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miptv nEWs reVieW ® April 2014 miptv.com 11,000 television and digital executives including some 4,000 buyers descended on Cannes for the 51st edition of MIPTV. With The New Age Of Storytelling a key theme, MIPTV witnessed the continued development of high-end drama and formats originating from around the world, strong co-production activity, an emerging international market for online content creators — reflected in the successful launch of MIP Digital Fronts and a coming together of online and offline players miptv iDEALS Deals show active global marketplace DYNAMIC deal-making around completed shows, formats and coproductions, not to mention a few high-profile channel launches and corporate acquisitions, underlined MIPTV’s undisputed status as the engine room of the new global entertainment economy. Drama, as always, was in strong demand. High-profile deals saw MGM sell Fargo to Soho New Zealand and eOne sell AMC’s Halt and Catch Fire to Canal+ and HBO Nordic. Similar scale deals included All3Media International’s Anzac Girls to Globo/ GNT Brazil and TV2 Denmark; BetaFilm’s Velvet to Rai Uno and M6; and Tandem/Lionsgate’s Sex, Lies And Handwriting to Bell Media Canada, TFI France and Pro7Sat1 Germany. BBC Worldwide screened its new political drama series The Honourable Woman starring Maggie Gyllenhaal, who took part in a Q&A after the screening. Just hours after screening BBCWW reported sales to Norway and France. There was also good news for Atlantique action series Transporter, which has sold to a range of markets including Italy, Turkey and Latin America. Business in the factual TV arena was equally brisk, with BBC Worldwide selling titles to TVB Hong Kong and VOD platform Tencent in China. Other companies to report strong trade included Off the Fence, which sold a slate of factual shows to Hubu Media Group in China; TCB Media, which secured a range of deals with SBS Belgium, TV4 Sweden and Nine Network Australia; Zodiak Rights, which unveiled a content partnership with Ovation; Prime Entertainment Group, which licensed packages to Chello Central Europe and My Sport Channel; and GRB which sealed agreements with broadcasters in Asia, Africa and Europe. UK-based distributors continued to be strong performers in this genre, with Shine International selling Educating York- shire to broadcasters including TVNZ, SVT and ABC Australia and DCD Rights selling music and documentary programming to DirecTV Latin America, Globosat Brazil and Phoenix Satellite TV China. There was also interesting news at France TV Distribution, which signed a multi-year factual output deal with Red Bull Media-owned Terra Mater Factual Studios. ARTE, too, had a successful market, licensing documentaries to Italy’s Channel 50. A key feature of deal-making at recent markets has been diversification in the kind of companies buying and selling content. A great example of the new breed of deal-making was Red Bull Media House’s sale of 150 titles to Korea Telecom’s VOD service Olleh. Another next-gen partnership saw Fuji TV licence Japanese drama to Crunchyroll for Europe and the Americas. Linked to this expansion in deal-making has been an increased appetite for volume arrangements. ITV Studios Glob- Anzac Girls (All3Media International) al Entertainment, for example, sold more than 500 hours of content to digital platforms and TV broadcasters across China and Thailand, including the crime drama Endeavour. Deals included a multi-year drama output deal with Tencent and a deal with Thai pay-TV broadcaster Next Step for 300 hours of factual TV. The Honourable Woman (BBCWW) 2 miptv iDEALS NEWS IN BRIEF ITALIAN public broadcaster RAI unveiled plans to restructure its commercial arm RAI Trade. The new company will be given an expanded remit and a new name, to be unveiled in the near future. The enlarged entity will launch in July and is to be headed by CEO Liugi De Siervo, currently a director at RAI Trade. HI-5 WORLD, the company behind kids franchise Hi-5, has entered into a co-production venture with KRU Studios to produce a localised version of the show in Malaysia. Production on 25 episodes will start in July 2014 for broadcast later this year. GERMANY’s ZDF has teamed up with BBC Worldwide to co-produce One Planet, a natural history series that will be made by the BBC’s Natural History Unit. The 6 x 60-minute series follows a previous partnership between the two on Frozen Planet. AFRICA’s Cote Ouest sold more than 200 hours of content at MIPTV. Titles covered the animation, entertainment and drama genres, an example being 120-episode soap opera Windeck which was licensed to the Multichoice platform in South Africa. BBC WORLDWIDE sold period drama The Musketeers to a range of partners including NT1 for France, SPI International for Central and Eastern Europe. It also struck a deal with Netflix for multiple territories for the first season and the upcoming second series. Endeavour (ITVS GE) Kids deal-making was also busy. DQ Entertainment and Method announced a second series of Peter Pan for ZDF, France TV, De Agostini and Tele-Quebec, while 9 Story Entertainment revealed a slew of international partners for Camp Lakebottom including Disney. Other noteworthy kids deals included Saban Brands’ Julius Jr. to Disney Junior in Italy; BRB International’s Canimals to Hulu Kids; PGS Entertainment’s Super 4 to Cartoon Network in Italy and LatAm; and Red Arrow International’s Esio Trot to ARD. Normaal’s Peanuts production will be distributed by France TV Distribution while UK indie Zig Zag revealed that it has acquired Japanese format Ultimate Brain to remake for children’s BBC channel CBBC. As the above kids deals demonstrate, global pay-TV broadcasters continue to be hugely-important customers for content creators. Other illustrations of this saw Turner take Platinum’s Matt Hatter Chronicles and D-Rights’ Beast Saga for its Asian services. Some international deals cross both genres and territories. Among the most strategically significant alliances to be announced during the market was Modern Times Group’s content partnership with SPT, which covered film and TV content for the Nordic market. Channel launches included Azteca and Cisneros Media Distribution’s partnership with content distributor AfricaXP to Continued success for the sniffer THE SNIFFER, a drama series about a detective with an acute sense of smell from Ukranian producer Film.UA, sold to France on the eve of MIPTV. The series, which was selected by The Wit for one of its Fresh TV presentations during MIPTV, has also sold well in Ukraine, Israel, Kazakhstan, Belarus and the Baltic territories, and was Russia’s highest-rated TV series in 2013. “The Sniffer is the most successful product we have produced,” Film.UA