I still find it impressive how much the internet has changed the focus of our communication to real-time, current, relevant information, shrinking the news cycle and creating massive events around happenings that once might have only been a blip on our collective radar. Even if these new real-time events only last a few hours, they [...]
Archives for the ‘forecasting’ Category
Streamys 2010: Making web content is hard. It’s amazing we’re even able to do it. Get over it.
Monday, 12 April 2010
At last year’s Streamy Awards, everything felt new and exciting, if a bit self-serving. The first annual awards were a chance for a burgeoning group of starry-eyed creators to gather in meatspace for the first time and acknowledge that yeah, we’re all doing this, and yeah, we’re onto something here. During the show, the in-jokes [...]
The iPad as interactive storytelling device (with the right software)
Saturday, 20 February 2010
With the hype dying down, TechCrunch recently published a
Broadcast is dead. Long live broadcast!
Thursday, 30 July 2009
With this week’s announcement of NBC falling under the same corporate umbrella as NBCU’s cable empire (Bravo, Syfy, Oxygen, MSNBC, CNBC, the list goes on…), broadcast television is dead. Where there has always been a dotted line between the profits of the NBCU cable empire and the losses of NBC Entertainment, there’s now also a [...]
We Live in Public, but it’s more complicated than that
Friday, 26 June 2009
I had the pleasure of seeing We Live in Public the other night, Ondi TImoner’s well-done and well-received follow-up to DiG!. It follows the life of Josh Harris, a guy you’d think us web series enthusiasts would know more about, considering he founded the very first web TV station, Pseudo, using a lot of money [...]
What NBC’s ratings woes can teach us about TV and web series aesthetics
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
It’s not news that NBC’s ratings are in the toilet, and the vast majority of critics will argue that it’s a result of the network developing and airing shows that have narrow audience appeal. Shows like Kings, 30 Rock, and the recently-premiered The Listener might be hailed by critics and appreciated by TV nerds like [...]
Cold, hard, factual numbers pwn Kevin Wasson, @paidContent
Thursday, 21 May 2009
Kevin Wasson posted yesterday at paidContent about how Hulu and other web services offering television for free are doing more harm than good:
the networks have simply relegated themselves to being content producers. …The value of NBC is not in a show like Heroes or Friends. The value of NBC is the more than 70 years [...]
The next step for web series aesthetics: Creating worlds, not just stories
Monday, 18 May 2009
After a long, incubated gestation period during which audiences have been relatively meager, web series are beginning to come into their own, aesthetically speaking. We have genres and aesthetic styles unique to the medium – the vlog (Gemini Division, LG15), the mini series (Dr. Horrible), the gamer show (The Guild), the fanfic show (My Roommate [...]
When the content moves faster than the deals
Monday, 27 April 2009
No one really knows how to make a viral hit (though my buddy Freddie has some great ideas), but worse, big media Hollywood is ill-equipped to make money off viral hits when they occur.
A disagreement between YouTube and Britain’s ITV, which owns the “Britain’s Got Talent” program where Ms. Boyle appeared, has kept the YouTube [...]
Fred hits a million, apocalypse about 10 years away (for broadcast)
Monday, 13 April 2009
For the last few days I’ve been processing the momentous fact that Fred became the first YouTube channel to have one million subscribers. It’s a milestone that has to be taken seriously, because unlike the number of views a video has, a user has to physically click a few buttons in order to subscribe (and [...]
