Daily Marauder


HULU TUBE by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:34 PM
Filed under: MISC

HULU TUBE

Hulu is finally unboxed. . .even though I don’t know anyone with access to the actual site.  Hulu, the co-partnership site developed by Fox and NBC, has launched in “technical beta” today.  Unlike YouTube, Hulu’s objective is to offer professionally produced content to the masses rather than user-generated content.

Click on the image below for some screengrabs of the new site.  As a reminder, episodes on Hulu are free and ad-supported. 

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Current content: Includes full length current and library TV titles and feature films. 

Electronic sell-thru: Not currently offered by the site but Hulu will get a cut of any DVD’s sold by referral from hulu.com

Access Points: While Hulu is in technical beta, users can access the Hulu channel through AOL’s video site. Users can also enter through a variety of other portals including MSN, Yahoo!, MySpace and Comcast’s FanCast.

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The beta version of the online video site Hulu.com launched today, set up by NBC and Fox to rival the major viral video sites such as YouTube, Veoh and Google.  Available on the site and full shows from NBC and Fox, as well as programs provided by Sony and MGM, including The Office, King of the Hill, The Simpsons, Monk, and older programs such as The Pretender, Picket Fences and Miami Vice.  The site also promises to offer up to ten feature films, among them The Blues Brothers and The Breakfast Club. (http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/419-nbcu-nws-jv-hulu-launches-with-private-beta-open-distribution-sony-mgm-  10/28 http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fc43a4b4-858f-11dc-8170-0000779fd2ac.html 10/29, http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/business/la-fi-hulu29oct29,1,7587581.story 10/29)



BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:32 PM
Filed under: BROADCAST/CABLE

BROADCAST/CABLE

Time Warner’s formal announcement of the Dick Parsons-Jeff Bewkes CEO transition is planned for early November, according to a top company official. Getting the news out of Bewkes’s ascension before third-quarter earnings are released could boost Time Warner’s lethargic stock. (http://www.newsweek.com/id/62216  10/26)

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Jeff Bewkes, Time Warner’s CEO-in-waiting, is described by colleagues as “sharp witted” and as “the first true businessman” to head the company. A Time Warner exec says Bewkes was a success during his years running HBO, because he created a “distribution model that worked.” (http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117974860.html?categoryid=1&cs=1 10/26)

Sumner Redstone plans to meet in the coming weeks with his daughter, Shari, in an attempt to resolve their ongoing feud over the future control of CBS and Viacom. CBS chief Les Moonves recently had his contract rewritten to insulate himself from Shari, should she take over. (http://members.forbes.com/forbes/2007/1112/108.html 10/26)

The stock of IAC/InterActiveCorp, which Barry Diller heads and in which John Malone’s Liberty Media owns a majority stake, is underperforming. And Malone, who refers to their relationship as a “marriage,” appears to want a divorce. But to buy out Liberty, Diller may have to sell off assets. (http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB119344185734273462.html 10/27)

Despite the onslaught of publicity for the nearly 30 new television shows of the fall season, viewers so far prefer old standbys like ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” and “Grey’s Anatomy.” Right now, Disney’s ABC is “in the catbird seat,” with its heavy lineup of returning hits. (http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/fall-tv-lineup-old-favorites/story.aspx?guid=%7B50055F80-A526-4D1D-910A-145577C4B81C%7D 10/28)

Discovery has inked its first syndication deal, selling the domestic rights for “Deadliest Catch” and “American Chopper” to Debmar-Mercury. “American Chopper” is scheduled to be offered to TV stations in the fall of 2008, and “Deadliest Catch” is expected to enter syndication in 2009. (The Hollywood Reporter 10/29) 

U.S. Sens. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) want a congressional hearing to probe cable and telco providers’ “power to discriminate against content.” Also: Comcast staffers who talk about the company’s interfering with file sharing are subject to termination. (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071027/ap_on_hi_te/data_discrimination_senate 10/27, http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20071028-comcast-to-employees-talking-about-blocking-p2p-can-get-you-fired.html 10/28)



ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:31 PM
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

ONLINE/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

 

The social networking site for NBC’s The Office fans saw over 800,000 unique users coming to view some part of the site, according to NBC.com, with over eight million page views and over 100,000 consumers signing up to be a part of the virtual Dunder Mifflin work force. Fans who register are given positions in the other “branches” of Dunder Mifflin and asked to perform weekly tasks and challenges that tie in to each week’s storyline. An “Office” convention was held over the weekend in Scranton, PA to give fans a chance to meet the real stars of the show.