CEO Igor Storchak said. “The story is both special and simple and we believe it will find success with local producers in Europe and North America.” The Sniffer, from Ukrainian producer Film.UA 3 launch Romanza+Africa, a telenovela channel targeting English-speaking audiences in Africa. MIPTV also saw Vice Media and Fremantlemedia launch food channel Munchies. Other deals of significance included the company acquisition of Eagle Rock by United Music Group. There was a 4K co-production deal involving Chinese producer Rare Media and French company Camera Lucida to make 4K documentary Moon for Planete+ and France Televisions. A reminder that home entertainment is still a significant market for content owners was Gaumont International Television’s deals for supernatural drama Hemlock Grove with Shout!Factory and Kaleidoscope. miptv iMIP DIGITAL FRONTS Industry welcomes Digital Fronts launch MIP DIGITAL FRONTS, the new international screenings for original online video — which launched the international digital content markteplace — featured a series of MIP Digital Fronts showcases. Sessions on the first day of the two-day event featured YouTube presenting some of the most popular performers on its multi-channel networks (MCN), illustrating what the video-sharing website can do for creative talents. A session hosted by Michael Stevens, the US creator/presenter of YouTube channel VSauce, featured a number of artists including Rhett Mclaughlin and Link Neal, of the Rhett & Link comedy duo; Jack and Finn Harries, direc- tors at Digital Native Studios in the UK; and Ana Kasparian, host of the popular US online news service The Young Turks. “Our audience is a huge part of our content; you’ll get an immediate evaluation of your shows from them, and they will hold you to account,” Kasparian said. “Working with brands has helped our company, Digital Native Studios, experiment and learn to improve the quality of shows on our YouTube channel JacksGap, which has three million subscribers,” UK brothers Jack and Finn Harries, said. UK video-games devotee Joseph Garrett used MIP Digital Fronts to announce the launch of an online kids-ed- ucation channel, which will be created with YouTube multi-channel network Maker Studios. The new channel will be an offshoot of Stampylonghead, Garret’s existing kids entertainment YouTube channel, which is based on the Minecraft video game and has more than 2.3 million subscribers. Of the new venture, he said: “Minecraft has an open sandbox that you can create in and watch videos. If you take that engagement and put it in the education space, the young audience will relate to it.” Garret and American musician Chester See were presented as “two of the most talented performers that mainstream TV has Modern times YouTube’s Michael Stevens Digital Native Studios’ Jack Harries VICE Media only really set its mind to becoming an online multichannel entity two years ago, but at this MIPTV it launched a food channel, to go alongside news and sports channels also on stream this year — bringing its total to eight. “You can’t really call yourself a modern media company, like a Time Warner or whatever, unless you have a sports play, unless you have a news play, unless you have a music play,” Eddy Moretti, vice-chief creative officer said. “Increasingly things like food and travel are important to these media companies as well.” Vice’s food channel, Munchies, is a joint venture with FremantleMedia. “There’s a real passion among kids for food. These days, it’s cool to cook. Kids with tattoos do it,” Moretti said. One such tattooed guy is rapper Action Bronson, whose Munchies show, F*ck, That’s Delicious, takes viewers on a culinary and musical tour of the world, exploring local cuisines from New Zealand to Croatia. Digital Native Studios’ Finn Harries Maker Studios’ Rene Rechtman Action Bronson 4 miptv iMIP DIGITAL FRONTS never seen,” by Rene Rechtman, president of international at US-based Maker Studios. During Rechtman’s MIP Digital Fronts presentation, he said the two Maker Studio artists personified how on-screen entertainment has changed. “We’re in a very special time right now. We’re democratising media,” he said. “We’re one of the first companies to be at the cross-section of technology and creativity. There’s a fundamental shift happening and we can’t ignore it. And we do it for 5% to 10% of the cost of traditional TV.” Jimmy Lee is the post-production arm of agency Sid Lee, best known for its work with Adidas. Creative executive PierreMathieu Fortin was at Digital Fronts to screen some of the work his company had done both for TV and the web. “Brands want exposure, and broadcasters want amazing content,” he said. As of 2012, Cirque de Soleil took partial ownership in Sid Lee. “It was an amazing venture for both of us. Cirque was already a client,” Fortin said. Sid Lee manages Cirque’s brand, expansion, and stage sets. Edward Averdieck, the entrepreneur who joined forces with singing superstar Peter Gabriel to pioneer some of the early online-music ventures, is now CEO/co-founder of CueSongs. “We want to create a level-playing field between those who work for major broadcasters and those who work in online TV,” he said. “I am here at Digital Fronts to see the networks that we are trying to reach.” Gabriel is the majority shareholder in CueSongs, which aims to license music by hit artists and major publishers, worldwide, at reasonable prices. Dailymotion presented two of its most popular content providers at MIP Digital Fronts: Marawa the Amazing, a hoola-hoop performer who is currently the world record holder, having danced while supporting 160 hoops; and action-and-adventure sports specialist David Carlier, who founded the Freeride World Tour back in 1996. The session, which was opened by Marc Eychenne, vice-president international content at Dailymotion, and chief marketing officer Damien du Chene, featured a video compilation of some of the platform’s most popular performers. According to du Chene, Dailymotion now has so many content providers that choosing two to be at MIP Digital Fronts was virtually impossible: “They create the passion on the platform, and we are incredibly proud to have been able to co-produce so much great content,” he said. “And our commitment to coproduction will only grow now that we have a 700 sq m studio in Paris. And the first person to use the studio, before it was finished incidentally, was Marawa.” Twitter makes TV better, Roy says Twitter’s Deb Roy IN HIS Media Mastermind keynote speech Twitter’s chief media scientist Deb Roy told the MIPTV audience that the company is a “force multiplier” for television viewing, delivering “the social soundtrack for TV”. He continued: “The biggest, most pervasive medium ever invented — television — is being intertwined with a global social medium, Twitter.” He argued that “Twitter makes television better”, and that taking attention away from the TV screen to a second screen doesn’t automatically mean that first screen is diminished. He suggested that Twitter has three key defining properties: “It’s live, it’s public and it’s conversational. We use it in the moment to talk to everyone who cares to listen. And we use it to converse: to exchange words… A synchronised social soundtrack for whatever is happening in the moment, as a shared experience.” Soundtracks were originally designed to enhance the film experience: rather than being a threat, he said. “I’s hard to imagine today what E.T. would have been like without the soundtrack. Jaws, without the soundtrack was a silly robotic fish splashing around in the water!” He moved on to whether Twitter drives people to tune in to TV shows — can it bump up the ratings? Roy showed a graph of tweets per minute about a Japanese news programme, when the Twitter volume suddenly spiked when the news anchor mentioned that a story was coming up about a prominent actress, 5 with the editorial team also tweeting this message. “If we look at what happened in the next few minutes, the tune-in on TV almost doubled,” he said. Roy spoke of the need for an “emerging standard” in measuring TV, using the social signals; Nielsen is working on a Twitter TV Rating chart in the US. He introduced Twitter’s TV Amplify scheme. “A new capability that has been engineered essentially to augment and add to the organic social soundtrack,” as he described it. The case study was the NFL: audiences watching American Football matches while using Twitter. Amplify helps the NFL send out tweets with up to 30 seconds of video of just-aired content from television, complete with a pre-roll advertisement. The idea: people who aren’t watching the live event on TV can see what just happened: and potentially then tune in. “To use Twitter to broadcast and potentially extend the reach beyond the set of people who were watching the programme,” Roy concluded with a challenge to the creatives in the MIPTV audience: “I actually think the real puzzle in social TV and what’s happening with Twitter and television comes down to storytelling,” he said. “So the challenge and the opportunity is in the hands of storytellers in how to tap into this new creative storytelling, and evolve storytelling”. Creatives should be prepared to “look to the data, and to really go and pioneer potentially whole new genres” of television. mipcom iMIP DIGITAL FRONTS Optimising the online experience SNAKE Eats Crocodile, a MIP Digital Fronts session featuring Rightster’s Charlie Muirhead and Sam Barcroft of Barcroft Media, examined video optimisation. Muirhead kicked off by talking in detail about Rightster, which has existed for some three years. “As a business, our focus has been creating a partnership with content creators, traditional media businesses and new media businesses, allowing Rightster to be the one-stop shop for all the digital back-end and monetisation,” said Muirhead. The slogan is “upload once — commercialise everywhere.” Muirhead said the big challenge online is fragmentation. Between content owners, audience and online publishers, there’s a lot competing for the right to exist, the right to time. “People tend to think that online video is just a depository to push content into. It’s not true. You have to promote it and get excited about it,” said Barcroft, whose company produces clips and shows that have generated over 250,000 comments so far this year. A few examples include Cheetah Chases Impala (six million views), Flying Lion (31 million views), and Snake Eats Crocodile (24 million views). “Barcroft are the content experts, incredible at picking out these stories,” said Muirhead. “Our job is to make sure all those experiences get shared across platforms.” Charlie Muirhead and Sam Barcroft Digital studios take centre stage DURING the MIP Digital Fronts digital studios showcase, Collective Digital Studio, SXM, Smokebomb, What’s Trending, Bigballs Films and others screened their latest shows and formats in a presentation hosted by What’s Trending co-founder Shira Lazar. Collective Digital Studio’s Paul Kontonis introduced Video Game High School, an action/ comedy series about “best friends, first loves, and landing that perfect head shot”. It’s a coproduction with Rocket Jump, a firm founded by YouTube star Freddie Wong. Season three is being shot at the moment, shot in a mixture of 24 and 48 framesper-second. Collective is now bundling up the first three seasons in a 17 x 30 minute package for distribution. SXM, showed its The Comment Show — an interactive talk-show that’s made available on music video network Vevo. SXM produces shows for various online networks, as well as for brands — Samsung is one of its clients. Smokebomb Entertainment vice-president and digital/creative director Jay Bennett and actor, writer and director David Hewlett showed State Of Syn, a sci-fi thriller that runs across multiple platforms and devices. “It’s a series, it’s an app, it’s a Google Glass game and it’s a social experience,” Bennett said. Vuguru showed its scripted series Play Nice, which is being sold at MIPTV by FremantleMedia. Vuguru CEO Larry Tanz said that five years ago MIPTV delegates saw the best new original online videos at the MIP Digital Fronts showcases 6 “digital was not really a place people were going for premium programming, and now we’re seeing some of the best shows on digital platforms… who have really jumped from what we consider as digital content to television content.” miptv iSTARS AT MIP DIGITAL FRONTS David Hewlett stars in State Of Syn, Smokebomb’s award-winning transmedia storyworld set in the future where technology reigns Ray Wise, star of innovative branded content comedy series for Chipotle, Farmed And Dangerous Hoola-Hoop World Champion and Dailymotion star, Marawa the Amazing, performed at the company’s presentation at MIP Digital Fronts Actor, musician, comedian and YouTube star Chester See was in town with Maker Studios for MIP Digital Fronts Shira Lazar, co-founder and host of What’s Trending, the award-winning, Emmy nominated, daily live interactive online show, was in Cannes for MIP Digital Fronts Ana Kasparian, co-host and producer of US-based online news programme The Young Turks, was in Cannes to take part in MIP Digital Fronts 7 miptv iKEYNOTES Industry leaders take the Cannes stage LEADING executives from all areas of the international media presented during MIPTV’s series of Media Mastermind Keynote talks. Early in the week Jan Frouman, group managing director of Red Arrow Entertainment, presented the company’s new series, Bosch. He was joined on stage