Urdu 1
Appearance
Urdu 1
| Golle imaaɗe | 2012 |
|---|---|
| Lesdi | Pakistan |
| Owned by | Media Alliance |
| Headquarters location | Dubai |
| Email address | mailto:info@urdu1.tv |
| Laawol ngol laamu anndani | https://www.urdu1.tv/ |
Urdu 1 (Urdu: اردو 1) ko lowre wellitaare ɗemngal Urdu, jooɗiiɗo to Dubaï, Emiraaji Arab Dentuɗi. Ina yaltina dramaaji janani ɗi mbiyatee e ɗemngal Urdu.
Tariya
Urdu 1 sosaa ko e hitaande 2012 ngam yaltinde teleeji janani ɗi mbiyaten e ɗemngal Urdu. Nde fuɗɗii jarribaade jaayndeeji ñalnde 12 suwee 2012, nde fuɗɗii yaltinde jaayndeeji keewɗi ñalnde 23 suwee 2012. Nde huutoriima mbaadiiji winndereeji, ko wayi no MasterChef, ngam heɗtiiɓe nokkuuji ɗii.[1][2][3][4]
Tuugnorgal
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- ↑ Sulehria, Farooq (2018). Media Imperialism in India and Pakistan. Routledge. p. 138. ISBN 9781351399388.
The third and most successful model, from the viewpoint of popularity as well as economy, has been Urdu 1. Based in Dubai, Urdu 1 has landing rights with a touch of ‘glocalisation.’ It airs foreign soap operas dubbed in the Urdu language. Some media sources claim that Urdu 1 is a front organisation for News Corporation, others, for instance Pakistan Broadcasters Association, informed a commission constituted by the country’s Supreme Court that Indians own it (PMCR, 2013). The latter claim is, however, unsubstantiated according to journalists interviewed for this research.
- ↑ InpaperMagazine, From (13 January 2013). "Faraz Ansari, CEO of Urdu1, talks about Ishq-e-Memnu, protests against foreign dubbed content and his plans of taking Pakistani programmes to channels abroad". Dawn.
- ↑ "Turkish TV serials captivate Pakistani viewers". Anadolu Agency.
- ↑ "How Are International Regulations Impacting Media and Streaming Platforms Globally?". Paley Center for Media. 11 May 2021.