Daily Marauder


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

A year ago Facebook had super growth around the world, but U.S. growth was flat and we pondered the real value of all these worldwide users. At that time it would have taken Facebook more than four years to catch up to MySpace in the U.S. In January we re-ran the numbers and the trend suggested January 2010. Today that has all dramatically changed – MySpace has 70 million monthly U.S. uniques (Comscore, March 2009), less than they did a year ago. Meanwhile, Facebook has surged to 61 million U.S. users and are adding a few million more every month. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/18/myspace-is-in-real-trouble-if-these-page-view-declines-dont-reverse/ 5/18)

Myspace

Twitter is developing add-on tools for businesses and professionals, which could create a revenue stream for the microblogging service, says co-founder Biz Stone. Twitter doesn’t plan to pursue advertising, he adds, because it could end up annoying users. (Iwantmedia 5/19, http://www.reuters.com/article/GlobalTechnology09/idUSTRE54H5CP20090518 5/18)

Facebook’s recent redesign makes the social network closely resemble Twitter, according to Twitter creator Jack Dorsey. “We’re definitely flattered because it is moving more into our direction,” he says. “They may get more and more close to what we’re doing.” (Iwantmedia 5/19, http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2009/05/twitter-jack-dorsey-nielsen.html 5/18)

Twit

Napster has announced its latest relaunch plan, the company’s first since being bought by Best Buy last year. Under the new plan, customers will pay $5 a month for unlimited streaming music and 5 MP3 downloads per month. VentureBeat (5/18) , Reuters (5/18)

If newspapers want to get their online revenue growing, according to media buyers, they need to tie ad rates more closely to results, charge less for ads and provide Web content that readers can’t get at news aggregators. “CPMs have got to be in line with the online marketplace.” (Iwantmedia 5/19, http://www.marketwatch.com/story/newspapers-pressured-to-change-online-ad-approach 5/18)

Disney is opening DisneyStore.com, a new site offering merchandise from its theme parks, as the entertainment group seeks new revenue sources. The site will sell Mickey Mouse ears and other items that were previously only available at Disney parks and resorts. (Iwantmedia 5/19, http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSTRE54I0L320090519 5/19)

Disney store

(Below)  That’s like the CEO of Chrysler telling people to not use their cars.  Is this the Bugs Bunny technique?

Google CEO Eric Schmidt, speaking at the University of Pennsylvania’s commencement ceremony in Philadelphia, recommends college graduates to turn off their computers and discover the humanity around them. Economic downturns can be a time for innovation, he says. (Iwantmedia 5/19, http://tech.yahoo.com/news/ap/20090518/ap_on_hi_te/pa_google_penn 5/18)

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

More than 60% of Twitter users stop using the microblogging service a month after joining, according to Nielsen Online. “Twitter has enjoyed a nice ride over the last few months, but it will not be able to sustain its meteoric rise without establishing a higher level of user loyalty.” (Iwantmedia 4/29, http://tech.yahoo.com/news/afp/20090428/tc_afp/usitcompanyinternettwitternielsen 4/28)

twitter1

Bravo is tapping into the hottest social networks to help fans participate in The Real Housewives of New York City finale. On Tuesday, May 5 at 10 p.m. ET/PT, fans can utilize Twitter, Facebook Connect and live mobile chat integrations on BravoTV.com to interact directly with their favorite Housewives live and the ladies will respond in kind during the finale. (Cynopsis 4/29)

real-nyc2

MTV is joining forces with both Facebook and Twitter for its new “The Alexa Chung Show.” The show will be similar in format to MTV’s former “TRL.” Audiences — whether on the set or watching from home — will be asked to tweet their reaction to guests while the show is on the air. (http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118002926.html?categoryid=1009&cs=1 4/28)

