"Media was serendipity to me. I don't think I had a clear vision that I wanted to be in the media and entertainment segment. I was clear that I wanted to be an entrepreneur," he said speaking at the annual Tiecon here.
Screwvala sold his stake in UTV to the American entertainment major Walt Disney in a Rs 2,000-crore deal in 2011, and donned multiple hats, including being a venture capital investor, owning a Kabaddi team.
After running it for six years, he chanced upon the availability of toothbrush making machines in Britain and imported them to India.
He then entered the media world with a production house under the brand name UTV, which saw many setbacks. Screwvala recollected how the usage of a phrase in a show made for public broadcaster Doordarshan offended the parliamentarians.
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"There is a Telegraph Act, there's a Copyright Act, there is now Trai. In all these, cable TV is the only arm that is not defined, and it is not a legal entity and we still call it an industry here," he wondered.
He said consumers should ideally be paying Rs 400 per month for the content for which they are paying only Rs 100, which compresses the industry's revenues.
"We don't really need foreigners to come here and tell us how to be philanthropic. I think we are an extremely giving country," he said.