Filed under: BROADCAST/CABLE | Tags: Christina Applegate, Cincinnati Bengals, Conan O'Brien, Scrubs, Tonight Show, Wanda Sykes, Warner Bros., Zach Braff
HBO Sports on Aug. 12 will premiere the fifth season of its award-winning “Hard Knocks” franchise, which goes behind the scenes each year at an NFL team’s training camp. This year’s subject, the Cincinnati Bengals, has agreed to give HBO and NFL Films unlimited access to practice fields, training rooms and coaches’and players’meeting rooms. Multichannel News (5/14)
Comedy Central has given a green light to an animated series titled “Ugly Americans” about humans and creatures from the horror and fantasy genres living in New York. The series is expected to debut in the first quarter of 2010 and is part of a development slate that includes projects from actor Jamie Foxx, actor/comedian Andy Dick and actor/rapper Ice Cube. Broadcasting & Cable (5/14)
As Jay Leno nears his final The Tonight Show episode on NBC May 29, he announced Conan O’Brien, who takes over as host starting June 1, will be his last guest. This will mark O’Brien’s 17th appearance on The Tonight Show. Other guests during Leno’s final week include: Mel Gibson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Wanda Sykes, and Billy Crystal, who was Leno’s first guest in 1992. (Cynopsis 5/15)
The creators of “The Simpsons” aim to turn Fox’s top revenue-generating property into a “timeless classic” to rival Disney’s Mickey Mouse in terms of raking in money from merchandising. They have to move fast: Ratings for the nearly 20-year-old series are sliding. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.usatoday.com/money/media/2009-05-14-merchandise-fox-simpsons_N.htm 4/15)
FOX handed an order to Warner Bros. TV for its reincarnation drama, Past Life. The plot is about a team of detectives who use regression therapy and reincarnation to solve crimes. This drama joins previously announced FOX pick-ups including Human Target, Sons of Tucson, Cleveland and Glee. (Cynopsis 5/15)
ABC may keep the comedy Scrubs around for a ninth season, reports THR, as star Zach Braff signed a deal to appear in six episodes to transition the show to its new format which is still being hashed out. (Cynopsis 5/15)
ABC, as part of a renewal condition, asked producers at ABC Studios, the production company behind the Christina Applegate sitcom, Samantha Who? to change the series for its third season from single- to multi-camera. (Cynopsis 5/15)
In anticipation of the season four premiere of Tori & Dean: Home Sweet Hollywood, Oxygen launched new online fan content at Oxygen.com this week. Fans of Tori and Dean can find new online content added daily prior to the on-air debut of the series May 26 at 10p. (Cynopsis 5/15)
U.S. broadcast networks will introduce their 2009-10 prime-time schedules in the coming week and get down to negotiating billions of dollars worth of deals with advertisers. ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox are expected to collect up to 15% less than the $9.2 billion they won a year ago. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.reuters.com/article/industryNews/idUSTRE54E4QU20090515 4/15)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: comScore, Fox Interactive Media, Google, Hulu, The New York Times Company, Twitter, Yahoo, YouTube
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Optimedia U.S. has released a new survey that attempts to measure not only how many people watched a show across multiple platforms but also how engaged viewers are in it and how much buzz it gets. “American Idol” on Fox was at the top of the Content Power Ratings, AMC’s “Mad Men” was the highest-ranked prime-time cable show and Showtime’s “Dexter” was the highest-ranked pay-cable program. The New York Times/TV Decoder blog (5/14) , TVWeek.com (5/14)
YouTube remains the largest online-video brand site, but Hulu has grown from 63.2 million total streams in April 2008 to 373.3 million in April 2009 — a 490% increase, according to Nielsen Online. Other online-video brands on the list were Yahoo!, Fox Interactive Media, Nickelodeon Kids & Family Network, MSN/Windows Live, ABC.com, MTV Networks Music, and Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital. TVWeek.com (5/14) , Mediaweek (5/14)
While Nielsen says Hulu received 8.9 million visitors in March, comScore claims the video site received 42 million. The wildly divergent numbers demonstrate the nascency of the market for online video measurement. Advertising execs complain: It’s “still the wild wild West.” (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/15/business/media/15nielsen.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1242417777-hPCG7aRJ6N313TbLNTrCjg 5/15)
How many Twitter followers do you have? Chances are it’s nowhere near 1 million — only seven users have that many. Oprah
just joined the club as the 8th member. But what’s crazy is that she gained her millionth follower just 28 days after signing up for the service. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/14/28-days-later-oprah-races-past-a-million-twitter-followers 5/14)
The New York Times is said to be nearing a decision on how to charge for some of its content on the Internet. One proposal will allow a reader to roam freely on the Web site until hitting a predetermined limit of word-count or pageviews, after which a meter will start running. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.observer.com/2009/media/new-york-times-considering-two-plans-charge-content-web 4/15)
Google has rolled out
a new recommendations gadget that allows sites that use Google Friend Connect to see which parts of their websites their visitors like best. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/15/google-friend-connect-adds-recommendations-gadget 5/15)