IAC/InterActiveCorp CEO Barry Diller is stockpiling cash and says he aims to “spend it intelligently.” Speaking at the USA Today CEO Forum, he says Facebook is “the real deal.” However, “nobody can buy Facebook now.” Also, Web video will evolve “just like the movie business did.” (http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/management/2009-04-28-diller-ceo-forum_N.htm 4/29)

iac2

Facebook is on a “clear path to be cash-flow positive next year,” says COO Sheryl Sandberg. One indication that 2009 is an important year: Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s 24-year-old founder and CEO, has committed to wearing a tie everyday to the office, she adds. (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aKLGItgfmt48 4/28)

With its new management team, News Corp.’s MySpace “looks more like a media and entertainment portal,” observers say. If MySpace comes to define itself that way, the site could incorporate social networking like Facebook, but with a focus on “consuming entertainment.” (http://www.thewrap.com/article/2736 4/28)

my

Network’s digital arms are beginning to get serious about monetizing their content. NBC.com will launch a series of targetable segments starting in Q2 2009 enabling advertisers to target groups of users using a menu style selection matching their target to NBC audience clusters or custom segments. The network also unveiled a whole new suite of ad delivery solutions and products geared toward attracting premium brand ad dollars. (Cynopsis 4/29)

One way to possibly track the spread of the swine flu is to look at where spikes in search activity around related terms is occurring. Google already does this with its Google Flu Trends, and has now extended that analysis on an experimental basis to Mexico with a site it just put up called Experimental Flu Trends For Mexico. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/29/searching-for-the-swine-flu/ 4/29)

swine

The U.S. District Court for Massachusetts set aside a prior jury verdict against content delivery network Limelight, stating that Limelight doesn’t in fact infringe upon Akamai‘s CDN patents. Limelight hopes to reverse expenses of about $66 million saved for potential damages and interest in the case. Akamai promised to appeal the ruling. (Cynopsis 4/29)

Top U.S. Online Video Properties by Videos Viewed -March 2009
Property                   Videos (000)    Share (%) of Videos
Total Internet           14,468,345           100.0
Google Sites              5,919,530            40.9
Fox Interactive Media    437,098             3.0
Hulu                            380,102             2.6
Yahoo! Sites                334,724             2.3
Microsoft Sites             288,239             2.0
Viacom Digital             277,753             1.9
CBS Interactive            191,686             1.3
Turner Network            167,323             1.2
Disney Online               125,248             0.9
AOL LLC                       105,237             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 – March 2009
Property                   Unique Viewers       Average Videos
(000)              per Viewer
Total Internet                149,410                96.8
Google Sites                  100,382                59.0
Fox Interactive Media       55,156                 7.9
Yahoo! Sites                    42,524                 7.9
Hulu                               41,564                 9.1
CBS Interactive               35,400                 5.4
Microsoft Sites                32,194                 9.0
Viacom Digital                 27,168                10.2
AOL LLC                          22,349                 4.7
Turner Network                19,644                 8.5
Disney Online                   12,965                 9.7
Source: comScore Video Metrix, Rankings based on video content sites; excludes video server networks.  Online video includes both streaming and progressive download video

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE VIDEO OF THE WEEK: TWOUBLE WITH TWITTERS by Marauder

ONLINE VIDEO OF THE WEEK: TWOUBLE WITH TWITTERS

Many people ask me about Twitter and how they can use it.  Here’s a little known fact.  I actually don’t like Twitter.  Until I noticed its promotional power for pushing traffic to my web site, I thought it was one more social networking tool in an already crowded world.  This video is dead on.  There are a whole lot of people screaming at a wall on Twitter and only a few people listening.  But for those who want to listen, there is a wealth of information to be had; information which would better you and/or your business.

