Daily Marauder


BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

E! registered more pre-Oscar viewing on its network as 3.2 million total viewers watched its two-hour Live from the Red Carpet show Sunday night at 6p, up 14% from a year ago. The show additionally captured a 2.43 HH rating. (Cynopsis 2/24)

angelina

In the ongoing battle for the attention of America’s youth, Nickelodeon has built a business model that, the Viacom network admits, borrows a thing or two from rival Disney Channel, the latest of which was Nickelodeon’s Feb. 16 launch of “Spectacular,” an upbeat musical that resembles Disney’s “High School Musical.” “I think they tapped into a genre that had been sleepy,” said Nickelodeon President Cyma Zarghami. “Now, it’s a genre that is open for everybody.” The New York Times (2/23)

The cast of “Glen Martin DDS,” about an eccentric dentist’s family, which will start on Nick at Nite this summer.

nick

“Crash,” the first original series from Starz, received a new 13-episode order that will make up the series’ second season. The show, which stars Dennis Hopper, will have a new behind-the-scenes creative team in its sophomore outing, and about half of the cast, including Hopper, will remain on board. The Hollywood Reporter (2/23)

crash

Univision’s finale of its novela Fuego en la Sangre (Burning for Revenge) last Friday night at 9p was #1 for the hour with all A18-34 and A18-49 viewers, across all languages. The one-hour conclusion attracted 1.8 million A18-34 viewers, 3.2 million A18-49 viewers and nearly 5.9 million total viewers. (Cynopsis 2/24)

VH1 is developing a reality series that will feature some of the “most compelling female residents” of Aspen, Colo., a representative for the network said. And, according to this report, the show is part of a new programming trend that features conspicuous consumption by the country’s moneyed set. Broadcasting & Cable (2/23)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

Boosted by a wealth of new interactive features and video content, Disney-managed Oscar.com saw major year-to-year increases on Oscar Sunday, with unique visitors and page views up 57% and 87%, respectively. Users spent an average of 11.63 minutes on the site per visit, a 15% bump from last year. (Cynopsis 2/24)

oscars2

Not surprisingly Twitter traffic spiked dramatically during the Oscar telecast as users chimed with their two cents about who won or wore what. Stars like Ashton Kutcher kept their fans abreast of the party scene with comments and photos using the TwitPic mobile photo app that allows users to post pics directly from their phones. (Cynopsis 2/24)

twitpic

(Below) Now here is a company thinking out of the box.  This should be a lesson to us all.  Stop complaining.  Start reinventing and monetizing.

Glam is seeking to make money by editing streams from Twitter. The women’s online publisher launched a widget that lets users tweet their thoughts about this year’s Academy Awards. Glam’s editors edit the stream to make advertisers more comfortable with the tweets. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://venturebeat.com/2009/02/22/glam-edits-oscars-twitter-feed-and-makes-money 2/22)

Following the success of CNN’s immensely popular Facebook integration during the Inauguration, ABCNews.com is teaming with Twitter and multiplatform news network ABC News Now on a new interactive web venture dubbed “Nightline Now” tonight during President Obama’s State of the Union address. Users will be able to post “tweets” on Twitter as they watch live streaming of the address then see their comments show up simultaneously on ABCNews.com and ABC News Now. (Cynopsis 2/24)

nightline-twitter


Netscape founder Marc Andreessen announced on Charlie Rose last week that he is creating a VC fund with partner Ben Horowitz to help seed technology companies. Check out the interview to hear Marc’s thinking on the future of the newspaper business (shut down the print editions tomorrow), the patience of Facebook’s monetization strategy and the wonders of devices like the iPhone that get the user interface right. (Cynopsis 2/24)

