Daily Marauder


BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

HBO has ordered a fourth season of “Big Love,” the drama about a polygamist in Utah and his growing roster of wives. The show, starring Bill Paxton, averages about 5 million viewers when time-shifted and VOD viewing as well as encore showings are considered. Variety (2/4)

bl

Live-plus-seven-day figures from Nielsen show that many people like to watch Sci Fi’s “Battlestar Galactica” on their own schedule. The Jan. 16 episode attracted 2.11 million live-plus-same-day viewers, Nielsen said, but the DVR-driven, seven-day data showed the number of viewers increased to 2.8 million, adding 32% to the original showing. Mediaweek (2/4)

battlestar

Changes come to the Primetime Emmy Awards as the Board of Governors of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences voted to increase the number of nominees from five to six in the following categories: Outstanding Comedy and Drama Series programs, Outstanding Lead Actor and Actress in a Comedy or Drama Series and Outstanding Supporting Actor and Actress in a Comedy and Drama Series. Additionally, the Television Academy Governors voted to eliminate the two-phase nominating process in the series and performance categories. That means the voting for the Drama and Comedy Series programs will be determined by the whole Television Academy membership; nominees in the Drama and Comedy Series performer categories will be voted on by the Performer Peer Group. (Cynopsis 2/5)

VH1 reported its 90m premiere of I Love Money 2 on Monday night at 9p posted a 1.3 rating among A18-49 and 2.3 million total viewers. On the same night at 1030p, For the Love of Ray J opened and held steady with a 1.3 A18-49 rating and increased it’s lead-in among Total Viewers to 2.4 million. (Cynopsis 2/5)

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IAC/InterActive Corp’s CollegeHumor.com has evolved into a go-to site for 6 million visitors monthly, a comedy tour, books and now a television series, MTV’s “The CollegeHumor Show,” premiering Sunday. Beer, babes and parodies dominate the site, a favorite of men ages 18 to 22. (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2009-02-04-collegehumor-show_N.htm 2/4)

college

ABC acquired the Media Rights Capital comedy Surviving Suburbia, headlined by Bob Saget, and will place it on Mondays following Dancing with the Stars beginning April 6 at 930p. With 13 episodes already produced, Surviving Suburbia was originally planned to be part of The CW’s Sunday night block. The sitcom replaces Samantha Who? which moves to Thursdays. (Cynopsis 2/5)

Ex-Viacom CEO Tom Freston is now a consultant for Oprah Winfrey’s forthcoming cable television channel, OWN: the Oprah Winfrey Network, set to launch by early 2010. OWN, he says, “is as big an idea now as MTV was then. It’s the first network about empowerment and life purpose.” (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://money.cnn.com/2009/02/03/news/newsmakers/sellers_freston.fortune/index.htm 2/3)

A state tax credit that brought television production in New York City to a record high last year has run out of money, threatening jobs. “None of us has booked a single pilot this year,” says Alan Suna, head of Silvercup Studios. “Everybody is sending their pilots elsewhere.” (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://www.crainsnewyork.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090204/FREE/902049968 2/4)

Time Warner Cable added 44,000 digital-TV subscribers and 124,000 high-speed-data customers during the fourth quarter of last year. It also had 130,000 telephony additions. Overall, the cable provider reported revenue jumped 8%, to $4.4 billion, during the period. OneTRAK (2/4) , Light Reading (2/4)

The last major obstacle in the way of moving the digital-TV transition from Feb. 17 to June 12 was overcome Wednesday when the House of Representatives voted 264-158 in favor of a four-month delay. A similar measure had already passed in the Senate, and now a combined bill will go to President Barack Obama, who has said he is in favor of the June 12 date. The Wall Street Journal (free content)/Dow Jones Newswires (2/5) , Los Angeles Times (free registration) (2/5) , Broadcasting & Cable (2/4)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

Media companies appear to be losing the battle over illicit digital copies of television episodes and films. Illegal downloading and streaming is increasingly becoming a mainstream behavior. NBC Universal exec Richard Cotton says: “Young people conclude that if it’s so easy, it can’t be wrong.” (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/05/business/media/05piracy.html?_r=1 2/5)

Doesn’t this feel kind of nostalgic? Anyone remember a little Deathmatch called Napster vs. the music business? Hmmmm… The world has a funny little way of repeating itself when the snooze button is depressed.

