Filed under: MISC
Happy Thankgiving all! In celebration of turkey time, I send you all a little e-card love from Hoops & Yo Yo. Click the image above to open. Daily Marauder will be on hiatus until next Monday. Turkey on y’all.
Filed under: MISC
NOV 21: NO MUSIC DAY
Today is No Music Day. That’s right, NO Music Day: the brain child of writer, thinker, conceptual artist and former member of the early-90’s band KLF, Bill Drummond. Today we are asked to bravely go where no wo-man has gone before and leave our iPods at home. [gasp] What will we New Yorkers do while forced to sit next to each other on the subway? We may just have to. . .[double gasp]. . .have a conversation.
Drummond picked Nov. 21 in direct opposition to the following day (Nov. 22), the feast of St. Cecilia, the patron saint of music. Why all the music hatin’? Apparently, Drummond was fed up with the commercialization of popular music best demonstrated by the dissemination of Muzak. According to the Royal National Institute for the Deaf, the average shop clerk hears ‘Jingle Bells’ 300 times in the few days proceeding Christmas. As a proud owner of the Time Life Christmas collection on CD, this doesn’t bother me at all. I do, however, understand the argument. At which point, is music dissemination infringing on our personal right to silence?
In two years, Drummond hopes to convince Apple to shut down iTunes on No Music Day. Good luck with that man.
Filed under: BROADCAST/CABLE
BROADCAST/CABLE
It turns out that ABC decided to pay their writers for work done for the web before the strike began, according to The New York Times. Lost’s writing crew was paid around $800 an episode for the companion digital series Missing Pieces and promised a 1.2% – 2% residual of studio licensing fees. The backstory shorts have been premiering on Verizon’s VCast service before streaming on ABC.com. The paper contrasts the deal with NBC’s practice of not paying writers of The Office extra for their work on The Accountants, a web series also monetized by pre-roll ads. On one hand, the ABC deal is being held up as model for future agreements. On the other hand, the terms of the deal specifically state it does not set a precedent to be cited in future negotiations, underlying how uncertain networks remain in committing revenue points to new platforms.
Showtime’s “Dexter” attracted 1.23 million viewers Sunday, the show’s largest single-episode audience. The network’s “Brotherhood” also fared well during the evening, with 651,000 viewers, according to Nielsen Media Research. (Broadcasting & Cable 11/20)
NBC completed its $875 million acquisition of Oxygen Media and announced that Bravo President Lauren Zalaznick will oversee the brand. Oxygen becomes part of the NBC Universal Cable group led by Universal Television Group President Jeff Gaspin, to whom Laruen reports. She will also continue to serve as Chair of NBCU’s Green Council. (http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/419-nbcu-acquisition-of-oxygen-media-closes 11/20, http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117976322.html?categoryid=14&cs=1 11/20)
Verizon will increase the monthly price of its FiOS TV Premier by 12%, from $42.99 to $47.99, for customers who will subscribe after Jan. 20, 2008. The rate increase suggests that the telco is confident “in the strength of their product offering and their ability to gain share even without aggressive discounting,” Sanford Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett said. It also implies that “the risk of a price war in the pay TV market is likely lower than investors expect,” Moffett added. (Multichannel News 11/20)
The rationale for relaxing U.S. media ownership rules “seems to be increasingly evident,” says Barrington Research analyst James Goss, with the difficulties media companies are having in generating revenue streams “as the Googles of the world continue to siphon off their advertising.” (http://www.thestreet.com/s/fcc-creates-dimmer-picture-for-tv-stocks/newsanalysis/business-technology/10391150.html 11/21)
The Directors Guild of America is entering tentative three-year labor agreement with ABC, CBS and NBC calling for annual wage increases for television news and sports directors and some staff. Negotiations for Writers Guild of America writers are scheduled to resume on Nov. 26. (http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/television/news/e3i6ed02f115f5e252e554d0374e0111869 11/20)
The offices of Big Media execs reportedly are being inundated with phone calls, faxes and emails from television fans seeking an end to the Hollywood writers strike. Also: Blogs, social-networking sites and online video are giving striking writers a cyberspace soapbox. (http://www.deadlinehollywooddaily.com/the-secret-to-getting-moguls-to-settle 11/20, http://www.nypost.com/seven/11212007/business/cyber_strikers_566930.htm 11/21)
The NFL Network, looking to stitch together major carriage deals with the top cable companies, said that the National Footbal League would sell equity positions in the channel to certain distributors. At issue is whether cable companies offer the channel on basic cable tiers, which attract more eyeballs, or more expensive premium tiers. (Variety 11/20)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Google may climb to $900 in the next year, according to Credit Suisse Group, which says the Internet giant will expand its share of the market for mobile device and Web display advertising. The new estimate represents a 44% gain. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aoUDoVFbWTZs 11/20)
Eric Schmidt, chief executive officer of Google Inc., listens to a question during a news conference at the Seoul Digital Forum 2007 in Seoul, South Korea, on May 30, 2007. Photographer: Seokyong Lee/Bloomberg News
(Below) COMPLETELY agree with this argument by MoveOn. I can change my security options to block networks or particular users but advertisers have free reign? I can opt out of telemarketing messages but not this? Not cool.
Liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org is launching a campaign against Facebook, contending that the social network violates users’ privacy by requiring them to opt out rather than voluntarily opt in its new advertising program. The new feature exists only to “micro-target users with ads.” (http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-facebook21nov21,1,2142037.story?ctrack=1&cset=true 11/21)
HBO Video has struck a partnership with ad firm Monster Media and Virgin Megastore for an interactive ad campaign in the music and DVD retailer’s 11 locations nationwide. The initiative features HBO Video’s top DVD titles and will run through the end of the year. (American City Business Journals/Orlando, Fla. 11/20)
The writing’s on the wall for music DRM – now even the folk who sell music (the UK’s Entertainment Retailers Association) are calling on the industry to drop the protection. Director-general Kim Bayley said labels have been “quick to complain” that the holy grail of digital offsetting physical sales has not yet been met. But clumsy protection “might have added to the slow take-up of legal digital services”, she told FT.com, observing “just 150 million tracks” have been sold digitally in the UK in the last three years. “Sadly, that amounts to an average of less than one £0.79 ($1.61) per download per head of population per year. At the moment, [DRM] just puts consumers off.” (http://www.paidcontent.org/entry/419-uk-music-retailers-to-labels-drop-drm-by-christmas 11/20)
Online advertising spending at U.S. newspapers is rising but still fails to offset a decline in print ad spending, according to new study from the Newspaper Association of America. The hardest-hit newspaper ad sector is classified ads. (http://www.reuters.com/article/mediaNews/idUSN2061927620071120 11/20)
Filed under: WIRELESS
WIRELESS
Zinio, a digital distribution platform for magazines and books, is introducing a Zinio Mobile Newsstand for Apple’s iPhone and iPod Touch. The service allows mobile users to access magazines that replicate the print version. The visuals, however, are augmented by interactivity. (http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=71262 11/20)
Filed under: GAMING
GAMING
MTV’s new “Rock Band” video game is the headline act in the Viacom unit’s plan to spend more than $500 million on games over the next two years as it expands beyond television. “Rock Band,” retailing for $170, includes controllers shaped like a guitar, drum set and microphone. (http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSN2062306020071121 11/21)
Rock Band
Disney plans to make Prague its largest European site for the development of games played on mobile phones and the Internet, the company says. An existing games development studio in the Czech capital will be expanded. Prague has “a large pool of young game developers.” (http://www.smartmoney.com/bn/ON/index.cfm?story=ON-20071121-000594-0915 11/21)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY
TECHNOLOGY
Haier America introduced a new Wi-Fi portable media player that can access Real Network’s Rhapsody music service, AOL video and other digital content from any Wi-Fi hotspot. The Ibiza Rhapsody unit sells for $229 to $329 depending on the size of the hard drive, shipping with a 30-day free trial for the Rhapsody subscription service and 25 free a la carte downloads.