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The NBA is in talks with a number of partners including Turner to find someone to manage its fledgling NBA TV network and digital properties like NBA.com, according to Multichannel News. While bullish about the revenue potential of distributing games digitally, longtime NBA commissioner David Stern has no plans to offer fans an online subscription package of games the way Major League Baseball and the NHL do. Live games are currently available on NBA.com only to cable NBA League Pass subscribers. (http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/nba-in-talks-with-turner-to-run-nba-tv-and-nbacom-no-plans-for-standalone-o  10/28)

As a take off on Barack Obama’s “One Million Strong for Barack” group, Comedy Central’s Stephen T. Colbert launched a Facebook group of his own to garner 1 million supporters to his mock campaign out to register folks to vote. (Over 2,600 have registered to vote from the site so far.) The group acquired 1 million members in just six days while Obama’s profile has managed just over 385,000 in 9 months.

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Facebook’s $15 billion valuation — more than CBS and Viacom combined — puts pressure on CEO Mark Zuckerberg to deliver astronomical growth. Some of the growth is expected to come from the social-networking site’s new advertising strategy, set to be announced on Nov. 6. (http://www.nypost.com/seven/10282007/business/now_zuckerberg_faces_the_press.htm 10/28)

Starz Media’s Manga Entertainment launched a new site dedicated to streaming clips of famous anime titles. Manga.com features ad-supported excerpts organized by genre – “Babes,” “Meca,” “Kill Shots” and “Monster” for instance – and provides product information for the latest anime-themed DVDs, TV shows, movies and game releases. Brightcove is powering video and syndication for the site.

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MySpace and MTV have partnered with politically-themed 10questions.com to enhance its Presidential Dialogue series. The top-voted user generated videos as of 10 am ET this morning submitted at 10questions will be selected and posed to Senator Obama during today’s MySpace/MTV dialogue, which was streamed live today at 1:30 pm ET from the campus of Coe College in Cedar Rapids, IA. The 10questions Presidential Forum is being produced by techPresident in cooperation with The New York Times editorial board, in association with MSNBC.com and sponsorship from a large, cross-partisan group of bloggers, online media and organizations.

Senator Obama was asked for his stance on net neutrality and to my delight, he replied that he is firmly planted behind a net neutral ideology.  I may have to vote for him based on this alone.  OK, yes. . .there are other issues.

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Netflix is considering set-top boxes and other new alternatives for online video distribution, CEO Reed Hastings said. The company is looking at different models and working with a number of unnamed partners to find inexpensive ways to deliver online content to TV viewers. (TheRetailBRIDGE.com 10/29)

Meanwhile mtvU, in partnership with Logo, has created a web-based Wiki site to offer advice on coming out. HowDoISayThis.com was developed and produced by a group of students from UCLA and combines social networking features with a series of short-formed video submissions providing advice and personal experiences on the daunting task. The site is a result of mtvU’s Digital Incubator initiative sponsored by Cisco.