by the series’ producer Henrik Bastin, author of the Harry Bosch series of crime books Michael Connelly, and actor Titus Welliver who plays homicide detective Harry Bosch. The full series of Bosch was commissioned by Amazon Studios after the pilot won rave re- views from Connelly fans. Frouman praised Amazon’s pilot model: “Amazon makes the pilot available to its user audience for a period of time, whether it’s a month or two months, and they gather data,” he said. “It’s a transparent process, as opposed to a backroom negotiation.” In a separate keynote later in the week, Roy Price, director of Amazon Studios, disclosed that it had produced 24 pilots and given the go-ahead for the production of 11 high-end series. “Our priority is great shows for Amazon customers,” he said. “People are interested in original ideas and engage with that, which is why we started Amazon Studios in the first place.” Tuesday afternoon featured Studiocanal chairman and CEO Olivier Courson and Tandem Communications president Rola Bauer. Courson described how his company had been set up as an alternative to US studios: “US production is amazing, but mainly focused on the domestic market. Our domestic market is Europe, so we begin with European stories and talent.” Bauer said Courson’s emphasis on European talent was a key reason why Tandem joined the Studiocanal family. But she stressed the group was not turn- ing its back on North America: “Every time we develop something we try to find stories that will transcend boundaries. Shows like Crossing Lines and Labyrinth are proof that European content can cross the pond.” Starz CEO Chris Albrecht talked about how difficult it is to make international drama coproductions work. For Albrecht, whose recent projects at Starz have included Black Sails, The White Queen, The Missing and Power, successful co-productions usually have “a central vision agreed on at the outset, trust between partners and a producer you can rely on”. In Studiocanal chairman and CEO Olivier Courson (centre) and Tandem Communications president Rola Bauer, with moderator Le Film Francais’ Francois-Pier Pelinard-Lambert Red Arrow group managing director of global production and distribution group Jan Frouman Actor Titus Welliver (left), writer Michael Connelly and Bosch producer Henrik Bastin 8 miptv iKEYNOTES addition, “they need time, because there are so many stages of the process where there is potential for disagreement”. Chairman and CEO of Publicis Groupe Maurice Levy sees no real potential for conflict with the traditional TV industry in the fact that advertising agencies are increasingly making content: “We are storytellers about brands, so we are in the advertising business, and the TV industry is in the entertainment business. But it’s true that a lot of the directors come from our world, and a lot of them make great adverts alongside successful careers in film and TV. There is a long list of great film direc- tors, such as Ridley Scott and Alan Parker, who have shot commercials,” he said. According to Deb Roy, Twitter’s chief media scientist, Twitter Amplify has the potential to drive users to live TV broadcasts. “It opens up a new pathway from content producer to audience,” he said. Taking the example of an American football game, he said Amplify would allow the NFL to embed a 30-second clip of justaired footage in a tweet directly targeted at a Twitter user who was engaging in a hash-tagged conversation — whether or not they were actually watching the Chairman and CEO of the Publicis Groupe Maurice Levy TV. “It’s the ability to take tiny bits of TV and use Twitter to broadcast them and extend the reach,” he said. According to YouTube’s global head of entertainment Alex Carloss on-demand and online video are competing with every other source of entertainment these days, rather than with each other. “Today no one cares where the content comes from, it just has to be good. The fact that over 60% of the views for our creators’ videos come from outside of their home country, and that 91% of the audience for K-Pop videos is outside South Korea, proves that.” Starz’ Chris Albrecht Amazon Studios’ Roy Price YouTube’s Alex Carloss 9 miptv iMIPCUBE SESSION FOCUSES ON BETTER STORIES BIG DATA is like teenage sex, Magine’s Mahesh Kumar told delegates at the MIPCube Talk, A Date With Data: Everyone Thinks Everyone Else Is Doing It, But No One Really Knows How To Do It. But the director of special projects at the Swedish cloud-based OTT service said: “It’s a great time to be in the media industry because of data,” adding: “The real holy grail will be how to tell better stories, powered by data.” Julian McCrea of the UK’s Portal Entertainment told the MIPCube audience that data can help tell stories better especially for those companies which, unlike the big studios, don’t have the budgets to research viewers’ reaction to a new release. IBM business development executive Odile PerraudinJuillard told of the company’s data-powered robot Watson, which is built to understand the English language including slang and curse words. Watson was recently used to challenge winners of the game show Jeopardy, and won. “We’re now moving ahead to develop a system that can understand and anticipate what an audience is looking for,” she said. Magine’s Mahesh Kumar Closed-door debate on data THE DIGITAL Minds Summit held at the Carlton on the first day of MIPTV, was a closed-door educational and executive think tank, gathering together some of the sharpest minds in the media industries. The event, which was examining how to create actionable intelligence with data, featured speakers Scott Button of Unruly Media, Eric Scherer of France Televisions and Altimeter Group’s Susan Etlinger chairing the session. “There were several important conclusions to be gleaned from today’s session,” Etlinger, an analyst at Altimeter Group, said. “It became increasingly clear that we in the US tend to focus a lot on game mechanics, by that I mean who is winning, who is losing, and who just acquired who. But what needs to be taken into consideration are the real human issues, like how to build a company to make the most out of data, while respecting privacy and not losing the trust of the public.” The solution lies, says Etlinger, in more communication between departments: “Ultimately, creatives need to learn more about the kinds of data available, and data crunchers need to learn more about understanding data in context. There needs to be more interplay between the creative and quantitative sides of the business.” Online video moves into mainstream DURING the MIPCube session A Fireside Chat With The Gamechangers, Brent Weinstein, head of digital media, United Talent Agency, told the audience that new media companies, including What’s