RealNetworks, which is waging a court battle against Hollywood studios over its DVD-copying software, is now filing antitrust claims against them, saying they are trying to prevent other companies from building products that let consumers legally copy DVDs for personal use. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.informationweek.com/news/personal_tech/drm/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217500225 5/14)
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia will test a paid download model for access to some of its vast library of online video content next month. The test will make the lifestyle media company the latest media operation to try charging for content online. “It has to happen,” says Stewart. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.smartmoney.com/news/ON/?story=ON-20090514-000657-1426 5/14)
A new screen-sharing app launched today from drop.io
, which keeps adding features to its private file-sharing service. The new product is called present.io
and it lets you set up a screen-sharing presentation with multiple participants in just a few clicks. Present.io has a lot in common with drop.io’s chat feature which it added last month, except that it looks like this scales to hundreds of participants and is designed specifically for webinars and group presentations. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/14/dropio-adds-seamless-screen-sharing-app-with-presentio 5/14)
Roger McNamee, co-founder of Elevation Partners, which bought a big stake in Forbes Media in 2006, is resigning from the Forbes board. The investment firm’s bet that Forbes.com would come to offset the company’s declining print business “proved to be wrong,” he admits. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.nypost.com/seven/05152009/business/at_forbes_media__the_knives_are_coming_169342.htm 5/15)
Cablevision, the New York-area cable-television provider, is in talks to offer an interactive travel service to subscribers in competition with Web sites such as Expedia and Orbitz. The service would allow Cablevision customers to book trips through their TV sets. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a.qDlgdX26JA 5/15)
Cablevision Systems Corp., which has set up thousands of Wi-Fi hot spots in the Long Island, Connecticut and Westchester-Dutchess, N.Y., areas, has announced that it has expanded its high-speed wireless Web access in New Jersey to include areas such as Shore Points and Morris, Ocean and Monmouth counties. Bethpage, N.Y.-based Cablevision also said that it was now offering Wi-Fi speeds up to 3 Mbps, which is double its previous offering. Forbes/The Associated Press (5/14)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: CinemaNow, Hewlett-Packard, iPod Nano, Netflix, Palace of Auburn Hills, Random House, Toni Morrison, YouTube
And so it begins: Random House has switched off
Kindle Text-to-speech by default, angering educators and advocates for the blind in the process. Forty titles have been shut down including books by Stephen King and Toni Morrison. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/05/15/random-house-shuts-down-kindle-text-to-speech-for-their-titles 5/15)
Techcrunch has gotten their hands on the COOL-ER
, a new Ebook reader coming out in two weeks that’s sporting a (relatively) low $250 price tag and a case that looks like an over-sized iPod Nano (it’s also coming in 8 Applesque colors). Interead
, the small startup that built Cool-er, is obviously trying to bring Ebooks to a new market, shunning some of the features seen on the Kindle in favor of a lower price-point and a broader appeal. And it just might work. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/05/15/video-our-full-walkthrough-of-the-color-coated-cool-er-ebook-reader 5/15)
In an effort to boost its slumping PC sales, Hewlett-Packard began offering consumer desktops equipped with touch-screen controls. The units accounted for 400,000 of the company’s PC sales last year, a fraction of the 54 million traditional desktops and laptops HP sold, so the firm is expanding its touch-screen effort into the commercial market with installations at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and Detroit’s Palace of Auburn Hills arena. The Wall Street Journal (5/15)
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, left, and H-P’s Stephen DeWitt test a touch-screen PC at O’Hare Airport in March.
LG’s new BD390, which includes integrated Wi-Fi, is “probably the best all-around Blu-ray player there is at the moment,” according to this review. The system comes with Netflix, YouTube and CinemaNow on board, and, unlike other players, has made installation and setup a job that just about anyone can handle. Gizmodo (5/15)
Dell has introduced the 22-inch P2210, the 19-inch E190S and the 17-inch E170S monitors, all of which meet or exceed current energy-saving standards. The displays’price points are $240, $130 and $110, respectively, for the P2210, the E190S and the E170S. Electronista (5/14)
Filed under: MISC | Tags: Blockbuster, Business, Metro-Goldwyn Mayer, Minimal instruction set computer, Movie studio, Providence Equity Partners, United States, Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal reports that Blockbuster‘s first-quarter revenue shrank nearly 20% to $1.12 billion and earnings dropped 39%. Blockbuster said few strong movies were available for rental during the quarter, but big titles, including “Watchmen,” will be out soon. The Wall Street Journal (5/15)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the movie studio controlled by Providence Equity Partners and TPG, is in talks to restructure $3.7 billion in debt. The studio says it aims to stay independent. (Iwantmedia 5/15, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aAkQCXqtlHvg 5/14)





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