Daily Marauder


SUPER BOWL 43: THE BEST OF TIMES AND THE WORST OF TIMES by Marauder

SUPER BOWL 43: THE BEST OF TIMES AND THE WORST OF TIMES

super-bowl-431

Photo: Barton Silverman/The New York Times

For me, the Super Bowl is less about this (above) and more about this (below).

super-bowl-43

This year, I was even more excited for the ads as 2 of them were to be screened in 3D. But then, why did the commercial breaks come and go leaving me feeling like the day after a bad New Year’s party? Overall, this Super Bowl was a general dud in the ad department but a gleaming diamond in terms of the game. Even I, who generally spends the game wondering what the hell is going on, was screaming as The Steelers turned it all around in the final moments.

But back to the ads. There were some Rubik’s Cubes in the rough. I have to leave out the two 3D ads as my local CVS didn’t have the glasses. Shocker. Click here or on the Super Bowl ad image above to watch all of the ads from the Super Bowl and rate on Hulu.

The Good

Pepsi: Pepsuber

pepsuber

My favorite commercial is one part, popular SNL skit MacGruber and one part, Pepsi commercial. For final flair, MacGyver makes a cameo in the spot. Jazz hands.

Hulu: Alec in Huluwood

huluwood

Alec Baldwin can do no wrong and his comedic genius comes through yet again in this spot. Baldwin takes you into the Hollywood sign for a rare look inside Huluwood. I think perhaps the spot was reaching a bit only at the end. Loving it, loving it, loving it, wha?!

Pepsi: Refresh Anthem

pepsi-refresh

Way to stick it to Coke and tug at my heart strings simultaneously. And modeling your new logo after Obama’s campaign logo? Ingenious.

The Ugly

Careerbuilder.com: Tips

careerbuilder

For an American population with general lack of focus, perhaps they thought the redundancy angle was a good one. But really, the repetition in this commercial just made me want to hurl my television out my 8th floor window. If you hate your job and this commercial, blame Careerbuilder. By far, the worst commercial of the night.

Teleflora: Talking Flowers

teleflora

So, I’m trying to envision the marketing meeting where it was decided that this commercial was a good idea. Flowers = Feeling bad about myself. Genius. The flowers this woman receives berate her while all of her co-workers watch. Way to SUCK the fun out of Valentine’s Day Teleflora. Debbie Downer, party of one? Debbie Downer.

Castrol Oil: Edge Monkeys

castrol

One world: Creepy.

The Best of the Best

Terry Tate: Office Linebacker aired during the Super Bowl in 2003.  This Reebok ad is still the best ad for me in terms of storyline.  If you ask Reebok though, it wasn’t a success.  Apart from being a hysterical commercial with a fantastic storyline, the ad lacked a direct call-to-action and ended up doing nothing for Reebok’s bottom line.  Still, you kill the joe, you make some mo’.  I pour one out for Terry Tate…

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BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

NBC’s broadcast of the Pittsburgh Steelers‘ victory over the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII was seen in 42.1 percent of U.S. television homes, below the 43.1 rating in the 2008 game. Last year’s teams, the New York Giants and New England Patriots, have larger fan bases. (Iwantmedia 2/2, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aSF8HlY3jTo0 2/2)

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NBC revealed its sold-out advertising inventory within Super Bowl XLIII broke all previous Super Bowl records totaling $206 million, though the total for the entire Super Sunday ticked up to $261 million. Spots within the Big Game went for $3 million apiece, while spots in the pregame went for $44,500 per spot during the first hour (noon-1p) and up to $1.6 million for those placed in the 15-minute window prior to kick-off. NBC tallied a total of 32 advertisers and their commercials can be viewed online via NBC.com, Hulu.com and Superbowl.com. (Cynopsis 2/2)

Last Thursday’s episode of USA Network‘s “Burn Notice” attracted 5.38 million viewers and, in what is believed to be a first, beat out corporate cousin NBC during the 10 p.m. hour, which aired a rerun of “ER.” “Burn Notice” also put up a 2.0 rating among adults 18 to 49 — its best showing yet in that demo. TVWeek.com (1/30)

burn-notice2

MTV is bringing back a fourth installment of Making The Band, picking up the story of Danity Kane, Day 26 and Donnie Klang where the last season ended. Making The Band 4 premieres February 12 at 9p and this Thursday at 9p, fans of the series can watch a third season re-cap special titled Damaged: A Making The Band Special. Bad Boy Entertainment produces the franchise. (Cynopsis 2/2)

