Filed under: BROADCAST/CABLE | Tags: American League Championship Series, Baseball, Boston Red Sox, Major League Baseball, Rob Riggle, Sports, Tampa Bay Rays, World Series
TBS hit a home run Sunday night as Game 7 of the American League Championship Series, with the Tampa Bay Rays beating the Boston Red Sox and going to the World Series, attracted 13.4 million total viewers. This game became the most-watched regular or postseason MLB game this year as well as in cable’s history. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Rob Riggle, correspondent on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show With Jon Stewart made a talent holding agreement with CBS and CBS Paramount Network Television to create and star in a half-hour comedy, according to Variety. Riggle has not yet committed to a storyline for his show although he may base it on his own background as a major in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Comcast-owned FearNet on Nov. 6 will premiere “The Dark Path Chronicles,” a series about a young vampire who explores parallel realities with a gal pal. The series is expected to have a strong musical element and was created by music video director Mary Lambert, who has worked with Madonna and Janet Jackson. Reuters/The Hollywood Reporter (10/21)
MSNBC Films will premiere on Oct. 29 its first theatrical release, “Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father.” The film, about the custody battle that ensues after the murder of a Pennsylvania doctor, will debut in Manhattan and then be rolled out to select markets, including Los Angeles, Chicago and Santa Fe, N.M. Variety (10/20)
BBC is gearing up to broadcast our November 4 presidential election night to more than 200 countries worldwide. Broadcasting live from its Washington, D.C. bureau, BBC will present U.S. Election Night on BBC America and BBC World News with limited commercial breaks starting at 6p. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Comcast, the country’s largest cable TV provider, will continue to look for new ways to add original content to its video-on-demand menu, including more aggressively seeking out co-production deals with the broadcast networks, according to Steve Burke, the company’s chief operating officer. “We’re very interested as a company and as an industry in future product that becomes available for the VOD platform,” he said. Broadcasting & Cable (10/20)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Blu-Ray, Blu-ray Disc, Digital rights management, DVD, MP3, Net income, Netflix, Wal-Mart
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Netflix said new net subscriptions declined 30% in October compared with a year ago and — despite reporting a 30% increase in net income for the quarter — again cut its fourth-quarter estimates for adding new customers and profits. The company, which also stated that 500,000 of its 8.7 million subscribers will be Blu-ray customers in the fourth quarter, restated its outlook downward for the second time in two weeks. The Wall Street Journal/Dow Jones Newswires (10/21) , Reuters (10/20)
It looks like Walmart has soft-launched it’s DRM-free MP3 store
class=”snap_preview_icon”> . The company decided to ditch its DRM approach
, but then got into hot water with consumers once they figured out that Walmart was going to be taking down the servers they used to manage all the DRM rights. No servers, meant that they wouldn’t be able to listen to the songs they had legally purchased. So Walmart had to reverse course
class=”snap_preview_icon”> and is now keeping those servers up. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/21/screenshots-of-walmarts-new-mp3-only-store 10/21)
Yahoo just announced third quarter earnings. revenues were flat, up one percent to $1.79 billion. The company met consensus earnings estimates of $0.09 a share. CEO Jerry Yang on the conference call says that yahoo will lay off “at least 10 percent by year end.” That’s 1,500 people, as expected. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/21/yahoo-to-cut-headcount-at-least-10-percent-possibly-more-to-come-next-year 10/21)
(Below) So much online video, so little time. While content developers are thinking about how to make yet another online serial, perhaps someone should also be investing time into how to engage audiences to the point where they are watching multiple episodes. Appointment viewing is relatively lost on the online content crowd. Apart from subscribing to a newsletter, is there a better way to promote viewing habits?
Fox TV Studios announced its first homegrown digital serial: a 13-episode web series called The Skinny: Fat-Free News, currently available on MySpaceTV and at Hulu.com. (Not to be confused with celeb dieting blog The Skinny Website.) The Skinny will also be available across multiple video aggregation sites including YouTube, Metacafe, Dailymotion and Blip.tv, as well as social networking site Facebook.com. The Skinny is the result of a think-tank of creative types encouraged to develop original content for the web, henceforth to be known as 15 Gigs. (Cynopsis 10/21)
(Below) The social rooms are live now and frankly bring me back to an antique time where message boards were popular and Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a phenomenon. The format and user experience are hardly engaging. TV widget yes. Social room no.
