Daily Marauder


BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

With baseball season officially underway, HBO announced a renewal of its baseball-themed comedy series Eastbound & Down for a second season. The Danny McBride-headlining series, about a former MLB star pitcher returning to his home town to teach P.E., will begin production later in 2009 with new episodes scheduled to hit HBO’s lineup next year. (Cynopsis 4/9)

eastboundanddown

FOX is playing off the uncertain economic times with a new reality competition series called Someone’s Gotta Go. The series, from Endemol USA, will go inside real American businesses giving employees the chance to decide which colleague will be laid off. (Cynopsis 4/9)

Leah Remini rejoins the world of sitcoms in the ABC comedy pilot Don’t Try This at Home, per THR. From ABC Studios, Don’t Try This at Home is about marriage and parenting from the perspective of three couples. (Cynopsis 4/9)

Part of AMC’s programming magic over the past few years, according to network chief Charlie Collier, has been to partner edgy original shows with feature films that present a related theme. “When ‘Mad Men’ debuted, we led into it with ‘Goodfellas,’” he said. “The notion was that you’d take this iconic Martin Scorsese piece about a group of guys who thought they could play without rules, and it led to an iconic television program about a group of men who again thought rules did not apply.” The Wall Street Journal (4/8)

Shares of Disney, Time Warner, News Corp. and other media giants are seeing gains. But Wall Street analysts warn: “The rally will meet resistance once the market realizes that the first-quarter results are below consensus.” Within a few months, “things turn ugly again.” (Iwantmedia 4/9, http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/finance/news/e3i4f09d44ee2455d728c72b6547178e4bd 4/8)

Michael Copps, acting chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, says he intends to “right the injustice” of the lack of diversity in U.S. broadcasting. The agency is OKing a proposal to improve data collection about media owned by women and minorities. (Iwantmedia 4/9, http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090408-711361.html 4/8)

Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes was awarded compensation in 2008 valued at about $21.5 million, according to an Associated Press tally of data filed with regulators. That figure is up 11% from a year ago, as the company cut costs and moved to shed assets such as its cable unit. (Iwantmedia 4/9, http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090408/ap_on_bi_ge/time_warner_executive_compensation 4/8)

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BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

Animal Planet attracted a record-setting 1.3 million viewers to Sunday night’s debut of “River Monsters,” including 647,000 in the targeted 25-to-54 demographic group. The episode was the most-watched premiere in Animal Planet’s history and pulled in more viewers than any other regularly airing prime-time telecast on the network in more than six years. Broadcasting & Cable (4/7)

river-m

NBC dethroned its drama series Kings, opting to move it off of Sunday nights at 8p to Saturdays at 8p, starting April 18. Originally, Kings had been slotted to air Thursdays at 10p but was moved by NBC Entertainment President Angela Bromstad to Sunday nights where the most recent episode averaged a 1.1 rating among A18-49. The new John Wells drama series Southland gets the prime Thursday at 10p time slot this week. (Cynopsis 4/8)

kings

In May, Fox will broadcast a “sneak peek” of its new television series “Glee,” a comedy-drama about a high school glee club that has echoes of Disney’s lucrative “High School Musical.” After airing the pilot episode May 19, Fox will re-introduce “Glee” this fall. (Iwantmedia 4/8, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/business/media/08rice.html 4/8)

Nickelodeon has added a pair of live-action buddy comedies to its production slate. One is for an as-yet-untitled series that will be about two surfing pals in search of the perfect wave, while the other will be called “Telepathic” and revolves around high school students with supernatural powers. The Hollywood Reporter (4/7)

The CW will broadcast the Daytime Emmy Awards for the first time on August 30. The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences made a deal with The CW to broadcast this year’s show from the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles, at the same time the network plans on debuting its new fall lineup. Previously, ABC and CBS alternated airing the awards show but after both declined the NATAS offered it to The CW along with first time show producer, Associated Television International. (Cynopsis 4/8)

From television networks selling downloads of shows, to music companies trying to curb file-sharing, to struggling newspapers and magazines, the make-or-break question is this: How do you get consumers to pay for something they have grown used to getting free? (Iwantmedia 4/8, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/business/media/08pay.html?_r=1 4/8)