Trending, Machinima, AwesomenessTV, Tastemade, and FailBlog “are the media companies, not of the future, but of the present”. He added: “The access they have to huge audiences is something that no one would have expected just a few years ago.” What’s Trending was born from a desire to “make a broadcast-quality format” because web shows lacked the reputation of strong production. But it also had to be authentic and interactive for web audiences, the company’s co- founder Shira Lazar said, adding: “The sky’s the limit for companies like ours who were there from the beginning, and who have credibility in the digital realm.” Ben Huh of Cheezburger, which promises “videos, pictures, text, a multi-format way of delivering a way to make you laugh every single day,” said: “We’re one of the largest destinations on the net.” Cheezburger recently raised $35m in venture capital funding — partly on the strength of its halfbillion pageviews per month. Failblog, a sister channel, is a top-five YouTube channel. At Cheezburger headquarters, 50 people are employed in the service of “curating humour”. Vimeo’s Kerry Trainor said creative professionals drive the major10 ity of the platform’s growth. “Vimeo was the first site to offer true HD streaming over the net, and that solidified its relationship with professional high-quality creators,” Trainor said. “But the exciting next-phase is building revenue for creators. We’re only taking 10% of the revenue and our commitment to creators won’t ever change. “We believe the ad-supported economy will continue to grow but I also believe that advertising is only one business model. The opportunity for great creators to charge directly for their work is exciting, and we want to power that market. If you want to charge $15 for 20 minutes of content, go ahead. There are creators doing it, and doing well.” miptv iMEETINGS OF MINDS Delegates share co-pro knowledge THE THIRD international drama co-production summit in the Carlton hotel brought together many of the leading decisionmakers in the business. All together, around 60 key figures in the co-pro sector used the closeddoor Summit to make new contacts and explore the potential for developing projects. One of those attending was Peter Benedek, co-founder of leading agency UTA. Speaking to the MIPTV News, he said: “It was a really useful exercise, involving a terrific group of international executives. Even those of us who have a lot of experience have much to learn about how to put together co-productions.” That positive assessment was echoed by Philipp Kreuzer, MD of Bavaria Media: “There’s a lot of curiosity in this area so the Summit was a great opportunity to catch up with people you already know and to make new contacts. I thought there was a good mix of producers, commissioning editors and distributors.” A closed-door event, the Summit was supported by UTA, Telefilm Canada and the Canada Media Fund. Among the companies taking part were the BBC, Starz, TF1, ZDF, HBO and DR Denmark. UTA’s Peter Benedek: “Even those of us with experience have much to learn” Future Of Kids TV Summit makes debut MIPTV 2014 hosted the first-ever Future Of Kids TV Summit — sponsored by Shaw Rocket Fund and SK Broadband — an event that brought together over 120 senior children’s entertainment executives to address key issues surrounding digital disruption in kids’ creation and distribution. Talks were given by key players in the kids sector, including Aardman Animations’ Daniel Efergan and Hopster’s Nicholas Walters. Interlude’s Yoni Bloch demonstrated his online interactive web application Treehouse. Journalist Stuart Dredge gave a presentation in which he discussed how “Apps are creating networks for children’s TV, almost by stealth. Rovio is making Angry Birds cartoons, but it’s also licensing shows to distribute within its apps.” The first Future Of Kids TV Summit at MIPTV 11 miptv iMIPDoc MIPDoc hosts top names in factual MIPDOC is where co-financing and co-production, as well as a unique global factual content library, come together. The event offers two days of conferences, keynotes and screenings, alongside access to top decision-makers in financing, commissioning, distribution and production. MIPDoc keynoter Dean Possenniskie, A+E Networks managing director EMEA, said the group is in rude health as it marks its 30th birthday, and ready to take on new challenges. “In my four years at A+E, we’ve been focusing on international markets to drive growth,” he said. “A+E’s recent takeover of the joint venture channels it runs in Italy and Asia is part of its plan to wholly own its assets, and launch more channels fast. It’s not a strategy for the UK market,” he said. But in many of the European and Asian markets, “where the option arises to take ownership, we will.” MIPDoc speaker, Sam Toles, Vimeo’s newly appointed vice- “Vimeo is the Bloomingdale’s of VOD to YouTube’s Walmart.” He added: “We have the best-inindustry VOD player. We had 168 million unique visitors in January alone. And while YouTube has 100 million free plays to 10,000 purchases, on Vimeo, the revenue share works out the same: $55,000 for their producers and $54,000 for ours.” Toles’ role is to help producers maximise their audience by customising and marketing their Vimeo sites. And he has $10mworth of marketing help to give those who have raised $10,000 through crowd funding. “Marketing is about converting viewers to buyers,” he said. “So a successful crowd-funding campaign for a project demonstrates that it already has a committed audience, and these are the ones we can help.” MIPDoc Keynote, Paul Welling, head of channels for Discovery Networks in Central & Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa (CEEMEA), introduced ID Ex- Tabloid presenter Jerry Springer Dean Possenniskie, A+E Networks managing director EMEA president of content acquisitions, told MIPDoc delegates: Focus on Israeli docs The weekend by numbers NATIONAL Geographic Channel’s Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey was the most requested title at MIPDoc this year. Unsurprisingly, in the year of the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I, war docs were also popular with Warsaw 1935 3D (Warsaw 1935 — Newborn) and 14 - Diaries Of The Great War (Looks Distribution) placing second and third. At MIPFormats, the mostrequested programme was gameshow format Are You For Real? from Israeli producer Gil Productions. Some 1,535 delegates attended MIPDoc and MIPFormats this year, screening a total of 22,720 factual programmes and 1,674 formats. tra, the new female-skewing mystery and suspense channel from Discovery Networks CEEMEA. On stage he introduced TV presenter Jerry Springer, whose new show Tabloid premiered on the new channel from April. MIPDoc International