A high-quality streaming video version of “Slumdog Millionaire” as seen on a secondary site reached through a “link farm” featuring pirated movies.

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Media CEOs say they are seeing their audiences move toward free or lost-cost Web video — both television and movies — and away from traditional delivery methods, such as cable television and DVDs. More young people are saying: “All I need is broadband.” (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123377977256648981.html 2/5)

With Time Warner reporting earnings yesterday, we now have online advertising numbers for the fourth quarter from the four largest players: Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and AOL. Tallying up their online advertising revenues provides a decent proxy for the health of the overall online advertising industry as a whole, since they represent a majority of those revenues. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/05/is-the-worst-behind-us-online-ad-revenues-pick-up-in-the-fourth-quarter 2/5)

online-ad

Things are not going well for Universal Music Group’s in its lawsuit against video-sharing site Veoh. First, the Los Angeles judge, A. Howard Matz, ruled last month that the safe harbor provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act do apply to the case, contrary to UMG’s request for summary judgment. On Monday, Veoh scored another point in the preliminary legal sparring that always precedes the main event. The same judge threw out the part of the complaint that named Veoh’s investors as defendants in the suit. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/04/judge-tells-umg-no-you-cannot-sue-veohs-investors-for-copyright-infringement 2/4)

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Microsoft is partnering with entertainment firm BermanBraun Interactive to create a celebrity news site. The creators of the new Wonderwall say it will attempt to “decommoditize” the stream of celebrity images, with a balance of the editorial tone found on TMZ and People.com. (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/techtracks/2009/02/05/msn_launches_new_celeb_gossip_site_wonderwall.html 2/5)

And here I thought Wonderwall was an Oasis song? Microsoft take down Perez or TMZ? Doubtful.

wonderwall

Online film site Jaman signed a deal with E1 Entertainment to add nearly 3,000 of the studio’s titles to its download service including feature films, documentaries, episodic series and classic American TV shows. E1′s library includes the works of cinema masters including Jacques Demy, Claude Chabrol, Jean-Luc Godard, Jacques Rivette, Eric Rohmer. (Cynopsis 2/5)

The comedians at Team Tiger Awesome have come up with an imaginative spoof of their own for MTV Network’s Atom.com to celebrate Oprah Winfrey’s recent birthday. Oprah is Dead riffs on just how much the queen of daytime television has come to mean to America. (Cynopsis 2/5)

JuicyCampus, an online hangout for college students to spread anonymous rumors, is shutting down, citing a lack of advertising revenue and funding. Despite expanding to more than 500 U.S. campuses, the site was unable to “muster the resources needed to survive,” says CEO Matt Ivester. (Iwantmedia 2/5, http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2009/02/juicy-campus.html 2/4)

U.S. Web surfers watched 14.3 billion online videos in December, a 13% increase from the month before, according to a study by comScore. YouTube had the biggest gain in viewers, a growth of 49%, and it represented about 41% of the market. TVWeek.com (2/4)

Google Sites once again ranked as the top video property in the U.S. with 5.9 billion videos viewed (a 41% online video market share), with YouTube accounting for more than 99% of all of its videos viewed, according to ComScore‘s latest Video Metrix report. Fox Interactive Media ranked second with 445 million videos (3.1%), followed by Yahoo! Sites with 330 million (2.3%) and Viacom Digital with 291 million (2.0 percent). Hulu continued its impressive growth trajectory, climbing 6% versus November to 241 million videos viewed. Nearly 150 million U.S. Internet users watched an average of 96 videos per viewer in December. Google Sites surpassed 100 million online video viewers during the month, representing two out of every three Internet users who watched video. (Cynopsis 2/5)

Top U.S. Online Video Properties* by Videos Viewed – December 2008
Property Videos (000) Share (%) of Videos
Total Internet 14,318,722 100.0
Google Sites 5,905,854 41.2
Fox Interactive Media 444,865 3.1
Yahoo! Sites 330,025 2.3
Viacom Digital 290,558 2.0
Microsoft Sites 247,903 1.7
Hulu.com 240,585 1.7
AOL LLC 197,135 1.4
Turner Network 183,948 1.3
Disney Online 148,434 1.0
ESPN 102,542 0.7
Source: comScore Video Metrix
*Rankings based on video content sites; excludes video server networks. Online video includes both streaming and progressive download video