More food comes in June as Bravo debuts Top Chef Masters, the spin-off of its Top Chef series, on June 10 at 10p. The flip-flopped premise of this competition/elimination series has 24 world-famous chefs trying to out-do each other until one winning chef remains receiving $100,000 for the charity of their choice. Throughout the series run, guest stars and celebrities will be featured including Neil Patrick Harris, Zooey Deschanel, the past Top Chef winners as well as appearances by Top Chef’s Tom Colicchio, Padma Lakshmi and Gail Simmons among others. (Cynopsis 4/8)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

ABC had nine out of the top ten most viewed television series for the month of February according to Nielsen VideoCensus (Which, it’s important to note, doesn’t track visits to Hulu.) Lost proved to be a juggernaut with 2.5 million unique viewers, up 41% over January. Lost also ranked number one in total streams with 48 million ­- up 20% from January. Dancing with the Stars (1.5 million unique viewers), Grey’s Anatomy (1.3 million), The Bachelor (962,000), Brothers & Sisters (801,000), Desperate Housewives (793,000) and Scrubs (655,000) ranked 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th, respectively. (Cynopsis 3/16)

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Yahoo is abandoning its forays into television-style online productions. Instead, the Internet company is focusing on producing brief, niche Web shows. Yahoo execs say they have found a sustainable model for making original video online, in part by not competing with TV. (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/16/technology/internet/16yahoo.html?_r=1 3/16)

Ali Landry is the hostess of “Spotlight to Nightlight,” a series on celebrity mothers.

yahoo-online

Analysis: More television viewers are flocking to Web streaming, but the broadcast networks aren’t getting anywhere near the revenues that they would earn from traditional TV commercials. If too many people switch to services like Hulu, TV’s business model “could collapse.” (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118001234.html?categoryid=2522&cs=1 3/13)

hulu

Facebook unveiled some new targeting filters on its ad platform last week allowing advertisers to now target users by language and geographical location including individual metro areas made up of multiple cities. Previously in order to target based on language, advertisers were forced to specify countries they wanted to target. (Cynopsis 3/16)

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A panel of comedians and tech execs at the South by Southwest Interactive conference in Austin, Texas, contend that online video is still a long way from destroying traditional television. “Everyone is still trying to figure out” webisodes, says B.J. Novak of NBC’s “The Office.” (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/03/15/sxsw-web-video-isnt-killing-tv/ 3/15)

B.J. Novak, who plays Ryan Howard on NBC

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Steven Johnson, author of “Everything Bad is Good for You,” says during an appearance at SXSW that he sees a bright future for news. Consumers will benefit from the new “ecosystem of news” — encompassing Digg, Twitter, Facebook, as well as professional journalists. (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10196386-93.html 3/13)

Tim Armstrong’s jump from Google to AOL could create a challenge for the Internet search giant in its effort to win big advertisers. Google’s exiting top ad exec has a rep for building strong client relationships. His sales team at Google will find their jobs “more difficult without him.” (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123715363111434391.html 3/16)

The hiring of Google’s Tim Armstrong to run AOL is prompting speculation that a long-awaited separation of the troubled Internet unit from Time Warner is finally near. An announcement is expected “in the next 12 months.” Ultimately, Armstrong will “run a public company.” (Iwantmedia 3/16, http://www.smartmoney.com/news/ON/?story=ON-20090313-000813-1348&hpadref=1 3/13)

AOL’s People Networks division has today announced the launch of social networking site Bebo, which it acquired almost exactly one year ago, in several key European countries such as France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/03/16/aol-rolls-out-bebo-in-several-european-countries/ 3/16)

bebo

Vancouver-based web 2.0 movie fan site MovieSet, a portal that allows users to track the development and creation of feature films, is gearing up for its first live streaming event. MovieSet will be streaming live from the set of mixed martial arts movie Death Warrior beginning today providing embeddable interviews with the filmmakers and actual footage from the set. (Cynopsis 3/16)

death-warrior

If you can’t beat ‘em (Hulu, that is), turn to other content providers. Socially-oriented online entertainment platform Boxee has added Blip.tv shows to its line up. (Cynopsis 3/16)

