HT Media Limited

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HT Media Limited HT Media Limited https://www.indiamart.com/htmedialtd-delhi/ HT Media found its beginning in 1924 when its flagship newspaper, Hindustan Times was inaugurated by Mahatma Gandhi. HT Media (BSE, NSE) has today grown to become one of India's largest media companies.Produced by an editorial team known for ... About Us HT Media found its beginning in 1924 when its flagship newspaper, Hindustan Times was inaugurated by Mahatma Gandhi. HT Media (BSE, NSE) has today grown to become one of India's largest media companies.Produced by an editorial team known for its quality, innovation and integrity, Hindustan Times (English newspaper) and Hindustan (Hindi newspaper through a subsidiary Hindustan Media Ventures Limited),Hindustan Times is the choice for nearly 3.7 million readers across India, who turn to it daily for news, information, analysis and entertainment. Hindustan, the group's Hindi daily, continues to be the second-largest daily in the country with a total readership of 36.6 million,(based 0n Indian Readership Survey (IRS) for the first quarter (Q1) of 2011. Both dailies enjoy a strong brand recognition among readers as well as advertisers.In addition to Hindustan Times, HT Media also publishes a national business newspaper, Mint. Mint is a one-of-its-kind newspaper in the sense that the company has an exclusive agreement with the Wall Street Journal to publish Journal-branded news and information in India. Mint is today the second-largest business newspaper in India with presence in the key markets of Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, Chandigarh, Pune, Kolkata and now Ahmedabad too.HT Media has also made its foray into electronic media. Diversifying its ambit of operations, the company in a consulting partnership with Virgin Radio, has launched the FM radio channel... For more information, please visit https://www.indiamart.com/htmedialtd-delhi/aboutus.html OTHER SERVICES P r o d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Print - English Media Services Print - Hindi Media Services Internet Solution Events & Solutions F a c t s h e e t Nature of Business :Service Provider CONTACT US HT Media Limited Contact Person: Ashok Kumar 18-20,Kasturba Gandhi Marg New Delhi - 110001, Delhi, India https://www.indiamart.com/htmedialtd-delhi/.
Recommended publications
  • MASTERS of JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION Syllabus
    MASTERS OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION Syllabus / Scheme Semester - I S. No. Subjects Theory Practical Internal History And Development of Media 1. 80 - 20 (MJMC 101) Communication : Principles And 80 20 2. 50 Theories (MJMC 102) Media Language : Structure, Style 80 20 3. 50 And Translation (MJMC 103) News Papers & Magazines 80 20 4. - (MJMC 104) 80 20 5. Computer For Media (MJMC 105) 50 LNCT UNIVERSITY, BHOPAL Programme: MJMC Semester – I Session – 2019 - 20 Name of Paper Paper Code Theory History & MJMC 101 L T EST CAT Total Development of Media 3 1 80 20 100 S.No Units / Topic Hours/Week Characteristics of Pre – Independence Press Concept of Journalism and Media (Lecture, expert session) History of Bengal Gazette and Udan Martand. Contribution of pioneer journalists like Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Bhartendu 1 Babu Harish Chandra (Lecture and Case reading) 4 hrs/week Brief Introduction of prominent journalists – Lokmanya Tilak, Mahatma Gandhi Baburao Vishnu Paradhkar, Makhanlal Chaturvedi, Madhav Rao Sapre and Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi. (Lecture and Case reading) Role of press in Freedom Movement. (Lecture and Case reading) Characteristics of Post – Independence Regional Language Press The regional press after Independence : Nature and Growth, Web based regional newspapers. (Lecture and Case reading) Trends in post – independence leading Hindi Language newspapers; Nai Dunia, Dainik Bhaskar Government efforts in growth of press after Independence formation of Press Commission. (Lecture and Case reading) Trends in post – independence leading Hindi Cosmopolitan, Hindi newspapers 2 4 hrs/week and magazines, Navbharat Times, Hindustan, jansatta, Hindi Outlook, Hindi India Today. (Lecture and Case reading) Trends In post- independence/vernacular language newspapers: one each in Malayalam, Telugu, tamil, Kannada, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati and Assamese.