Pitch winner ISRAELI docs are thriving, said Danna Stern, head of acquisitions and programming at Yes DBS Satellite Services during the MIPDoc session on Israel – part of the Focus On Israel series of events held in Cannes this year. The “lean and mean” Yes is pioneering innovative ways to fund factual programmes using crowd funding, crowd sourcing and social media. For docs about already well-covered topics, producers must seek out new angles. Unique access helps. For her award-winning feature-length doc The Gatekeepers, Cinephil producer Philippa Kowarsky persuaded six former directors of the notoriously secretive Shin Bet to speak on camera. And in his highly personal doc The Green Prince, director Nadav Schirman convinced a junior Hamas member who spied on his own father for Israel, to be interviewed, along with his Israeli handler. A LEAK In Paradise, about Rudolf Elmer, a former Swiss banker and whistleblower who exposed tax evasion, won the MIPDoc International Pitch. The film is available for pre-sales from Belgium’s Ventes–CBA/WIP Sales. Thierry Detaille (right) with Ove Rishoj Jensen, who chaired the competition Danna Stern, head of acquisitions and programming at Yes DBS Satellite Services 12 miptv iMIPFormats Formats: talent gives way to scripted MIPFORMATS, which runs concurrently with MIPDoc over the weekend before MIPTV, is the world’s largest gathering for the formats community. This year it brought together world-class keynote speakers and panelists, new talents, curated screenings, case studies and targeted matchmaking events. According to the annual Formats Survey, scripted is on the up and singing and talent shows may have peaked. Changing media-consumption patterns and the digital landscape are seeing online consumers preferring to binge on drama rather than formats. There are more formats, but not more money, and the balance of power is shifting to new territories, for example Israel, Turkey and Scandinavia. And IP theft remains a key concern. According to DR Denmark’s Rasmus Ladefoged: “I’m tired of seeing classic formats with a new twist being hailed as gamechangers,” he said. “We are looking for something truly original, and a gimmick bolted-on to an old format is not going to be it.” Keynote speaker Marco Bassetti, CEO of Banijay Group, used the MIPFormats stage to announce that the French superindie is partnering with former Endemol North America head David Goldberg to launch Banijay Studios North America. Bassetti ended his keynote with some advice for tomorrow’s format creatives. “There’s a lot of attention being given to the digital space and the connected generation who don’t like to watch TV,” he said. “It’s important to bear in mind that you are storytellers and there are a lot of people who still want to lean back and listen. Content can be delivered in any way, but there always needs to be a good story.” The perception that the formats industry is creatively stagnant annoys Rob Clark. “I think the industry is extraordinary creative at the moment,” said FremantleMedia UK’s director of global entertainment development in Banijay Group’s Marco Bassetti FremantleMedia UK’s Rob Clark, Shine’s Gary Carter his MIPFormats keynote. “There are a lot of great formats around and I think this MIPTV will demonstrate that. It’s just the cyclical nature of television. Nothing’s ever dead — it’s just how you retell the story.” Clark said that FremantleMedia looks for three “central tenets” in a format: cultural transferability, returnability and scalability. He also said that formats needed a digital strategy. In answer to interviewer Ben Hall’s question about how important financial fire power is in terms of getting a format off the ground, Clark said: “Very important. Broadcasters don’t have the same balls that they used to. That’s understandable, given that the pressure to succeed is so great and failure is so expensive. So they often want a format that’s worked somewhere else.” Discussing The Next Big Thing, Shine chairman Gary Carter referred to Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Black Swan theory which states that people use hindsight to pass off the unusual as predictable. He said: “The next big thing is a Black Swan event, and the small number of Black Swan events explains almost everything in the world of non-scripted television.” MIPFormats International Pitch THE MIPFormats International Pitch this year was won by Australian company The Feds for Zombie Boot Camp. The format took the top prize of up to €25,000 in development money from sponsor Warner Bros International Television Production. In the format, 16 contestants fight their way through repeated zombie attacks, testing their skills in everything from skull protection to improving bullets. “To win, all you have to do is survive,” said Lisa Gray, head of content for Australia’s The Feds. Her colleague, producer Claire Marshall, added: “It’s a fun way of looking at the end of the world.” 13 miptv iFORMAT SALES Israel riding high on formats Following the mob BRISTOW Global Media acquired Canadian format rights for reality show Mob Wives from Electus International. The show, which airs on VH1 US, follows a group of women whose husbands or fathers are doing time for mob crimes. Bristow also picked up Canadian format rights to You, Me And My Ex from Armoza Formats. Still got the X Factor Keshet’s Boom! sold well in Cannes WITH the Focus On Israel series of events bringing much attention to this small but hyper-creative country, it didn’t disappoint where format sales were concerned. Every day saw deals for Israeli companies including Keshet, Reshet, Dori, Armoza Formats and A Capella. Among the many deals were the sales of Keshet’s Boom! to Fox and TF1, Reshet/ITV’s Game Of Chefs to Vox Germany, Dori’s Power Couple to SIC Portugal and Armoza’s I Can Do That! to partners in markets including France and Thailand. There were also deals for Keshet’s hot format Rising Star and Armoza’s Do Me A Favour while A Capella’s key deal saw it enter a global distribution alliance with Nordic World on new format The Big Picture. While the headlines went to Israel, Asia’s format creators were also high-profile at this market. On the second day of MIPFormats, the Palais’ Auditorium A was packed out as producers and distributors from around the world were introduced to the most creative of Japan’s new formats in Treasure Box Japan. As the week went on, those formats became a feature of MIPTV deal-making. A good example was Fuji TV’s Whose Side Are You On?, which was picked up for international exploitation by The Gurin Company. China’s growing importance as a creative force was also evident at MIPTV. Armoza teamed up with JSBC China to launch format Celebrity Battle to the international market while