Rapper star Eminem is suing Universal Music over how much he is entitled to when the world’s largest music company sells his work to third-party distributors, including Apple’s iTunes. At stake is potentially hundreds of millions of dollars from digital downloads. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://www.thewrap.com/article/1549 2/23)

eminem


Welcome to the future, Safari fans, because the Safari 4 beta just hit the download shelves and it’s ready to tear some things up in Tiger and Leopard and even Windows. The download requires the latest security patch (2009-01) but other than that you’re ready to ride. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/24/safari-4-finally-a-reason-to-come-back 2/24)

safari1

Comcast will launch by the end of this year a video-on-demand service that will play out on the Internet. The service reportedly will be called On Demand Online, and Comcast rival Time Warner Cable is mulling a similar new product offering. Reuters (2/23) , Home Media Magazine (2/23)

AOL is launching AOL Classifieds, a site that enables consumers to search through millions of local classifieds listings for every ZIP code in the United States, as well as to post their own ads for free. The site is developed in partnership with classifieds service Oodle. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://blog.clickz.com/090223-173154.html 2/23)

Yahoo is unveiling several tools to help marketers better target their online ads, as the Internet company tries to win back business during the recession. The services include targeting graphical ads to users who have searched for particular terms in Yahoo’s search engine. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123543765554954735.html 2/24)

President Obama has chosen former MPAA lobbyist and current FTC member Jon Leibowitz to serve as the next Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, reports Bloomberg. The body that reviews mergers and enforces consumer protection laws, the FTC has already warned that it may take a closer look at behavioral targeting practices if the online advertising industry doesn’t successfully establish and adhere to self-regulatory guidelines. Leibowitz himself has been a critic of the industry’s lack of transparency and Byzantine opt-out solutions and has pushed the government to take a stronger tack toward privacy policies. (Cynopsis 2/24)

L.A.-based gossip blog Defamer has been folded into Gawker Media’s N.Y.-based flagship blog Gawker.com as the site’s entertainment column. (Cynopsis 2/24)

In a bid to increase engagement on its website History.com launched its first original web series regaling viewers with “great and telling tales” of unusual tidbits of arcane knowledge from historian Timothy Dickinson. The show, available in snackable ad-supported clips, features crude animation in the Monty Python tradition and is available as an exclusive to the AETN Digital site. (Cynopsis 2/24)

At its annual leadership meeting The IAB announced the release of its final Audience Reach Measurement Guidelines to once and for all to define key industry metrics and foster greater accuracy and reliability of all forms of online audience measurement. The guidelines call for full disclosure of methodology, suggest that audience measurement should be spearheaded by clients not sellers, and call for internal numbers tracked by systems such as Omniture to be excluded from ad contracts. (Cynopsis 2/24)

Microsoft is creating a council of Web companies to help it develop a new advertising platform for publishers. The council will include IAC/InterActiveCorp, Dow Jones Online, New York Times Co., Time Inc. and Viacom. Goals include enhanced targeting and measurement. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Microsoft-partners-with-Web-apf-14441309.html 2/23)

The explosion of video on multiple platforms is still a tide in which all boats are rising as video consumption grew during Q4 across all three major platforms – TV, internet and mobile, according to Nielsen‘s just released A2/M2 Three Screen Report. Viewing on television reached a record 151 hours/month. Those who watch video on the internet consumed another 3 hours of online video per month. Mobile video viewers watched nearly 4 hours per month on mobile phones and other devices. (Cynopsis 2/24)

Other highlights of the report include:

  • Video viewing on mobile devices and DVRs jumped by the largest margin during the quarter (each about 9% vs. Q3) as 11 million reported viewing video on phones or PDAs and 74 million watched DVR programming
  • And while audiences of all ages are watching online video, the trend for younger 18-24 year old viewers – broken out by Nielsen for the first time – suggest a dramatically increased reliance on the internet for video viewing. The demo spent nearly the same amount of time (about 5 hours a month) watching video online as they did watching DVR programming
  • Even younger viewers (aged 12-17) watched less video on TV, DVRs and the internet than last quarter but spent almost 6.5 hours a month watching mobile video
  • When broken down by gender, females 2+ watched more TV and more online video than by almost 8% points but men consumed almost twice as much video on mobile phones