So get tweeting…but please don’t share intimate details of your sex life.  It’s creepy…  Oh yeah, and join the Daily Marauder twitter feed.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

Twitter co-founder Biz Stone says that the company is hiring a manager to develop accounts for businesses that will have more features but cost a fee to use. Stone did not disclose a launch date. Twitter is growing rapidly, but is yet to specify how it will make money. (Iwantmedia 3/26, http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2009/03/23/daily52.html 3/23)

twitter3


The rise of “feisty online alternatives” is helping speed up the decline of celebrity magazines, says a report by media bankers DeSilva + Phillips. Even powerhouse People magazine is vulnerable. Web sites like Perez Hilton “should be acquisition targets.” (Iwantmedia 3/26, http://www.foliomag.com/2009/outlook-celebrity-magazines-may-never-recover-recession 3/25)

celeb-mag

The new iTunes pricing scheme is set for an April 7 launch, says the Los Angeles Times. They do good work over there. Apple hasn’t revealed this date publicly, but April 7 is supposedly what Cupertino is telling record labels. Remember: prices now top out at $1.29 for popular songs. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/03/26/popular-songs-on-itunes-go-to-129-on-april-7 3/26)

new-itunes

AT&T and Comcast are announcing their initiatives to work with the music industry to combat online piracy. The Internet service providers are sending letters to identified customers informing them that infringement has taken place on their account — but with no action outlined. (Iwantmedia 3/26, http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3ic48b7a3a3eb3111d72b05ffcdd8d793b 3/25)

ZeeVee has updated its Zinc online video browser, which includes an on-demand library as well as content from Netflix and CBS. The browser’s new Beta 3 iteration organizes Internet-based content with a user-friendly interface that can be accessed via TV or other video screen. ElectronicHouse.com (3/24)

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

CBS Interactive is also testing a 1080p- quality video gallery on the TV.com portal for folks with a fat pipe (3 Mbps or higher) and a fast processor. Currently there are only 4 video clips but they look amazing. Competitor Hulu upgraded its HD gallery last year to stream videos in 720p. (Cynopsis 3/13)

The video stumbled a bit on my end but indeed, AMAZING.  Hulu’s strategy on most things is that they won’t deliver a product until they can perfect it.  Who knows which strategy will win but this new online video battle between Hulu and tv.com is an interesting one.  But to be fair, and keepin’ it real, whose at #2 in the online video ranking wars?  It sure isn’t tv.com.

tvcom

Conde Nast is entering a partnership to distribute video from sites such as Epicurious and Vogue.TV via Hulu, the online video hub. Hulu is selling advertising to accompany the Conde Nast content, while the partners agree to share the ad revenue. (Iwantmedia 3/13, http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=102059 3/13)

hulu-conde

Maybe it is all the TV news mentions, but Twitter is seeing the growth in U.S visitors to its site accelerating. In February, 4 million people in the U.S. visited the site, up from 2.6 million the month before, according to the latest data from comScore. That represents a 55 percent month-over-month growth rate, compared to 33 percent growth in each of the two months prior. (ComScore has yet to release February figures for worldwide visitors, but for January that number is 6 million). (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/13/whoa-twitter-mania 3/13)

twitter-stats

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg will take to Oprah Winfrey‘s couch on Friday. Winfrey is expected to interview Zuckerberg and show a demo of her TV show’s new page on the social network. A “celebrity Facebook addict” might Skype in to talk up the service as well. (Iwantmedia 3/13, http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/03/12/oprah-to-interview-facebook-founder 3/12)

If Oprah is doing it, Facebook has achieved mainstream status officially.

oprah

New AOL chief Tim Armstrong: “I am looking forward to taking what I have learned at Google and seeing what I can bring to really help AOL.” He adds: Time Warner wants “the best outcome” for its Internet company. “That could take the form of different paths,” including a spin off. (Iwantmedia 3/13, http://kara.allthingsd.com/20090312/new-aol-chairman-and-ceo-and-about-to-be-ex-googler-tim-armstrong-speaks 3/12)

Twitter is driving much of its traffic to social networking, search, email and entertainment sites, according to an analysis by Hitwise. The data also shows that Twitter has more in common with social networks than search engines. Twitter is “a means of distributing content.” (Iwantmedia 3/13, http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=102076 3/13)

