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- TELEVISION, Page 92Asia's Hot New STAR
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- The BBC takes aim at CNN on a satellite-TV service
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- "Ladies and gentlemen of Asia, let's rock 'n' roll!" That
- clarion call is changing the face of television from Kuwait to
- Taiwan. It comes from STAR-TV, the first pan-Asian satellite TV
- service, launched last April by Hong Kong billionaire Li
- Kashing. STAR currently beams four channels of programming to
- 38 countries across the world's most populous region. One
- channel is an Asianized MTV; the others are devoted to sports,
- entertainment and Chinese-language fare.
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- Last week, in a preview of its most ambitious venture yet,
- STAR began offering hourly news reports from the BBC. In
- November those newscasts will become the centerpiece for a
- 24-hour news channel, run by the BBC World Service. STAR's
- all-news service, like its other channels, will be available
- free (in contrast to CNN, its chief rival); the operation is
- trying to support itself entirely from advertising.
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- Because STAR can be seen only by people who have their own
- satellite dishes (or a cable or microwave hookup linked with a
- dish), it is available primarily to the affluent. About half a
- million households are now able to receive the service, a number
- expected to grow to 4 1/2 million by 1993. But several Asian
- governments have launched campaigns to prevent STAR from
- introducing foreign programming and ideas to people long
- insulated by state-run TV. The government of Malaysia has
- announced a ban on private dishes, to protect its large Muslim
- population from contagion by "undesirable values." A committee
- appointed by the government of India argued early this year that
- satellite TV exposes people to "foreign perceptions and alien
- values." Still, STAR has already overtaken CNN as India's
- foreign-programming source of choice.
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