ITVS GE linked up with China’s Star Media on Sing My Song, a show that has been drawing a huge audience on domestic channel CCTV3 (see photo below). All of which brought a strong reaction from the format sector’s established players. BBC Worldwide sold the format for Dancing With The Stars to Planet TV Slovenia, meaning the show has now been licensed to 50 countries. Dutch format giant Talpa Media, meanwhile, sold its breakout hit Utopia to Pro7Sat1 Germany. Celebrating 50 years of Dancing With The Stars: Planet TV’s Igor Gajic (left), Antenna Group’s Nick Pawsey, CEMA’s Magdalena Garbacz, BBCWW’s Paul Dempsey and dancers from the French version of the show, Christophe and Coralie Licate DESPITE growing competition from rival formats, Syco/ FremantleMedia International’s The X Factor continues to do good business. Antena 1 Romania and STB Ukraine both renewed the show this week, as did channels in Albania and Kazakhstan. Other format deals saw Canale 5 Italy secure a dating makeover show from Electus International and FremantleMedia acquire rights to MTV classic show Punk’d from Katalyst Network and Viacom. Another big story from FremantleMedia saw it team up with Dick De Rijk, creator of hit format Deal Or No Deal. On the scripted format front, one of the market’s top stories was a joint-venture between Channel 4 UK and Xbox to create Humans. The show, produced by Kudos, is based on SVT’s Real Humans. Star media’s Vivian Yin (left) with ITVS GE’s Mike Beale and Maria Kyriacou 14 miptv iNEWS The homeland of hit formats ISRAEL, which has recently spawned global format successes Prisoners Of War, In Treatment and Rising Star, was highlighted during a series of Focus On Israel events during MIPTV. As part of this special focus, Keshet Media Group CEO Avi Nir gave a keynote speech in which he explained why this small nation is having such an impact on the international content market. Part of it, said Nir, is that “Israeli audiences are impatient. They like innovations and see through the mechanics of TV shows very quickly. Our success is down to the fact we keep them on their toes, keep surprising them.” Tuesday morning at MIPTV saw a series of sessions that expanded on Nir’s insights. In a session entitled How To Create Successful Scripted Formats/Dramas, Yoram Mokady, vice-president of content at cable platform HOT, said the country’s low budgets inspired creativity: “If you have a low budget you have to come up with a good story because you can’t cover it up with bigger production values.” Format pioneer Avi Armoza said the format model means foreign broadcasters can “buy three years of development, and the best Israeli scriptwriters sitting together for seasons one and two. They can get quickly into something fully written and developed.” The Wit’s Virginia Mouseler also explored Israeli creativity in a session entitled Fresh TV From Israel. Introducing delegates to the hottest content from the country, she said: “There is an extra complexity… psychological layers that are very interesting.” Israelis also cite the entrepreneurial and innovative nature of their society as key factors in the country’s success. This subject was covered during a separate session entitled Innovation Seminar: From Start-Up To TV. Speakers included Frank Melloul, who recently launched the international news channel i24news from out of Israel. Innovation was also a key theme for Israeli musician, talent show judge and digital entrepreneur Yoni Bloch, who was a speaker at MIPTV’s first-ever Future Of Kids TV Summit. Bloch is CEO and co-founder of Interlude, a digital media company that designs, develops, markets and enables the creation of interactive Avi Armoza: foreign broadcasters can “get quickly into something fully written and developed” videos. Bloch used his session to demonstrate online web application Treehouse, which allows people to tell their own stories via interactive videos. Another Focus On Israel panel, Innovation Seminar: From Start-Up To TV, was moderated by Zig Zag’s Danny Fenton (left) and featured i24 News’ Frank Melloul, SatLink Communications’ Doron Revivi and Screenz Cross Media’s Eli Uzan ‘The 4K market is moving forward’ THE FEEDBACK from MIPTV’s 4K/Ultra-HD sessions, presented in partnership with Sony, was positive, with the general consensus that momentum is really beginning to build for this new era of content production. Chris Forrester, moderator of the 4K track, said: “The Screenings were fantastically well-attended. There’s a real sense that the 4K market is moving forward. Compared to this time last year, costs are down and a wider range of content is being filmed in 4K.” According to Forrester, “Producers and broadcasters are making more content in 4K because they NHK’s Junko Ogawa: finding out “what level of demand there is for 4K” 15 know it won’t be too long before 4K TV sets become affordable. In the meantime, 4K productions can be shown in cinemas and public places like shopping malls.” MIPTV’s 4K Screenings showcased some impressive work from the likes of NHK, the BBC, FIFA, SPI International, Done & Dusted, Colossus Productions and St Thomas Productions. Junko Ogawa, head of NHK’s content marketing division, said her company had produced a lot of 4K content: “We have projects like The Great Barrier Reef, Human Life: Our Amazing Cells and Sakura Housara which are our attempt to find out what level of demand there is for 4K from the market.” miptv iINTERNATIONAL DIGITAL EMMY AWARDS Awards focus on social media THE International Academy of Televison Arts & Sciences announced the winners of the International Digital Emmy Awards at a ceremony on Monday night attended by more than 300 international executives from the television, broadband, and mobile industries. The event was organised in partnership with MIPTV and sponsored by the Bell Fund of Canada. Winners came from Kenya, in the Children & Young People category; Australia, in Fiction; and the UK for the Non-Fiction category. The Pioneer Prize was presented to YouTube, with Alex Carloss, head of entertainment, accepting on behalf of the company. The winner in the Children & Young People category, Shujaaz. FM Reloaded, from Kenya’s Well Told Story, is a multi-media communications platform that inspires young people to become entrepreneurs and raise awareness about challenges they encounter in their daily lives. The project won the category for the second time. Shujaaz.FM, the first instalment, won in 2012. The winner in the Fiction category — #7DaysLater, from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Ludo Studio P/L — is a digital crowd-sourced comedy series that challenges Australia’s most popular YouTube creators. D-Day: As It Happens, made by Windfall Films and Digit London for UK’s Channel 4, is a 