Overall Usage Number of Users 2+ (in 000′s) – Monthly Reach
4Q08      3Q08        4Q07     % Diff Y/Y
Watching TV in the home         285,313   282,289   281,376     1.4%
Watching Timeshifted TV°          73,934    67,656     53,914   37.1%
Using the internet                   161,525   160,070   156,323    3.3%
Watching Video on internet      123,195   120,362      n/a         n/a
Using a Mobile Phone              228,920    224,495      n/a         n/a
Mobile Subscribers Watching
Video on a Mobile Phone           11,198      10,260     n/a          n/a
Source: The Nielsen Company

Monthly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes Per User 2+
4Q08   3Q08    4Q07 % Diff Yr to Yr     Absolute Diff Yr to Yr
(4Q08 to 4Q07) (4Q08 to 4Q07)
Watching TV in the home          151:03   140:48   145:49         3.6%             5:13
Watching Timeshifted TV              7:11      6:27      5:24       33.0%             1:47
Using the internet                      27:04    27:18     26:08        3.6%             0:56
Watching Video on internet           2:53      2:31      n/a          n/a                 n/a
Mobile Subscribers Watching
Video on a Mobile Phone               3:42      3:37      n/a          n/a                 n/a
Source: The Nielsen Company

Video Audience Composition – Age  4Q 2008
K2-11 T12-17 A18-24 A25-34 A35-44 A45-54 A55-64 A65+
On TV                           10%    6%      8%       13%     14%    17%    15%   18%
On the Internet                7%    8%      8%       16%     19%    20%    15%    7%
On Mobile Phones            n/a    19%     11%      34%     20%    11%      5%    1%
Source: The Nielsen Company

Video Audience Composition – Gender 4Q 2008
F2+     M2+
On TV                       53%    47%
On the Internet          54%    46%
On Mobile Phones       37%    63%
Source: The Nielsen Company

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WIRELESS by Marauder

WIRELESS

Samsung Mobile has figured out a new way to deliver content to mobile devices. A new collaboration with Paramount Digital will preload the Mission Impossible trilogy of films on a 2G microcard, available for free with the purchase of a touchscreen Samsung Drive from Alltel Wireless. Buyers must mail in proof of purchase by April 16 to receive the microcard. (Cynopsis 2/24)

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GAMING by Marauder
February 24, 2009, 7:33 PM
Filed under: GAMING | Tags: , , , , , , ,

GAMING

Microsoft is offering a new “Deal of the Week” promotion for Xbox Live Gold members. The first deal involves the game “Braid,” which will be sold for the membership equivalent of $10, a third of the usual price. Ars Technica (2/23)

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TECHNOLOGY by Marauder
February 24, 2009, 7:32 PM
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: , , , , , , ,

TECHNOLOGY

As Amazon’s Kindle 2 e-book reader starts shipping, bookseller Indigo Books & Music on Thursday will launch Shortcovers, an e-book reading program that works on the iPhone, Blackberry and other devices. The service lets users share comments and Twitter while they read. (Iwantmedia 2/24, http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/02/23/kindle-2-arrives-and-so-do-rivals 2/23)

kindle1

When Muvico opens a 14-screen movie theater this week in Thousand Oaks, Calif., the real star will be Sony products. The theater will use Sony’s 4K SXRD digital projectors, which will get on-screen billing before the show starts, Sony LCD TV screens at the concession stand and PlayStation 3 consoles in the arcade. The New York Times (2/23)

Apple on Wednesday will convene its first annual shareholders’ meeting since Steve Jobs, the company’s iconic leader, took an extended leave of absence for health reasons. The event will give investors an opportunity to question Apple executives about how the company will transition to a Jobs-less future. Bloomberg (2/23)

While the gap between smartphones and netbooks has converged along certain lines, such as system cost and complexity, other, more wide-ranging differences will keep the segments from competing with each other in the short term, according to this analysis. EE Times (2/23)

Blu-ray discs are moving beyond their “early adopter” status and are becoming a mainstream product for top-quality video. According to a study by Futuresource Consulting, U.S. sales of Blu-ray discs topped out at 24 million last year and will reach more than 80 million in 2009. PC Magazine (2/23)