Universal Cable, the production company for NBC Universal cable nets USA and Sci Fi, has put together its first deals: a two-year overall agreement with “Psych” creator/executive producer Steve Franks and a one-year, first-look pact with director Jace Alexander. According to this article, the moves reflect a growing trend toward so-called “showverall deals” as more studios move away from development deals toward bargains with creators, showrunners and directors of in-family hits. The Hollywood Reporter (2/2)

The Obama administration said late last week that it expected lawmakers to pass legislation that would delay the transition to all-digital TV signals from Feb. 17 to June 12. A DTV delay measure has twice been passed in the Senate and this week is expected to come up for another vote in the House. Reuters (2/1) , Broadcasting & Cable (1/30)

ABC okayed two comedy pilots: The New Twenty from writer/executive producer Tad Quill (Scrubs) and ABC Studios about two forty-ish friends who are at different junctures in life; and Let It Go starring Lauren Graham (The Gilmore Girls) as a talk show host who is dumped by her boyfriend and having a hard time “letting it go”. (Cynopsis 2/2)

On Friday, ABC picked up three additional drama pilots: Limelight, inspired somewhat by musician/hip-hop producer Pharrell Williams’ youth spent at a performing arts school, is about kids and faculty set at a similar performing arts school in New York. The second drama pilot is an untitled Jerry Bruckheimer 60m crime project from Warner Bros. Television about amateur crime solvers, though internally it is called “The Unknown.” (Cynopsis 2/2)

CBS consented to three drama pilots all produced by CBS Paramount Network Television: the first is titled Back about a man who disappeared during the 9/11 terrorist attacks and remarkably shows up eight years later and tries to reconnect with his family. CBS next approved the hour-long pilot Washington Field set inside the FBI’s Washington field office about a team of agents handling top-priority cases. The third project is an untitled legal drama from Frank Military (The Unit) about a group of federal prosecutors based in the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan. (Cynopsis 2/2)

The Comcast Programming Group, the Comcast division that includes networks such as E!, Style, G4 and the Golf Channel, isn’t likely to acquire any new channels in 2009, according to President Jeff Shell. “Brian [Roberts, the Comcast chairman] and Steve [Burke, Comcast's chief operating officer] will tell me if they ever want to make [the group] bigger,” Shell said. “My job right now is to run with what we’ve got.” Multichannel News (2/2)

ABC Family issued 10-episode pickup orders to three new female-focused series — “Ruby and the Rockits,” “10 Things I Hate About You” and “Perfect 10.” The network also announced renewals for a third season of “Greek” and a fourth season of “Lincoln Heights,” but said it would cancel “Kyle XY.” The Hollywood Reporter (2/1)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

After nearly two years as a company, Twitter has yet to bring in revenue. The micro-blogging site’s initial stab at making money likely will come by April, although it won’t be anything revolutionary, according to CEO Evan Williams. “We don’t like to make too big a deal of it.” (Iwantmedia 2/2, http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/01/BUA215ITSO.DTL 2/1)

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Video sharing site Metacafe touted phenomenal growth in 2008 reporting a year-over-year increase of 54% in worldwide users to 44 million overall uniques, citing comScore Media Mertrix data. (That’s even faster than YouTube‘s growth, according to comScore, which grew by 44.7% from a year ago.) Key initiatives for 2008 included teaming with content partners to enhance short form entertainment categories including TV clips, movie trailers, music videos and sports highlights; and expanding usage of its Wikicafe system, which entreats users and producers to improve video search functionality by a adding more tags and title descriptions to entries’ metadata. (Cynopsis 2/2)

Another class action pricing lawsuit was filed against Netflix and Wal-Mart alleging that the two companies have partnered to limit competition against one another, per Video Business. The suit claims that Netflix raised its monthly subscription price from $14.99 to $17.99 after reaching a truce with Wal-Mart, which had been offering its own monthly plan undercutting Netflix by $2. (Cynopsis 2/2)

Disney Channel is developing an online magazine about the fictional characters in the upcoming series “Sonny With a Chance.” The magazine, which will be called Tween Weekly, will be ad-supported and will launch on Feb. 8 to coincide with the premiere of the TV show. Multichannel News (2/2)

Yahoo! has discontinued its Ads in RSS service, which enabled network publishers to insert contextual advertising into syndicated content and get a piece of the action thanks to a revenue-sharing program. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/02/yahoo-stops-serving-ads-in-rss-feeds 2/2)