    [Show full text]
  • ! Dil!Maange!More! !! Cultural!Contexts!Of!Hinglish!In!Contemporary!India! ! Francesca!Orsini!(SOAS)! ! This!Is!An!Accepted!Manu
    ! Dil!Maange!more! !! Cultural!contexts!of!Hinglish!in!contemporary!India! ! Francesca!Orsini!(SOAS)! ! This!is!an!Accepted!Manuscript!of!an!article!due!to!be!published!by!Taylor! &!Francis!in!African!Studies![DOI:!10.1080/00020184.2015.1045721].! ! Abstract:!After!over!a!century!of!language!nationalism!and!almost!as!long!a!period! of!intense!competition!and!mutual!contempt,!in!post;liberalisation!and!post;low! caste!assertion!India!the!boundaries!between!English!and!Hindi!have!recently! become!more!porous,!and!the!hold!of!both!“pure!Hindi”!and!“British/pure!English”! has!become!much!more!limited.!English!is!of!course!still!the!language!of!greater! opportunities!in!local!and!global!terms,!and!increasingly!so,!but!as!low;caste! politicization!and!literacy!widen!the!sphere!of!Hindi,!and!the!“new!middle!class”! remains!resolutely!bilingual!in!its!everyday!and!entertainment!practices,!the!relation! between!English!and!Hindi!has!become!more!a!relationship!of!parallel!expansion,! though!still!perceived!in!public!discourse!as!a!zero;sum!game.!! Keywords:!Hinglish,!Hindi,!English,!code;switching,!mixed!language,! advertising!language,!language!of!politics,!media!language! Francesca!Orsini,!Professor!of!Hindi!and!South!Asian!Literature,! SOAS,!University!of!London,!Thornhaugh!Street,!Russell!Square,!London! WC1H!0XG,!Ph.!+442078984242,!email:[email protected]! 1 Dil!Maange!more! !! Cultural!contexts!of!Hinglish!in!contemporary!India! ! Francesca!Orsini!(SOAS)! ! ! ! ! A!vivacious!mixture!of!English!and!native!tongues,!Hinglish!is!a! dialect!pulsating!with!energy!and!invention!that!captures!the!essential!
    [Show full text]
  • Visual Presentation of Election Result in Hindi Newspapers: a Comparative Study
    Journal of Xi'an University of Architecture & Technology Issn No : 1006-7930 Visual Presentation of Election Result in Hindi Newspapers: A Comparative Study SARVESHWARAM KRISHNAM AND CHANDI P. PAINULI* University School of Mass Communication, GGSIP University, New Delhi-110078 *Bhaskar Institute of Mass Communication and Journalism, Bundelkhand University, Jhansi-284127 (UP) INTRODUCTION When electronic media struck the Indian format of journalism, it is believed that the epoch of print media is on the brink of dying. There was a hysterical mass appeal for its brightness and appearance. However, the peak of the electronic media appears to reach its nadir, because this medium is contaminated with sensational and unscrupulous news and content. News analysts and anchors have pushed the electronic media down further. Therefore, there is a clear shift of viewers in the print media from electronic. It seems that the epoch of print media has come to stay. In the last few years there has been a significant increase in the number of newspapers and magazines. The Digital Revolution has enabled print media to enrich its content and visual communication through the use of graphics and high quality pictures. Print Media is now more innovative also due to the challenges raised by electronic media, online newspaper and social media. Print media even more experimental in terms of its content and quality. Print media is using more visuals to tide its reader with their respective newspaper. On any special activity/occasions its presentation and packaging is adopting more innovative ways unlike the publishing days of yore. In the age of social media and mobile, when information is available on reader’s finger movement, it’s very difficult challenge for print media to save itself.