The makers of the latest flat-panel TVs are rolling out a series of technological advances designed to make their sets more eco-friendly. Companies such as Vizio, Funai, Sharp, Samsung, Sony and Panasonic are developing models that reduce power use in a number of ways, including changes in back-screen lighting and complete system shutdown when the TV is off. The Wall Street Journal (2/24)

Looking to offer a sound experience that will match the visual excellence of its Cinema 21:9 TV, Philips is offering a new home-theater sound system that includes the company’s HD AV receiver and a 7.1 speaker system. The package also includes four floor-standing tallboy speakers, two satellite speakers, a center channel and an active subwoofer. Pocket-lint.co.uk (2/23)

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BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

Some 36.3 million people watched this year’s Academy Awards, up about 4 million from last year’s least-watched Oscars show. Still, there are only two Oscar telecasts with fewer viewers. The largest Oscars audience was in 1998, when 55.2 million watched “Titanic” win best picture. (Iwantmedia 2/23, http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090223/ap_en_tv/oscars_ratings 2/23)

oscars-hugh

Peter Chernin, the long-time president and COO of News Corp, is leaving the company after protracted negotiations over his contract could not be resolved. Chernin’s salary was $28.8 million in the last fiscal year, which was $1.3 million more than even Rupert Murdoch’s take-home pay. Chernin helped Murdoch build and oversee his vast media empire over the past 20 years, and his departure no doubt will raise all sorts of questions about the future of the company. He will be leaving when his current contract expires on June 30. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/23/with-chernin-out-at-news-corp-what-happens-to-fim 2/23)

chernin

Rev. Al Sharpton is calling on the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to review the waiver extended to News Corp. for cross-media ownership. The move continues the protests over the political cartoon of a monkey published last week in News Corp.’s New York Post. (Iwantmedia 2/23, http://www.wpix.com/landing/?Sharpton-Calls-On-FCC-To-Investigate-New=1&blockID=220606&feedID=1404 2/23)

With expensive content-contract renegotiations to come, ESPN faces pressure in the current economic climate and last month said it would cut nearly 200 unfilled jobs, suspend new hires and freeze executive pay. However, network executive George Bodenheimer remains positive: “We feel we’re well-positioned in terms of our deals and business model.” The Wall Street Journal (2/23)

espn

Over the weekend, the Screen Actors Guild National Board of Directors with a vote of 73% to 27%, SAG voted against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers’ “last, best and final offer dated February 19, 2009.” SAG’s Board admitted they entered the negotiations last week with AMPTP by “sending an unmistakably clear message that we were ready to make a deal” and basing negotiations on the terms of the previous contract offer from AMPTP dated June 30, 2008. (Cynopsis 2/23)

NBC is selling individual thirty-second commercials in the finale episode of ER at a reported $425,000 each, cites B&C. The two-hour final episode, slated for April 2 at 9p, reunites several former cast members including George Clooney, Noah Wyle and Anthony Edwards and will be preceded by a 60m retrospective of the 15-year old series. Based on information obtained from TNS Media Intelligence, thirty-second spots in this season’s ER have been priced at $135,000 each. (Cynopsis 2/23)

CBS picked up a new comedy pilot called Ace in the Hole starring actor/comedian Adam Carolla as a husband/father who is also a driving instructor. (Cynopsis 2/23)

corolla

Jenna Elfman tries television again as she headlines CBS’ comedy pilot Accidentally on Purpose. Elfman, seen back in 2006 on the short-lived CBS comedy Courting Alex and in recent guest spots on ABC’s Brothers & Sisters and NBC’s My Name Is Earl, will portray a movie critic who gets pregnant following a one-night tryst. (Cynopsis 2/23)

elfman

“Project Runway” filmed its sixth-season finale Friday at New York’s Bryant Park during Fashion Week, as the Weinstein Co. and NBC Universal continue to fight in court over rights to the reality-TV hit. The combatants have yet to go to trial, and the outcome will be subject to appeal. (Iwantmedia 2/23, http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20090220/FREE/902209973 2/20)

