The early 1990s in India were defined by economic liberalization. The Gulf War (1990-91) had already exposed Indian audiences to CNN’s 24-hour coverage via satellite dishes. Simultaneously, transnational media corporations like News Corporation (Rupert Murdoch) were eyeing Asia. Zee TV was a joint venture between the Indian business house Essel Group (Dr. Subhash Chandra) and News Corp. By 1993, Zee had broken Doordarshan’s advertising monopoly, capturing nearly 40% of the urban Hindi-speaking market (Mehta, 2008).
Launched in October 1992, Zee TV marked a paradigm shift in Indian media. Prior to its arrival, the Indian television landscape was dominated by the state-owned Doordarshan (DD), which offered a single channel with limited entertainment and heavy state propaganda. Zee TV emerged as the first private Hindi-language general entertainment channel (GEC), breaking the state monopoly. This paper examines Zee TV’s role in catalyzing India’s television revolution, its unique programming strategies, its competition with Star Plus, and its successful expansion into a global diaspora network. zee tv
Zee TV and the Transformation of Indian Broadcasting: From National Disruption to Global Diasporic Hub The early 1990s in India were defined by