    [Show full text]
  • India's Media Boom: the Good News and The
    Painter India Final_Layout 1 08/08/2013 11:38 Page 1 REUTERS INSTITUTE for the SELECTED RISJ PUBLICATIONS STUDY of Julian Petley (ed) JOURNALISM Media and Public Shaming (published jointly with I.B. Tauris) James Painter and the Bad Good The News Media Boom: India’s Poles Apart: e International Reporting of Climate Scepticism David A. L. Levy and Robert G. Picard (eds) India’s Media Boom: Is there a Better Structure for News Providers? e Potential in Charitable and Trust Ownership The Good News and the Bad CHALLENGES Naomi Sakr Transformations in Egyptian Journalism (published jointly with I.B. Tauris) James Painter Edited by James Painter Climate Change in the Media: Reporting Risk and Uncertainty (published jointly with I.B. Tauris) Suzanne Franks Women and Journalism (published jointly with I.B. Tauris) Nick Fraser Why Documentaries Matter Nicola Bruno and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen Survival is Success: Journalistic Online Start-ups in Western Europe Paolo Mancini Between Commodification and Lifestyle Politics: Does Silvio Berlusconi Provide a New Model of Politics for the 21st Century? Richard Sambrook Are Foreign Correspondents Redundant? e Changing Face of International News James Painter Summoned by Science: Reporting Climate Change at Copenhagen and Beyond John Kelly Red Kayaks and Hidden Gold: e Rise, Challenges and Value of Citizen Journalism Painter James by Edited Stephen Whittle and Glenda Cooper Privacy, Probity, and Public Interest Stephen Coleman, Scott Anthony, and David E Morrison Public Trust in the News: A Constructivist
    [Show full text]
  • Status of Women Journalists in the Print Media
    CHAPTER-1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY STATUS OF WOMEN JOURNALISTS IN THE PRINT MEDIA By Pamela Bhagat INTRODUCTION The project on the Status of Women Journalists in the Print Media was initiated by the National Commission for Women to look into issues affecting the role of women working in the print media. As part of a broader study on working women in India, it was executed by the Press Institute of India (PII), through empirical data that was collected from almost all the States and Union Territories of the country. The objective of the research was to examine the problems and issues confronting women working in the media, to gauge the extent of direct and indirect discrimination in the workplace and to identify contemporary issues that need to be addressed. METHODOLOGY The research was coordinated by me with the support of media representatives from various regions - Linda Chhakchhuak from Shillong, Rajashri Dasgupta from Calcutta, Sushmita Malaviya from Bhopal, R. Akhileshwari from Hyderabad and Surekha Sule from Mumbai - who together formed a National Study Group. The National Study Group assisted with the design and implementation of the 20-page questionnaire. Usha Rai, Deputy Director, Press Institute of India, guided and steered the group. A brain storming session with a focus group of women journalists in Delhi preceded the study, to ensure that the questionnaire was suitable and that critical aspects were addressed. The questionnaire was then pilot tested to iron out discrepancies and ambiguities. Experiences from the field surveys are outlined later in the report. SAMPLING AND RESPONSE RATE A total of 410 women working in the print media responded.
    [Show full text]
  • Scheme of Farmers' Training & Education
    AD tir EDUGAT ON THE DEVELOPMENT SCHEMES ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ifiaiB iB m iiii Adult Education Components Innni The Development Schemes Of Government of India Published by : Director, Directorate of Adult Education Ministry of Education & Culture Govt, of India Block No. 10, Jam nagar H ouse Shahjahan Road New Delhi-110011 Printed at Ajanta Offset & Packagings Limited Delhi 110052 © Directorate of Adult Education Ministry of Education — 1984 5000 copies NIEPA G0864 G Preface When this Compendium was first published six years ago, it was a maiden effort to identify and to put together schemes and programmes at the national level of different Departments/Mi­ nistries, having non-formal component, which could be used by the planners in taking a wide angle view of non-formal adult edu­ cation and for initiating a process of inter-ministerial collabora­ tion. We also felt that by this initiative, it would be possible to di­ spel the common impression that education in the country was the exclusive concern and responsibility of the Ministry/De­ partments of Education. Since then, very luckily, our view-point that extension programmes under various development pro­ grammes do have the tremendous potential for non-formal adult education, has found greater acceptance, and the approach pap- #r to this Seventh Five-Year Plan now clearly states “all idevelopmental programmes, especially those affecting the rural and urban poor will be required to include a component of adult education and literacy aimed at the needs of the beneficiaries of those development programmes”. Therefore, it was but appro­ priate that we update this Compendium, before the launching of the Seventh Five-Year Plan.