U.S. visits to Facebook grew 149% in February compared with the same month a year earlier, according to Hitwise. That pushed Facebook’s market share among users in the United States visiting social networking sites to 36% last month – still behind MySpace, which enjoys a 52% market share despite a 28% percentage drop. MySpace also continues to lead in time spent among the top 5 social networking sites with an average 29:38 per users per month. (Cynopsis 3/16)

Market share of U.S. Internet visits to top five social networking Web sites
Rank   Name          Feb. 2008  Jan. 2009 Feb. 2009 Y/Y percent change
1     MySpace         72.92%      57.08%     52.21%          -28%
2     Facebook        14.46%      31.15%     36.03%          149%
3     Tagged             0.65%       2.33%       2.47%          280%
4     MyYearbook      1.17%       1.67%       1.63%            39%
5     Classmates       1.03%       0.80%       0.82%           -20%
Source: Hitwise

Average U.S. time spent among top five social networking Web sites
Rank Name     February 2008     February 2009    Y/Y percent change
1       MySpace          30:07                29:38                   -2%
2       Facebook         21:00                22:12                     6%
3       Tagged            24:56                26:22                     6%
4       MyYearbook     31:35                25:22                  -20%
5       Classmates      10:19                11:14                     9%
Source: Hitwise

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA

In the “foreseeable future,” Netflix is “likely” to offer its video-streaming service separate from its rent-by-mail offering, according to Barry McCarthy, the company’s chief financial officer. Netflix subscribers now can use a number of devices — not just a PC — to stream Netflix movies and TV shows, including the popular “Watch Instantly” content. Reuters (2/25)

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After the uproar that ensued when Facebook tried to change its terms of service a couple weeks ago, along with its subsequent backpedaling and public assurances that users own their data, the company is trying a different tack. It is inviting users to comment and contribute on proposed changes to its terms of service. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/26/facebook-opens-up-its-terms-of-service-to-input-from-users 2/26)

U2 has Comcast – The Allmans have Onstream Media. The digital media services platform announced a deal to webcast the Allman Brothers Band‘s 40th anniversary, 15-day concert series beginning on Mar. 9 live from the Beacon Theater in New York via Moogis.com on a pay-per-view basis. All 15 shows can be viewed live or via archive for $125. (Cynopsis 2/26)

allman

A super-secret Digg toolbar has been spotted in the wild. We tracked down a beta tester who gave us the skinny on its features. The toolbar lets you Digg or Bury the page you are on, and shows how many Diggs it has already received. There are also links to show related pages, as well as more pages from the same source voted highly by the Digg community or marked as up and coming. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/26/digg-is-working-on-a-toolbar-to-go-after-stumbleupon-tinyurl-and-all-the-rest 2/26)

digg-tester

Faced with a tough economy, Google is working harder to make money off more of its properties. The Internet giant is extending its AdWords program to searches on Google News, delivering text ads on the search results page, just as it has long done with Web search results. (Iwantmedia 2/26, http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10172410-93.html 2/25)

Tomorrow’s Cloud Computing Roundtable is sold out. For those of you who can’t join, Techcrunch will be live-streaming the event. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/26/cloud-computing-roundtable-sold-out-but-it-will-be-streamed 2/26)

cloud

Alaska Airlines has announced that they’ve started testing Row 44’s satellite-based Wi-Fi service on a handful of Boeing 737-700s. The first trial flight will take place between Seattle and San Jose (leaves Seattle at 2:20 PT today and returns on Flight 329 from San Jose back to Seattle) and the service will be free for 60 days. After today that aircraft will shift routes. Pricing hasn’t been set, but I’d imagine it’s close to what VA or AA is charging for Aircell’s Gogo service. (

http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/26/alaska-airlines-starts-testing-satellite-based-wi-fi-services 2/26)

alaska-wifi

The two behemoths of the web are at each others’ throats again. European Union regulators said yesterday they have accepted a request from Google to join in on antitrust proceedings launched in Jan. to investigate Microsoft’s dominance in the web browser market. Google continues to criticize Microsoft’s practice of bundling Internet Explorer with its Windows operating system, claiming it is stifling innovation for users. (Cynopsis 2/26)