I think the only reason why Twitter isn’t recognized as a search engine for the moment is because their search functionality isn’t prominent enough yet.  Furthermore, most folks just haven’t figured out how to use the feature.  Once both of these things change, Twitter will become a more functional search engine ESPECIALLY for local news.  Hey LA Times, NY Times….integrate Twitter functionality now.  The deal will benefit both of you being that Twitter hasn’t figure out how to monetize and all y’all can think about is monetizing.  Perfect union.

twitter2

Former Disney CEO Michael Eisner is developing a television series for rival Viacom’s Nickelodeon cable channel. “Glenn Martin, DDS,” a stop-motion animated series, will debut this summer. The effort will be the first TV series from Eisner’s Tornante company. (Iwantmedia 3/13, http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/content_display/news/cable-tv/e3iffcfe0c0b0255a5a8aecffcc5d1ceea1 3/12)

The WB.com has cast Jessica “LonelyGirl15″ Rose in a new 18-episode web horror series entitled Blood Cell, per THR, about a woman racing against the clock to stop a psycho killer. (Cynopsis 3/13)

Overall online video usage dropped a bit over Feb. according to Nielsen Online as those with jobs went back to work and those without spent more time networking for leads (Cynopsis’ theory).  Streams were down by almost 15% during the month (which, to be fair, is a shorter one in terms of total days.) Meanwhile Hulu climbed over Yahoo! to reach the #2 spot in terms of total video streams. (Cynopsis 3/13)

Overall Online Video Usage (U.S.)
Jan-09         Feb-09    Percent Change
Unique Viewers (000)        135,617     127,613        -5.9%
Total Streams (000)     10,457,785   8,897,943      -14.9%
Streams per Viewer              77.1           69.7       -9.6%
Time per Viewer (min)         178.6          169.3       -5.2%
Source: Nielsen Online, VideoCensus, includes progressive downloads and excludes video advertising

Top Online Brands ranked by Video Streams for February 2009 (U.S.)
Video Brand                                            Total Streams (000) Unique Viewers (000)
YouTube                                                           5,158,727             88,136
Hulu                                                                    308,806              9,473
Yahoo!                                                                 250,425            24,085
Nickelodeon Kids and Family Network                         209,465              6,039
Fox Interactive Media                                             194,255            14,376
ABC.COM                                                              187,128             6,716
MSN/Windows Live                                                 162,900            12,198
Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network          125,067             5,961
MTV Networks Music                                               100,076             4,410
CNN Digital Network                                                  99,846             8,377
Source: Nielsen Online, VideoCensus, includes progressive downloads and excludes video advertising

African Americans are slowly but surely closing the so-called digital divide as internet usage grows among the community, according to an analysis from eMarketer. African American internet usage is expected to increase from 46.4% in 2008 to 56.4% in 2013, thanks in part to swift adoption and lifestyle changes from younger users. (Asian Americans remain the most connected demo, with 70.8% of the population now online, expected to increase to 78.9% in 2013.) (Cynopsis 3/13)

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

The concept of building a Digg for music has been tried before (see Contrastream or iJigg), but a music streaming site called thesixtyone is the closest Techcrunch has seen so far to getting the formula right. It features only about 50,000 tracks self-uploaded by indie artists and music labels, but visitors can listen to the full stream of each track and vote their favorites up the rankings by hitting the “heart” button. The results are highly listenable playlists by genre, tag, or just what’s hot right now. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/09/thesixtyone-is-building-a-digg-for-indie-music 3/9)

I just listened to a great track by William Fitzsimmons and a very odd cover of Soul Asylum’s Runaway Train.  I approve.  Very interesting but listenable selections.

sixtyone

With Yelp still responding to charges by San Francisco businesses that it manipulates the prominence of positive and negative reviews, some Chicago merchants are adding to the heat. They allege that the user-review site is offering to rearrange reviews for companies that advertise. (Iwantmedia 3/9, http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/technology/chi-0309-yelpmar09,0,3536868.story 3/9)