    [Show full text]
  • Regionalization and Institutionalization: Dimensions of MultiLevel Party System Change in India
    Regionalization and Institutionalization: Dimensions of Multi-level Party System Change in India Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde der Fakultät für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften der Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg vorgelegt von Malte Pehl, M.A. Geboren in Stade Erstgutachter: Prof. Subrata K. Mitra, Ph.D. (Rochester, U.S.A.) Zweitgutachter: Prof. Dr. Aurel Croissant Heidelberg, 2010 © Malte Pehl DEDICATIO This work is dedicated to my parents, Klaus-Dieter and Elisabeth Pehl without whose encouragement, support and love it would have never been started. And it is dedicated to my wife Aruni whose belief, devotion and love saw it through to its completion. 2 ACKOWLEDGEMETS First of all, I would like to thank to my advisor, Professor Subrata Mitra whose scholarship first sparked my interest in pursuing a doctorate and in Indian politics. His support, example and his intellectual guidance have since then helped me to better understand politics and to hopefully become a better scholar in the process. Each of these qualities is only surpassed by his friendship and loyalty as a mentor for which I am equally grateful. I would also like to thank my second reader, Professor Aurel Croissant whose teaching and work on comparative and Asian politics I benefitted from tremendously since I first arrived in Heidelberg and whose writings have since then continuously motivated me to become a better writer myself. A debt of gratitude is also owed to Professors Russell Dalton and Bernard Grofman who were kind enough to offer me the hospitality of the Center for the Study of Democracy at the University of California, Irvine and a chance to engage in inspiring conversations on elections, parties and party systems and to teach comparative politics during two stays there in the course of my doctoral studies.
    [Show full text]
  • Guns and Protests: Media Coverage of the Conflicts in the Indian State of Chhattisgarh
    Reuters Institute Fellowship Paper University of Oxford Guns and Protests: Media coverage of the conflicts in the Indian state of Chhattisgarh By Supriya Sharma Michaelmas and Hilary terms 2012 Sponsor: Thomson Reuters Foundation 1 Table of Contents Executive Summary 3 Introduction 4-8 Chapter One – India: The Growth Faultlines 9-13 Chapter Two – India’s Red Corridor 14-18 Chapter Three – Chhattisgarh: A State in Conflict 19-27 Chapter Four – Chhattisgarh: Conflicts in the Press 28-36 Chapter Five – What the Scholars say 37-40 Chapter Six – Analysing Content 41-47 Chapter Seven – What the Journalists Say 48-51 Chapter Eight – Democracy and Dissent 52-53 Acknowledgements 54 Appendix 55-61 Bibliography 63-71 2 Executive Summary India has witnessed high rates of economic growth in recent years and some are heralding it as a future global superpower. But this view glosses over the fact that growth in India exists in tension with equity and social justice, specially in the mineral-rich central and eastern states, where the land of peasant communities including adivasis or indigenous people, is being acquired for mining and energy projects. The resultant tensions in the region are manifested as both armed insurgency and peaceful protests. This study focuses on the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh, which accounts for nearly one-third of the deaths in the Maoist insurgency over the last decade, and holds nearly one-fifth of India’s coal and iron ore reserves. While the common view merges the armed conflict in the state with the resource conflict, this study points out that the geographical areas of the two conflicts do not overlap.
    [Show full text]
  • Covid 19 Impact on Hindi Print Media of Jammu Division
    Quest Journals Journal of Research in Humanities and Social Science Volume 8 ~ Issue 12 (2020)pp: 38-51 ISSN(Online):2321-9467 www.questjournals.org Research Paper Covid 19 Impact on Hindi Print Media of Jammu Division Dr.Sandhya Pathania1, Sheelvanti Akhawat2 1Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Government Meera Girls College Udaipur(Rajasthan) 2Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, U.S.Ostwal Science,Arts &Commerce College Mangalwad,Chittaurgarh(Raj). Corresponding Author: Sheelvanti Akhawat ABSTRACT: The world noticed Coronavirus/COVID 19 on December 2019 with its advent in China. The virus practically took the world by surprise, a ghastly one. The 28 States and 8 Union Territories of India have been no exception. The Socio-Economic Impact on Indians have been panic, fear and terror. These have resulted in a government imposed ‘Infrastructural lockdown’ leading to core motivation changes and thereby behavioural shift. Social impact has been seen on various levels political, educational, religious, on health, psychological because of inequality because of economic impact for which lockdown, induced market, instability has been responsible that led to sharp rise in unemployment, cost cutting, stress on supply chains, collapse of tourism and hospitality industry, reduced consumer activity along market, plunge in fuel consumption, slashed interest rates of banks that led to decrease in government income. All these impacts are experienced by Hindi Print Media of Jammu division. Methodology: This paper mainly deals with the leading three Hindi newspapers of Jammu Province namely- Amar Ujala,PunjabKesari and Dainik Jagran ,their market share before lockdown and current position of PO i.e. print order during the pandemic.
