![]() | |
Country | India |
---|---|
Broadcast area | India Sri Lanka Nepal Bangladesh Maldives |
Headquarters | Mumbai |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Picture format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 576i for the SDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner | JioStar branding licensed from (Paramount Networks EMEAA) |
Sister channels | Colors Infinity MTV VH1 Nickelodeon Sonic |
History | |
Launched | 23 January 2012 |
Closed | 15 March 2025 |
Links | |
Website | comedycentral.in |
Comedy Central is an Indian pay television channel owned by JioStar under a license agreement with Paramount Networks EMEAA. The network carries programs from the American flagship network, along with domestic stand-up comedy and other acquired series. Comedy Central will be discontinued from 15 March 2025. [1]
Comedy Central launched in India on 23 January 2012, the product of a joint venture between Viacom and TV18, promoted with a three-city standup tour by Russell Brand. [2] [3] The network launched in high definition on 1 July 2015.
The channel will cease broadcasting on 15 March 2025.
Comedy Central was prohibited from broadcasting in India for 10 days, from 25 May until 4 June 2012, after an inter-ministerial committee (IMC) set up by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting found that two of its shows that aired in 2012, carried "obscene dialogues and vulgar words" that "offend good taste", violating several provisions of the Cable Television Networks Rules, 1994. The provisions of the law include "no programme should be carried in the cable service which offends against good taste or decency; no programme should be carried which contains anything obscene, defamatory, deliberate, false and suggestive innuendos and half truths". It also states that "no programme should be carried which denigrates women through the depiction in any manner of the figure of woman, her form or body or any part thereof in such a way as to have the effect of being indecent or derogatory to women or is likely to injure the public morality". [4]
Two incidents were cited for the temporary shutdown of the channel; an episode of Stand Up Club where an unnamed stand-up performed an act with "obscene dialogues and vulgar words derogatory to women" aired on 26 May 2012, then a 4 July 2012 airing of PopCorn TV (a program imported from France without dialogue), where one of the crew members was shown standing opposite a wall, in a shop holding false legs in an open and suggestive position with sexual movements. [5] Comedy Central apologised for the broadcast, blaming it on an "unintentional genuine error". [6]
The network appealed the ban in the Delhi High Court, with a judge rejecting it as not an "excessive, harsh or unreasonable" penalty. [4] The network then went dark for the next ten days. The ministry's decision to directly issue a show-cause notice and, later, order a blackout raised concerns in the Indian broadcasting industry about content restrictions. [7] [8] Critics felt that the government had used the vague framing of the Constitution to censor materials for viewers, threatening India's democratic traditions. [9]
Source: [10]