Daily Marauder


SH-T MY DAD SAYS: COMING TO A TV NEAR YOU by Marauder

SH-T MY DAD SAYS: COMING TO A TV NEAR YOU

Shit My Dad Says

Several months ago, Justin Halpern (29) had done what many of us consider to be the worst case scenario and moved back in with his parents in San Diego, CA. On August 3rdof this year, he launched a twitter feed to document the all out HYSTERICAL monologues his 73-year old dad embarcks on. Gems like:

“Son, no one gives a sh-t about all the things your cell phone does. You didn’t invent it, you just bought it. Anybody can do that.”

As you can see, the Twitter feed quickly amassed over 700K followers in only a few months. Hence, CBS came to develop the concept into a family comedy. Will & Grace” creators David Kohan and Max Mutchnick will executive produce and supervise the writing from Halpern to be joined by Patrick Schumacker.

Yes, so what I’m saying here is, Justin went from moving back in with his parents to potentially picking up a TV deal.

I heart the internet.

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BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

The Season 3 finale of AMC‘s “Mad Men” attracted 2.3 million viewers, according to preliminary Nielsen data, the show’s second-highest viewership mark of the season. The drama about the advertising business in the 1960s averaged 1.8 million viewers per episode during its third season, a 20% improvement over last season. Variety (11/9

Mad Men Season 3

NBC’s exit from scripted series to air “The Jay Leno Show” weeknights at 10 p.m. has left 1.82 million young viewers up for grabs, and CBS and ABC have let most of them slip away six weeks into the television season. (Bloomberg11/9)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

Google users may not turn up any News Corp. articles in their searches after the company launches its paid content strategy, according to comments made by Rupert Murdoch in a Sky News interview. Murdoch complained that search engine readers hold little value for print sites’ advertisers and again held up his Wall St. Journal site as an example of what the model would look like. (Only the first paragraph of news stories would come up in search engines.) “There’s not enough advertising in the world to make all the websites profitable. We’d rather have fewer people coming to our websites but paying,” said Mr. Murdoch.

Techcrunch reported that 25% of WSJ.com’s traffic comes from Google. That’s, in essence, what we’re talking about here: 25%. It’s a bit like Kraft taking all of it’s products off of supermarket shelves. And considering that WSJ has a deal with Google to allow users to read full article content when they search through the engine, it seems a bit like an about-face no?


In a continued housecleaning at Walt Disney Co., studio distribution veteran Mark Zoradi is leaving after 29 years. The departure of Zoradi, president of Disney’s motion pictures group, follows the ousting of his former boss, Disney Studios Chairman Dick Cook, in September and Miramax Films President Daniel Battsek late last month. (LA Times 11/10)

LinkedIn and Twitter have linked up. Starting immediately, users of LinkedIn and Twitter can cross-file to each other’s services, by checking a box on either Twitter or LinkedIn. (Reuters11/10)

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MOBILE by Marauder
November 10, 2009, 3:45 PM
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: , , , , , , ,

MOBILE

Now that in-app purchasing has been live for a few weeks in the iTunes App Store, and Apple is now ranking the top-grossing apps, whether they start out as free or paid, we have some initial data on what kinds of apps are pulling in the most money from in-app purchases. (In-app purchases allow apps to offer a free version and then make money by requiring consumers to pay for additional features or content). Today, Distimo put out a report (download it here ) which breaks down the top 40 grossing in-app purchasing titles by category. Games, social networking, and Book apps are doing the best job upselling consumers from free apps to paid enhancements. Music, news, and finance apps, not so much. (Techcrunch11/10)

In App Purchases iPhone

Today’s announced deal to by mobile ad startup AdMob for $750 million is Google’s largest acquisition since its $3.1 billion purchase of DoubleClick in March, 2008, and its third-largest ever after the $1.65 billion YouTube acquisition in 2006. (Techcrunch11/10)

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GAMING by Marauder

GAMING

Electronic Arts announced that it plans to acquire the assets of Playfish, a London-based developer of online social games, for at least $275 million. Meanwhile, the company said it will cut 17% of its workforce — about 1,500 jobs — and close several facilities in hopes of saving about $100 million annually. The Wall Street Journal (11/9) , Reuters (11/9)

EA

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