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This November, MTV Networks will start a wave of multi-platform programming centered around song lyrics for its three primary music brands MTV, VH1 and CMT. The idea: to connect lyrics with a variety of shows, specials and multiplayer trivia games including an update of TV warhorse Name That Tune. Online CD-information database Gracenote is supplying the lyrics information. (http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/419-mtvn-broadcast-music-channels-prep-programming-tied-to-lyrics-across-tv  10/28, http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117974887.html?categoryid=16&cs=1 10/28)

 

Writers Guild of America members could go on strike as early as Thursday unless a new deal is reached by Wednesday night. The big fear is that television viewers, without their favorite shows, could migrate to the Web — and not return. The key issue in the talks: new media and the Internet. (http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-strikeblow28oct28,1,4755553.story 10/28) 

With the exception of “Lonelygirl15,” most original Web series are yet to go mainstream. On television, you can flip channels and find a new show worth watching. But on the Internet, channel-flipping can be a chore among Heavy, Bebo, Blip.tv, My Damn Channel and other video sites. (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/newmedia/la-ca-webscout28oct28,1,529263.story 10/28)

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At left, Yuri Baranovsky from the “Arrested Development”-like online comedy series “Break a Leg.” At center, the girls from MySpace’s new original web drama “Roommates,” and at right, Craig Robinson from MSN.com’s “Mr. Robinson’s Driving School.”

 

Six Internet retailers are filing a lawsuit against Queens, N.Y., man Thomas Simon for counterfeiting and selling versions of their products from Second Life, the online virtual world. Some Second Lifers support themselves via the virtual world’s economy, which averages a real $1 million a day. (http://www.nypost.com/seven/10282007/business/now_zuckerberg_faces_the_press.htm 10/28)

Time Warner’s CNN is set to open a news-gathering outpost in Second Life in early November. And unlike news service Reuters, which is embedding a real reporter in the online virtual world, CNN will rely on Second Life “residents” to transmit copy and photos. (http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/news/recent_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003664297 10/29)

The judge in the Google-Viacom piracy lawsuit is criticizing both sides for their “gamesmanship.” Google wants the hearing to be made private out of fear that “confidential” data could be revealed; Viacom refuses to disclose presentation details as part of its litigation strategy. (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/business/news/e3i249adc6d308db50dd551be93f4a430a5 10/27)

Google is confident that its $3.1 billion bid for online advertising firm DoubleClick will win over European and U.S. regulators, according to the Internet giant’s chief economist, Hal Varian. Google and DoubleClick together will help expand the booming Internet ad market, he claims. (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/business/news/e3i249adc6d308db50dd551be93f4a430a5 10/26)

Time Inc.’s Maghound.com will allow subscribers to pay one monthly fee for three subscriptions from a variety of publishers, with the ability to swap one title out for a new one or cancel entirely at any point. Maghound, in development since 2004, isn’t slated to go live until September 2008. (http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=121539 10/26)

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Interactive marketing spending is on track to more than triple over the next 5 years according to a new Forrester Research report, growing 27% annually to reach $61 billion by 2012. Search marketing is expected to triple, display advertising will reach $14 billion by 2012, online video ads will increase dramatically and social media will drive spending in new areas including mobile, game marketing, widgets, podcasts and RSS feeds.



WIRELESS by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:26 PM
Filed under: WIRELESS

WIRELESS

To guarantee the iPhone’s availability for the holidays, Apple has instituted a credit card- or debit-card-only sales policy for its retail stores, and it has restricted sales to two phones per customer. Previously, customers could buy up to five iPhones at a time. (Bloomberg 10/27, CNET 10/27)

Skype and mobile group 3 announced today that their new 3 Skypephone will go on sale in 3′s stores in the U.K. on Friday. The phone will allow users to make free Skype-based calls and IMs. The companies anticipate selling “several hundred thousand” phones before the end of the year. (The Boston Globe/Reuters 10/29)



TECHNOLOGY by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:26 PM
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY

Sharp has released details for its new AQUOS P line of LCD TVs. The 1080p sets will come in 22-, 26- and 32-inch versions and will feature DVI-D and mini D-Sub to support PC connectivity. (EngadgetHD 10/29)

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MISC by Marauder
October 29, 2007, 6:24 PM
Filed under: MISC

MISC

Walgreen plans to put kiosks that can make DVDs of popular movies in drugstore photo departments next year, using a new system that will avoid piracy. The retailer is working with Hollywood studios on the kiosks. Consumers will be able to burn DVDs in about 15 minutes. (http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSN2840912120071029 10/29)




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