Time Warner Inc. and Time Warner Cable Inc. are parting ways as Time Warner elected to spin-off a pro rata dividend of all TWC common stock it held to Time Warner stockholders. The two entities expect the separation will be finalized by the end of this current quarter. (Cynopsis 2/23)

A lot of things have been spelling the doom of television in recent years — DVRs, channel surfing, fragmentation, clutter, digital media — but recent analysis shows TV advertising may be as effective as ever. “We haven’t seen a significant trend in the erosion of effectiveness of TV,” said Douglas Brooks, a Media Marketing Assessment executive. Advertising Age (2/23)

Scripps Networks, which had about 9% growth in ad sales last year compared with about 3% to 4% on average among cable networks, is going into upfront with an emphasis on relevance to people going through hard times. Sales executive Jon Steinlauf told Multichannel News that the Scripps slate was “well-suited to these times because they provide skills for homeowners to help them cook and entertain, do home projects, save money.” Multichannel News (2/23)

More than 100 original movies will air on basic cable networks this year. Multichannel News reports the movies reinforce a network’s brand, are less of a financial commitment than multiyear, multiepisode scripted series, and are meeting a demand by viewers who are staying home for movie night rather than going out because they have less money in the recession. Multichannel News (2/23)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

While people are watching video in ever-increasing numbers across all media and screens, the largest growth came in mobile video and on time-shifting devices, according to Nielsen’s report on fourth-quarter viewing habits. Internet video logged twice the gains of traditional television in terms of time spent watching and number of viewers, while mobile viewers increased 9% compared with the third quarter. The Wall Street Journal (2/23)

digital-age1

Hulu, founded by NBC Universal and News Corp., has become a better online video moneymaker than Web darling YouTube. But Hulu’s real victim might be cable companies: “Why pay $100 per month for a cable subscription when you can get so much great stuff online for free?” (Iwantmedia 2/23, http://www.newsweek.com/id/185790 2/21)

hulu1

A video clip of Academy Awards host Hugh Jackman rehearsing his Oscars shtick in advance of the ceremony allegedly was “leaked” online by a production assistant. But the organizers of the awards are believed to have produced the clip, intending it to go viral. (Iwantmedia 2/23, http://goldderby.latimes.com/awards_goldderby/2009/02/sneak-peek-see.html 2/20)

That leaked U2 album is causing all sorts of trouble. The unreleased album, which is due out on March 3, found its way onto BitTorrent and was downloaded hundreds of thousands of times. That, apparently, sent music industry lawyers over at the Recording Industry Association of America into a fit. As a result, word is going around that the RIAA asked social music service Last.fm for data about its user’s listening habits to find people with unreleased tracks on their computers. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/20/did-lastfm-just-hand-over-user-listening-data-to-the-riaa/ 2/20)

last-riaa

If Facebook has one standout application it has to be Photos. Measured on its own, it is the largest photo site on the Web. A full 69 percent of Facebook’s monthly visitors worldwide either look at or upload photos, based on comScore data. And more than 10 billion photos have been uploaded to the site. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/22/facebook-photos-pulls-away-from-the-pack/ 2/22)

facebook-photoa

Online photo editing site Picnik is quickly climbing the ranks of photo sites from seemingly nowhere.   In January, according to comScore, the site attracted 6.6 million unique visitors worldwide, a tenfold increase from the year before. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/23/picnik-is-emerging-as-one-of-the-fastest-growing-photo-sites-on-the-web 2/23)

picnik

Late last week, Microsoft Research shared a couple of things about Social Desktop, a prototype of which they are debuting at TechFest 2009 in a couple of days. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/23/microsoft-research-a-look-at-the-intriguing-social-desktop-prototype 2/23)

Comcast has confirmed that its thePlatform unit will provide backing technology for a new online video initiative that would allow cable customers to access “more content in more places.” The company, which previously has powered online video for the BBC, PBS and Fancast, said the move “is also good for cable programmers because it doesn’t put subscription fees at risk, and gives them the ability to give their audiences the experience they want and expect.” The New York Times/GigaOm (2/20)

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