Taking a page from MTV and others, CBS Interactive announced it will provide social viewing rooms on CBS.com beginning Wednesday where fans can gather to watch primetime, daytime and CBS classic shows while chatting, participating in polls and otherwise interact with the content. Intel is sponsoring the feature. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Current signed a deal to syndicate comedic video produced by stand-up comedy producer RooftopComedy on its linear network and via Current.com. Current TV plans to feature a weekly show featuring stand-up performances from around the U.S. with a focus on topical gags. (Cynopsis 10/21)
From the creators of The Onion and The A.V. Club comes Decider.com. No, it’s not another political site. It’s a localized blog profiling events, musical gigs, restaurants and bars, designed to be powered by users. The site launched with versions for Chicago and Madison, WI. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Time Warner Cable introduced FameStar, a new online mashup tool powered by Oddcast allowing users to create their own mock celebrity exposes of themselves. The interface calls for the subject to upload their photo, decide on a story arch then add dialogue. Your creation can be shared with friends via integrations with a variety of social networking sites. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Aiming to expand its interactive-TV capabilities, the Comcast Media Center has inked a deal with itaas to offer advanced ITV services to small and midsize cable providers. The deal, whose first products are expected to hit the market in the middle of next year, involves services built around the Enhanced TV Binary Interchange Format as well as the tru2way platform. Light Reading (10/20)
A new survey from D S Simon Productions reports that 65% of the Web sites owned by media companies now use online video, and the vast majority of those — 77% — predict that the trend will increase during the next year. The study also showed that 45% of TV stations and 67% of radio stations use video from outside sources on their sites. MediaPost Communications (10/20)
The race for the White House has raised all boats in the online political publishing realm increasing traffic by a factor of three in some cases, notes Mediaweek in a roundup of Nielsen Online data:
- MSNBC.com increased its uniques by 13 million since last Sept. now counting 43.2 million
- Yahoo News traffic is up 5.7 million uniques during same period to 38 million
- CNN is up 6.4 million uniques to 37 million
- ABCNews.com increased by 8 million uniques to 17.2 million
- FoxNews.com nearly doubled its base to 14.9 million uniques
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: Bluetooth, Jamba, Mauro Montanaro, Mobile phone, News Corporation, Symbian OS, VeriSign, Wi-Fi
Samsung‘s newest smartphone is a Symbian-powered device from which users can hit dedicated hot keys to download from the massive S60 library, the company said Monday. The Samsung i7110 features 3G connectivity, assisted GPS, Wi-Fi, a 5-megapixel camera, Bluetooth in a slim, candy-bar shaped design. InformationWeek (10/20)
Following the buyout of the 49% of mobile content company Jamba it didn’t’ already own, News Corp. announced a reorganization of the Fox Mobile Group to be headed by former Jamba CEO Mauro Montanaro. FMG also announced an expansion into the Asia Pacific region with a new regional office in Singapore. (Cynopsis 10/21)
Filed under: GAMING | Tags: Amazon, Amazon.com, Casual game, Games, Reflexive Entertainment, Video game, Wall Street Journal, Website
Reflexive Entertainment
CEO Lars Brubaker has announced
that Amazon has agreed to acquire the company he co-founded. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/21/amazon-snaps-up-video-game-provider-reflexive 10/21)
Japan‘s DeNA has plans to take its hugely popular cell phone-based, downloadable-gaming service to the U.S. next year. At the end of last month, the company’s advertising-supported flagship Web site had 11 million members. Last month, it launched MobMingle, an English-language test site that DeNA hopes will serve as a precursor to a full-blown gaming service. The Wall Street Journal (10/21)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: Apple, iPhone, iPod, Mac, Microsoft, Mobile phone, Netflix, Steve Jobs
TECHNOLOGY
Hot off of Apple’s Q4 earnings call comes a bit of iPhone news: Alongside 2.6 million Macs and 11 million iPods, Apple managed to sell 6,892,000 iPhones in the fourth fiscal quarter of 2008. In contrast, they sold just 1,119,000 iPhones in fiscal Q4 of 2007. (http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2008/10/21/apple-sells-69-million-iphones-in-q4-of-2008 10/21)
Although radio listening reportedly is up 11% among the 14 to 24 set, the medium’s ad sales were down 6.5% in the first two quarters of 2008, according to this article. The segment is trying to rebuild its ad base by claiming its place on MP3 players and cell phones through FM song-tagging; its first such deal, with Microsoft‘s Zune, offers users of the service access to 450 stations. Advertising Age (10/20)
Analysts say sales of Blu-ray players could be curtailed because economically pinched holiday shoppers will likely opt for less expensive gadgets. “If you can get movies over the wire on demand and have an entire library at your disposal on the screen a la Netflix, that’s the way you’re going to go,” said analyst Roger Kay, president of Endpoint Technologies Associates. San Francisco Chronicle (10/20)
Technology Ownership by Household Type
All adults Married Other household types Other multi-member
w/child-children types households
Cell phone(s) in household 84% 95% 80% 88%
Computer(s) in household 77 93 71 81
At least one household
member goes online 77 94 71 83
Have a home broadband
connection 52 66 47 55
Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project Networked Family Survey, Dec. 13, 2007-Jan. 13, 2008. N=2,252.





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