The PGA finally gets its roar back this week with the return of Tiger Woods at the Accenture Match Play Championship and Turner Sports’ PGAtour.com is there to provide online users with a variety of content including hole-by-hole video coverage of Tiger’s rounds. (Cynopsis 2/26)

(Below) If only ever company was this innovative…

Procter & Gamble is summoning top execs from Google, Facebook, MySpace and Twitter to its Cincinnati headquarters March 9 for a so-called Digital Night. The consumer goods giant is being hush-hush about the event. A P&G spokeswoman says: “It is about learning.” (

Iwantmedia 2/26, http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=134879 2/25)

Social app maker RockYou, which introduced a new feature earlier this month to add IAB-compliant video ads units to products, also began testing content distribution services with Ashton Kutcher’s Katalyst Media guaranteeing impressions within its apps, per NewTeeVee. RockYou was able to demonstrate 1.8 million impressions in a single day for Katalyst’s special Fashion Week episode of Blah Girls. (Cynopsis 2/26)

Internet advertising could fall by 5% in the first quarter of 2009, the first contraction in online ad spending since the dotcom bubble burst in 2001, according to market research group IDC. Also, the U.S. Internet ad market could get worse before the situation improves. (Iwantmedia 2/26, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123558776209174437.html 2/25)

Some 48% of respondents of a new survey from We Media/Zogby Interactive cite the Internet as their primary source of news and information. Among 18-29-year-olds, the number is 55%. In addition, Web sites are now “more trusted” news sources than newspapers, television or radio. (Iwantmedia 2/26, http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/agency/e3i195c363ab252f976cb7ec76fade882cc 2/25)

The simple e-mail newsletter is leading the way in showing how to make money online. The most noted success story is DailyCandy, purchased by Comcast for a reported $125 million last fall. Thrillist, with annual sales of up to $10 million, is launching in its 10th city, Philadelphia. (Iwantmedia 2/26, http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2009/tc20090224_035701.htm 2/25)

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WIRELESS by Marauder

WIRELESS

In its first mobile-content deal cut outside North America, Disney-ABC International Television will distribute full-length films and TV episodes for mobiles to South Korea’s SK Telecom on an on-demand basis, Disney said. The deal, which will take effect in March, will give SK customers access to such films as “WALL-E” and “National Treasure,” as well as the hit TV series “Desperate Housewives.” Variety (2/20)

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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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BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

HBO has secured exclusive rights to televise the inaugural kickoff ceremonies for Barack Obama on Jan. 18. The cable network said it would make the 90-minute event free to all cable and satellite subscribers, not just those who receive HBO. Variety (1/6)

obama2

Rock Of Love Bus With Bret Michaels series debut on VH1 last Sunday at 9p posted a 1.4 rating among A18-49 and drew in 2.1 million total viewers. Also the same night, Confessions Of A Teen Idol premiered at 8p with a 0.6 A18-49 rating and tallied another 0.6 rating with A18-49 viewers for its encore airing at 1030p. (Cynopsis 1/7)

What will it take to make this series die?

bret-michaels

American TV viewers continue to be infatuated with the NFL. Based on a report from Nielsen, 225 million Americans tuned into NFL regular season games last year. Other football TV watching stats include: 13 of the 15 most-watched television programs from all programming this fall included NFL games; NFL games were the highest-rated programs locally at a record 88%; and in 2008 NFL games airing on CBS, FOX and NBC averaged 16.6 million viewers which equates to 89% over the 8.8 million average primetime viewership among the four major networks: ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC. (Cynopsis 1/7)

AMC has started streaming old-school episodes of “The Prisoner” on its Web site, AMCTV.com. The episodes from the 1960s spy thriller are a prelude to a series remake that is expected to debut on AMC in November. Mediaweek (1/6)

With rival Netflix breathing down its neck, Blockbuster now says it’s looking to hook up with telecom providers such as Verizon and AT&T to offer advanced video services to the home. “As we move toward video-on-demand and pay-per-view, Blockbuster is well-positioned not only to compete on our own, but also to partner with others,” said Jim Keyes, the company’s chief executive officer. Reuters (1/7)

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