    [Show full text]
  • Getting Hindi and English Journalism on the Same Page Revati Prasad
    No More English Medium-Hindi Medium: Getting Hindi and English Journalism on the Same Page Revati Prasad To cite this version: Revati Prasad. No More English Medium-Hindi Medium: Getting Hindi and English Journalism on the Same Page. Media Theory, Media Theory, 2018, Standard Issue, 2 (2), pp.305-319. hal-02047851 HAL Id: hal-02047851 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02047851 Submitted on 25 Feb 2019 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivatives| 4.0 International License Special Section: Revolting Media No More English Medium- Media Theory Vol. 2 | No. 2 | 305-319 © The Author(s) 2018 Hindi Medium: CC-BY-NC-ND http://mediatheoryjournal.org/ Getting Hindi and English Journalism on the Same Page REVATI PRASAD University of Pennsylvania, USA Abstract English-language media in India retains and exercises an outsized power that not only carries forward a colonial legacy, but also contributes to a balkanized media sphere. This manifesto argues for and imagines a way out of the entrenched language divides within Indian media, calling for at the very least a merger of English and Hindi language news media online.
    [Show full text]
  • Role of Media in Alleviation of Poverty in India Prof
    Role of Media in Alleviation of Poverty in India Prof. B S Nigam* Dr. M B Paliwal** The role of media in various sectors of the society has been a matter of debate among intellegenita. Media has played its role in many sectors satisfactorily but its role in alleviation of poverty is debateable. This paper suggests a blue print for the media to tackle this problem. Keywords: Media, Society, Alleviation of poverty, Social sectors. 1. Introduction There has been a debate among the intelligentsia about the role of the media in various sector of the society. The media has rightly played its role too with satisfactory performances. In case of awareness of the values of the democracy specially the voting right, the media has played outstanding role. But certain areas still await the media intervention and alleviation of the poverty of the people of India is one such. Justice Katju, the Chairman of the Press Council of India even visiting his new office even for a day started attack on the media which was criticized by the media world all over the country. N K Singh noted journalist came out with strong words against the statement of the chairman of the Press Council of India. The practice has been since the inception of the media watchdog. Well the battle may be for the supremacy of the two distinguished authorities, but the fact remains that the role of the media is under active consideration by the society and the government together. The Anna movement has seen how the media can create awareness in the public without sponsorship from any quarter.
    [Show full text]
  • Media Criticism by Right-Wing Alternative Media in India
    ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: ANTI-MEDIA POPULISM: MEDIA CRITICISM BY RIGHT-WING ALTERNATIVE MEDIA IN INDIA Prashanth Bhat, Degree (Doctor of Philosophy), 2020 Dissertation directed by: Dr. Kalyani Chadha, Philip Merrill College of Journalism This study explores the anti-media populist sentiments expressed by emerging right- wing alternative news media in India. News websites, television network, and the 'online digital work' done by right-wing supporters—are the key constituent elements of India's burgeoning right-wing news sector. The articulation of negative sentiments about the news media's role in society is a central feature of these right-wing news outlets. What dominant criticisms do the right-wing alternative websites make against the mainstream press? How does the right-wing television express its criticism of the mainstream media? What do online Hindu nationalists say about their plausible association with the right-wing alternative news outlets, including websites and television? How do online Hindu nationalists plan to counter mainstream media's 'liberal' bias? Answering these questions contributes to the understanding of the expressions of media distrust articulated by the Hindu nationalists associated with the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in India. Through a thematic analysis of 545 media-related articles published on right-wing portals, Swarajya.com and OpIndia.com, an ethnographic qualitative content analysis of media-related debates aired on the right-wing television network, Republic TV, and in-depth interviews with 24 Hindu nationalists active on Twitter, this dissertation examines the discursive strategies employed by right-wing actors in India to discredit and undermine professional journalism. This study found several dominant themes of media criticisms articulated by right- wing alternative news outlets.
    [Show full text]