I don’t know if this is true or not but if so, way to destroy some major credibility overnight.

yelp

Twitter CEO Evan Williams says that the microblogging site could add an extension that would notify users of events taking place in their immediate vicinities. For example, he says, Twitter could ping users, in real-time, to a tweet about a fire burning in their neighborhood. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/07/twitter-to-start-serving-local-news-to-users 3/7)

twitter

YouTube, New York Times, BBC News and CNN top the list of mainstream media Web sites with the highest number of blogs linking to them in the past 30 days, according to a survey by blog search site Technorati. Other top sites include MSN, Guardian and Washington Post. (Iwantmedia 3/9, http://technorati.com/weblog/2009/03/482.html 3/9)

Even as Google is cancelling its experiment with newspaper advertising, Yahoo is expanding its newspaper consortium. Today, Yahoo is announcing that it is adding two new members: The Boston Globe and the St. Petersburg Times. That brings the consortium up to 38 media companies, representing 793 total newspapers, up from 635 newspaper partners a year ago, and 176 at launch in November, 2006.  Yahoo’s newspaper strategy has seen success because, unlike Google, it never tried to get into the business of selling print ads. Instead, Yahoo focused on helping newspapers get more traffic to their Websites. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/09/yahoos-newspaper-consortium-keeps-growing 3/9)

yahoo

Yahoo is getting a judge’s approval of a settlement mandating changes to the Internet company’s severance plan that investors contend will make it easier for Microsoft or other potential suitors to buy it. The settlement amounts to “an extraordinary victory” for investors. (Iwantmedia 3/9, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a.DE9DltWO7w 3/7)

In a privacy error that underscores some of the biggest problems surrounding cloud-based services, Google has sent a notice to a number of users of its Document and Spreadsheets products stating that it may have inadvertently shared some of their documents with contacts who were never granted access to them. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/07/huge-google-privacy-blunder-shares-your-docs-without-permission 3/7)

google-privacy

A federal jury says that Universal Music doesn’t have to pay Mark and Jeff Bass, the producers behind rapper Eminem, royalties for songs sold online, upholding the music industry’s business model. The decision could have greatly damaged the record industry. (Iwantmedia 3/9, http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-cotown-eminem7-2009mar07,0,5160214.story 3/7)

eminem1

Microsoft, Google and eBay are among the “10 great stocks to stash away for five years or longer,” according to Barron’s. The News Corp. financial newspaper cites Google for its growth opportunities of advertising on the Internet and the company’s lack of debt. (Iwantmedia 3/9, http://online.barrons.com/article/SB123639063818058979.html 3/9)

The mass media may be enamored of the rags-to-riches stories of developers on Apple’s App Store, but it isn’t the only game in town for indie developers to strike it rich. Techcrunch has gotten word from SocialMedia, a popular ad platform for social network applications, that one of the company’s clients pulled in over $700,000 in advertising revenues from their Facebook apps in December alone. Granted, this was spread over 30+ of the client’s applications, but the company only consists of a handful of (very prolific) developers. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/06/some-indie-facebook-developers-pulling-in-over-700000-a-month 3/6)

facebook1

When it comes to promoting new music, pay-for-play schemes are generally frowned upon. The practice, which involves music labels or artists paying radio stations to play their songs in heavy rotation, dates back to the beginnings of terrestrial radio. It got so bad in the 1950s that Congress had to intervene, but it keeps rearing its head in new forms.  Now, pay-for-play has hit online radio. Jango, a music streaming service which claims 6 million monthly listeners, is selling paid placement to labels and artists through a program it launched last week called Jango Airplay. For as little as $30, a band can buy 1,000 plays on Jango. Each song has links to buy the song at Amazon or iTunes. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/08/pay-for-play-comes-to-online-radio-is-that-a-bad-thing 3/8)

jango

Following up on a comment made last week by Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz about the central importance of Yahoo! Mail, Hitwise identified the Mail product as the portal’s most trafficked property receiving more than a third (36.71%) of visits to a custom category of 80 leading Yahoo! properties in February. Yahoo! held 56.46% market share of US visits among Email Services websites. MSN’s Windows Live Mail was #2 with 19.14% and Gmail was #3 with 10.82%. Yahoo Maps, which Bartz admitted she didn’t use, failed to make the top 10. (Cynopsis 3/9)

