chandra touch upon various topics

Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

FICCI Frames 2023: Jyoti Deshpande & Apurva Chandra touch upon various topics

The event is being held at Westin, Powai, Mumbai.

Mumbai: FICCI Frames 2023, the mega event on the Indian media and entertainment industry flagged off on 3 May at Westin, Powai, Mumbai.  

Viacom18 CEO Jyoti Deshpande opened the event with a welcome speech wherein she spoke about how India is proudly leading the charge, taking the mantra of Make in India and showing it to the world.

Deshpande said, “In 2015 Jio started a digital revolution to connect everyone and everything, everywhere.  Indians now consume nearly 20GB of data per month on an average, No. 1 in the world already, and expected to reach 46 GB by 2027.

The proliferation of smartphones, connected TV, the advent of 5G and affordable data rates all contribute to the fulfilment of the Digital India dream. Propelled by double-digit growth, by 2025 we are set to become an Rs 2.83 trillion industry.”

Government of India Ministry of Information & Broadcasting secretary Apurva Chandra pointed out, “There was a growth of 20 per cent in the media & entertainment sector in 2022; the media & entertainment industry has reached $26 billion – we are still less than one per cent of the world. The world is interested in Indian stories and culture. The success of Indian movies and music at the Oscars, the rise of OTT content and the box office speak volumes.”

He added, “We have become the most populous country in the world, but there is a lack of manpower. The National Centre for Excellence should be functional in Mumbai by next year. Participation of media & entertainment in films, OTT, broadcast and AVGC – participation of films - film production, film funding, heritage films and children films is being taken care of.”

Speaking about films, he mentioned, “On the film heritage mission, we have already given about Rs 500 crore work to be done and to be executed at a fast pace. People and fans will pay for films to be restored and will be saved for posterity.

We need to give support to young filmmakers who don’t get support in the larger market, and young filmmakers get a chance to showcase their talent.”

“There will be a tender for the Film Facilitation website which will be released within a month, so that we take up film shootings, events, etc.

Also, there will be strict action taken against piracy,” Chandra went on.

About broadcasting, he brought out, “The new uplinking and downlinking guidelines came up a couple of months back. We are looking at India becoming the uplinking centre for many countries.”

“About OTT – it is more of a self-regulatory mechanism, the government has kept a soft touch approach. I believe OTT is quite happy with that, the system is working well. Self-regulation should be exercised. We would like this sector to grow fast and not be bogged down by regulation.”

He concluded, “The world is out there for us to capture. We need to catch up with the world in content creation, gaming, visual effects, etc. We also need to create the best infrastructure – the best of studios, dubbing stations, movie theatres.”