Top U.S. Online Video Properties* by Unique Viewers – December 2008
Property Unique Viewers (000) Average Videos per Viewer
Total Internet 149,587 95.7
Google Sites 100,092 59.0
Fox Interactive Media 56,895 7.8
Yahoo! Sites 42,761 7.7
AOL LLC 31,522 6.3
Microsoft Sites 29,534 8.4
Viacom Digital 27,370 10.6
Hulu.com 24,572 9.8
Turner Network 20,499 9.0
Time Warner – Excl. AOL 17,294 2.8
CBS Corporation 14,840 3.7
Source: comScore Video Metrix

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WIRELESS by Marauder
February 5, 2009, 7:58 PM
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: , , , , , , ,

WIRELESS

In the last week, a pair of new iPhone applications have appeared on the App Store that put the menus of hundreds of restaurants at users’ fingertips. Dubbed GrubHub and CityMint, both applications allow users to order food on the go from online menus, buying entrees, appetizers, and drinks on the fly without the hassle of human interaction. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/04/mobile-restaurant-ordering-finally-hits-the-app-store 2/4)

citymint

If you ever get a craving for classic literature while on the go, Google’s just given you the ability to check out your favorite literary works via an iPhone or Android phone. Google’s Book Search currently features 1.5 million public domain books, which have all been optimized to fit a mobile screen. Unfortunately, Blackberrys and other non-Android operating system phones are out of luck in accessing this feature. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/05/googles-answer-to-the-kindle 2/5)

Not sure this is the best device to read on especially as my iPhone battery can’t handle normal usage without dying halfway through the day…but then again, I’m not a big fan of reading via Kindle either.

google-book

Asustek Computer and Garmin, consumer-electronics companies that have made names in the personal computer and portable-navigation fields, respectively, have formed a strategic alliance to market smartphones under the Garmin-Asus brand. Asustek Chairman Jonney Shih, whose company produces the popular low-cost Eee line of PCs, said the companies were pondering various operating systems, including Android and Windows Mobile. The Wall Street Journal/Dow Jones Newswires (subscription required) (2/5) , InfoWorld/IDG News Service (2/4)

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GAMING by Marauder

GAMING

Time Warner’s Warner Bros. is bolstering its presence in video games with the acquisition of Snowblind Studios, a Seattle-based developer. Warner Bros. already holds a 20% stake in Eidos, the company behind “Tomb Raider.” Unlike DVDs, sales of video games are rising. (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a23ad474-f2ee-11dd-abe6-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1 2/4)

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TECHNOLOGY by Marauder

TECHNOLOGY

The one-two punch of a global slump in demand and a strong yen that makes Japanese products less attractive to importers has led Panasonic Corp. to forecast a $4.3 billion loss for the fiscal year that ends March 31. As a result, the consumer-electronics giant said it would cut 15,000 jobs, about 5% of its work force. ClipSyndicate/New York Financial Press (2/4) , The Wall Street Journal (2/5) , Reuters (2/4)[Panasonic Gloomy Outlook]

panasonic


Game consoles are turning out to be the most popular nexus point for consumer-electronics devices connected to a home network, according to a new study from research firm In-Stat. The study went on to say that, in the future, Blu-ray and DVD players — and not personal computers — will become more important conduits in the networked home. Cartt News Service (subscription only) (2/4)

While demand for low-cost, no-frill netbook computers seems to be on the rise, the number of people considering a notebook computer is ebbing, according to a survey by ChangeWave. In the survey, the number of respondents who said they plan on buying a notebook in the next 90 days fell from 8% last November to just 6%. CNET (2/4)

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MISC by Marauder

MISC

The Associated Press is on the wrong of a fair use argument again. It is actually suing artist Shepard Fairey for his iconic Obama poster, which it recently discovered was based on an AP news photograph by Mannie Garcia. The poster is clearly based on that photograph (see comparison at left), but this is exactly the kind of use of copyrighted works that is meant to be protected. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/05/once-again-the-ap-tries-to-redefine-fair-use-goes-after-shepard-fairey-for-obama-poster 2/5)

fairey

obamaobama

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