Top 10 Yahoo! Properties in Feb. as % of overall visits to the portal’s sites
Website (80 returned)         Visits

  1. Yahoo! Mail             36.71%
  2. Yahoo!                    25.48%
  3. Yahoo! Search         11.75%
  4. My Yahoo!                 3.08%
  5. Yahoo! News             2.61%
  6. Yahoo! Address Book 2.16%
  7. Yahoo! Finance         2.10%
  8. Yahoo! Games          1.04%
  9. Yahoo! Answers        1.03%
  10. Yahoo Groups             .76%

Source: Hitwise

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]


ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

Disney-ABC’s Oscar.com unveiled a new original web series “Road to the Oscars,” featuring Bachelor and Bachelorette host Chris Harrison. The series, which will feature Oscar news, exclusive interviews and behind the scenes footage, consists of nine episodes with a new show premiering everyday through Monday, February 23. The site also launched its “Oscars Designer Challenge: Behind the Dress” competition hosted by “Project Runway” alum/ fashion designer Nick Verreos. (Cynopsis 2/19)

road-to-oscars

Facebook has just launched its first widget for Facebook Connect, its recently-introduced platform that allows users to authenticate themselves using their Facebook logins. Dubbed ‘Comments Box’, the new widget allows site owners to integrate a comments section into their webpage. But unlike normal commenting systems, comments left in Comments Box will be relayed back to the users’ Facebook profiles, where the conversation can continue (users can also choose to receive notifications through Facebook whenever someone responds to their comments on other websites). (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/19/facebook-connect-gets-easy-with-new-comments-widget 2/19)

Online TV firm Next New Networks and Verizon FiOS are launching an online network called $99 Music Videos to showcase the talents of emerging musicians and filmmakers. The companies say they are looking to create an “MTV for the digital and iTunes age.” (Iwantmedia 2/19, http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3iee816b19c15d56f1b3e2b5da7f3676cb 2/19)

A new interactive site dubbed Fashionology.com launched yesterday as a web extension to a hands-on shop in Beverly Hills that allows tweens to design and make their own clothing. Building on tools popularized by dress up sites, Fashionology uses animated avatars to allow young users to play around with designs, share and borrow ideas with others and order finished products. (Cynopsis 2/19)

fashionology

Despite the well publicized failure of Bud.tv, sneaker maker Adidas is rolling out its own video portal this week to promote its brands the viral video way, per Adweek. The portal began with basketball page featuring celebrity endorsements from NBA stars such as Dwight Howard, but plans are to ramp up content to include hundreds of embeddable videos, photos and integrations with social networking sites. The portal is the brainchild of EVB, San Francisco. (Cynopsis 2/19)

Nickelodeon‘s portfolio of sites claimed the top spot in comScore’s Family & Lifestyle category in Jan., posting a 13% gain in unique visitors (28.7 million) over a year ago. The group, which includes Nick.com; NickJr.com; The-N.com; Neopets; Shockwave; AddictingGames; ParentsConnect and NOGGIN.com; also ranked first in video streams among kids brands according to Nielsen’s VideoCensus. Nickelodeon Kids and Family Group was fifth among the top brands overall by video streams, behind only YouTube, Yahoo, Hulu and Fox Interactive Media. It delivered 204 million streams and 6.3 million unique video viewers. (Cynopsis 2/19)

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]



Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.