Social media marketing firm Vitrue announced its inaugural ranking of the top social brands for 2008 that are commanding attention and engagement within social communities online. The “Vitrue 100″ ranking analyzes online conversations on a variety of social networking, blogging, micro-blogging, photo and video sharing sites. Apple was the big winner as the iPhone earned the #1 spot as the most social brand, the Apple brand itself ranked #3, the iPod came in at #7 and the Mac legacy brand earned the #16 spot. (Cynopsis 2/2)

The Vitrue 100 – The Top Social Brands of 2008

  1. iPhone
  2. CNN

3.  Apple

  1. Disney
  2. Xbox
  3. Starbucks
  4. iPod
  5. MTV
  6. Sony
  7. Dell

Source: Virtue

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WIRELESS by Marauder
February 2, 2009, 12:30 PM
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: , , , , , , ,

WIRELESS

Apple was recently granted a gigantic patent covering everything that is the iPhone and a closer look reveals that serious video capabilities might be coming in the next iPhone. Apparently video recording is mentioned frequently throughout the entire document but a few images and sections explain a video conferencing capable phone. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/02/a-video-conferencing-iphone-in-the-works 2/2)

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T-Mobile USA will introduce new versions of its Android-powered G1 phone this year, but the carrier won’t have the field to itself as it did for the smartphone’s debut in November, after which fans bought 1 million units of the handset in 61 days. A data card product is among other devices that should be ready this year, said a T-Mobile executive. InformationWeek (1/30)

The rich graphics featured on new smartphones are driving the growth of mobile gaming, according to a new comScore report, which says downloads increased 17% last year. ComScore, which also says that 3.8% of subscribers — 8.5 million users — have gotten a game off the Internet, said iPhone owners were responsible for 14% of the downloads. InformationWeek (2/1)

Mobile Usage Benchmark Study – 3 month ave. ending Nov. 2008 (US Mobile Subs.)
Activity                                      Audience (000s)  Reach % (of all users) % change vs. last mo.
Sent/received photos or videos     63,736               27.7                             5.6
Received SMS ads                        54,922               23.9                            8.2
Accessed news/info via browser    41,894               18.2                             9.7
Used email                                  38,370               16.7                             6.3
Listened to music                         21,006                 9.1                            8.5
Accessed social networking sites    20,668                9.0                           14.2
Played downloaded game              20,468                8.9                             6.1
Purchased ringtones                      19,556                8.5                           -1.1
Accessed downloaded application   18,337                8.0                           15.8
Watched Video                               7,523                3.3                             5.6
Source: comScore M:Metrics

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GAMING by Marauder
February 2, 2009, 12:25 PM
Filed under: GAMING | Tags: , , , , , , ,

GAMING

Microsoft is hoping to attract more women to Xbox through a new suite of Xbox Live services, including streaming video, movie rentals from Netflix, shopping and social-networking features. “We’ve sold 20 million consoles to date globally since we launched three years ago,” said Heather Snavely, Microsoft’s director of interactive entertainment business global platforms. “In order to get to the next 20 million, we need to get a new audience of women and teens. We’re going after them in ways that are different than ways we’ve done before.” The News-Press (Fort Myers, Fla.)/Gannett News Service (1/31)

xbox

Nintendo reported a drop in profit due to the strong yen (net profit fell 18% to $2.35 billion for the first 9 months of the fiscal year) and issued a dire forecast for the future. The company  predicted that the worldwide recession would slacken demand for its industry-leading Wii console and likely lead to its first profit drop in five years. For the fiscal year ending March, Nintendo now expects to sell 26.5 million Wiis for the fiscal year ending March 31, down from an October forecast of 27.5 million in October. The company’s share price dropped more than 12% on the news. (Cynopsis 2/2)

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TECHNOLOGY by Marauder

TECHNOLOGY

Consumer-electronics giant Sony reported a 95% drop in net profit on sales that fell about 25% in its fiscal third quarter. The company, which makes Bravia TVs and Cyber-shot cameras, also reiterated its latest forecast that it would have an operating loss of $2.9 billion for the 12-month period ending March 31. Reuters (1/29)

Lutron has introduced the RadioRa-SR, a single-room controller that can accommodate 10 wireless devices, including dimmers, keypads, sensors, motorized shades or other compatible products. At the 2009 International CES, Lutron demonstrated how the system could work in a home-theater setup. CEPro.com (1/28)

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