24hour event in which viewers follow the lives of seven real people in 1944, across TV, the web, and Twitter, in real time. It won the Non-Fiction category. “This year’s Emmy winners masterfully demonstrate the perfect use of social media to leverage a great story — be it for social change, revisiting history or just pure entertainment,” said Bruce L Paisner, president & CEO of the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Daley Pearson, creator, writer, director, producer, Ludo Studio Esphan Kamau and Rob Burnet of Well Told Story Kim Plowright, executive producer, Windfall Films, and Joe Myerscough Bruce Paisner (far right), president and CEO of the International Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, presented medals and certificates to the 2014 International Digital Emmy Awards nominees. This year’s shortlist includes nominees from 10 countries 16 miptv iLOOKING AHEAD Mexico prepares for MIPCOM honour IN PREPARATION for Mexico taking on the mantle of Country Of Honour at MIPCOM in October, ProMexico, the trade and investment arm of the Mexican Ministry of the Economy, hosted the opening night party for MIPDoc. The event featured a 10-piece mariachi band and a welcome speech by Alejandro Delgado, ProMexico’s chief of the grants division and international relations. “We hope to achieve two main things through Mexico’s turn as the Country Of Honour,” he said. “The first is to build awareness among Mexican producers about the importance of attending events such as MIPCOM, and we are already making significant progress in this area. At MIPTV 2013 there were 11 Mexican companies, and this year that figure has tripled, with 29 companies on the Mexican pavilion plus several of the larger companies with their own stands. And currently we estimate that One of the highlights of the MIPDoc Opening Party was the mariachi band Alejandro Delgado, ProMexico’s chief of the grants division and international relations stages and production facilities that are the equal of anything in Los Angeles and Canada. But most importantly we have the right products for any and every market around the world.” ProMexico also organised Snack And Screen at MIPDoc, in which nine documentaries from Mexican producers were screened. Mexico is home to more than 1,500 audiovisual companies and there will be around 50 companies at MIPCOM.” He said Mexico wants to make the international TV community aware of the depth, quality and richness of Mexican programming, storytelling and creativity. We are strong across every genre, from documentaries and drama to animation, through to post production, plus we have sound Where the industry is going next... ON THE final day of MIPTV, a panel of industry experts summed up some of the key industry trends at the market. Among these was Red Arrow creative partner Omri Marcus who said that six selfies-based formats had been on show at MIPTV this year. Moderator, Reed MIDEM’s James Martin, also picked up on the link between mobile and TV by saying a growing number of formats are using apps in real time, such as buzzing Spanish format The Shower. Lisa Gray, winner of the MIPFormats International Pitch competition earlier this week for The Feds’ Zombie Bootcamp project, stressed the importance of multiplatform presence: “You can’t just come up with a TV format that’s going to be on one screen today.” She also pointed out that such a presence is a great way to getting people to come back to the TV show each week. Strategist Angela Natividad noted that broadcasters now see the difference between mere audience figures and fans’ engagement, two distinct results that need to be analysed separately. She took the example of show Broad City, whose executive producer Amy Poehler was on stage at MIPTV this week: it used to be an online show, but is now broadcast on TV, because Comedy Central saw its potential in Mary-Ann Halford of FTI Consulting, brand consultant Angela Natividad of Darewin, Lisa Gray of The Feds, Omri Marcus of Red Arrow Entertainment and Reed MIDEM’s James Martin 17 occupies third place in the Latin American subscription television market. The country currently produces 100,000 hours of television programming per year, which has been sold to 100 countries and translated into 30 languages. The result is that the country’s media industry exports, which are growing at 8.3% per year, account for 3% of country’s total GDP. terms of engagement. “In order to have your show commissioned, you now have to have social media in its DNA right from the beginning,” she said. A lot of engagement can be achieved via YouTube, as numerous YouTube-related sessions at MIPTV showed, partly because online producers can rapidly adapt their content based on the feedback they get from viewers. Despite this, FTI Consulting’s Mary Ann Halford was not convinced about TV’s ability to learn from YouTube: “The TV industry is still focused on orders, numbers, what the best trends are, and who the best writers are.” All speakers agreed that one of the most notable internet players at MIPTV this year was Vice. But we may only be at the beginning of a new era that will see all kinds of content emerge online, be it user-generated content players like Slow TV, or Dog TV, which announced a deal with Discovery Communications, at MIPTV. miptv iSTARS Meet the A-listers Leading on-screen talent came to MIPTV to promote their newest work. Our cameras were there to met them Kim Cattrall took part in a Fireside Chat at MIPTV to discuss her new project Sensitive Skin, in which she stars and co-executive produces, for Movie Central and The Movie Network. Sensitive Skin is produced by Rhombus Media and Baby Cow Productions and distributed by Tricon Films & Television Writer and director Hugo Blick (left) with Maggie Gyllenhaal and Andrew Buchan, stars of the new political thriller The Honourable Woman, in Cannes with BBC Worldwide Best-selling author Michael Connelly was in town with Red Arrow Entertainment, distributor of new crime series Bosch, based on Connelly’s work. Red Arrow’s Jan Frouman was joined on stage at his MIPTV Media Mastermind Keynote, by Connelly, executive producer Henrik Bastin and actor Titus Welliver, who plays Bosch Cecile Bois, star of French police drama Candice Renoir, was in Cannes with Paris-based Newen Distribution Jerry Springer joined Discovery Networks’ Paul Welling for his MIPDoc Keynote. Springer’s new show Tabloid is destined for Discovery Networks CEEMEA’s newly launched ID Extra channel Comedian and writer Amy Poehler (centre) was at MIPTV for the Comedy Central Broad City Keynote showcase alongside the creators, writers, executive producers and stars of both the original web and TV series, Abbi Jacobson (left) and Ilana Glazer. Poehler is executive producer 18