Posted on 10/15/2003 7:15:09 AM PDT by PJ-Comix
As former Vice President Al Gore edges toward mini-media-moguldom, press sources quoted his partners this week as saying that Mr. Gore would go younger, not leftierand now, if his plans work, The Observer has learned, Mr. Gores news channel could be
VTV.
V for victory, V for Vice President, V for Vermont, which Mr. Gore won by 30,000 votes in 2000.
In April, Mr. Gores principle business partner, Joel Hyatt, purchased a Web site called V.tv from The .tv Corporation, which supplies .tv domain extensions to customers like TBS, the Lifetime Channel and PAX. The companys Web site lists Mr. Hyatt as V.tvs administrative contact and as a representative of INDTV, L.L.C., located in Stanford, Calif., where Mr. Hyatt teaches business at Stanford University. An industry source confirmed that INDTV is the working incorporated name of Mr. Gore and Mr. Hyatts TV project, which has been characterized in press reports as either a news network for the reality-TV generation or a liberal answer to Fox News, or both.
As of this writing, V.tv has not yet been activated.
According to the .tv Web site, the price of a fancy one-character domain name is $10,000. Mr. Hyatt didnt return calls seeking comment, so its hard to know what the V in VTV stands for. One can only visualize Winston Churchillor John Lennonholding up two fingers.
If VTV sounds like that other three-lettered channel so beloved by the Oxy Cream generation, thats no coincidence. Mr. Gores channel will reportedly be geared toward the young Democrats of tomorrow, who can relate to Mr. Gores fixation with the Internet and hand-held digital-video cameras (V for va-va-video!). Mr. Gore was a fan of MTVs late-90s video-diary show, Unfiltered, and met with the shows producer earlier this year to talk about similar programming concepts.
With that in mind, The Observer called up a few members of the potential consumers in VTVs future target audience to see if theyd ever flip to a channel that aired "edgy" 24-hour news about, say, Iraq and file-sharing and those bad, bad Fox News commentators.
"Yeah, Id be interested," said Jimmy Jung, a 23-year-old advertising assistant. "Id be curious. I dont know if Id check it out all the time, but probably."
Mr. Jung assumed that, if Mr. Gore was involved, it would be "liberal-slanted media." In fact, Mr. Gores name had to be considered, even if the respondents were fond of the idea.
"Id be hesitant, because its being operated by former Vice President Al Gore," said Sarah Lewitinn, a 23-year-old assistant editor at Spin magazine whose friends call her "Ultragrrrl." "But at the same time, its cool that hes trying to bring current affairs to the young. I think people get their information from MTV anyway, so heres a network for them, which is kind of smart. I know a lot of people in my age group are really unaware of whats going on in the world. They know more about the new Strokes album than what is going on in Iran and Iraq and Syria."
She said it would have to be something with a sense of humor, like The Daily Show, to work. But Elliot Aronow, 23, a public-relations assistant, said it needed to have some gravity. "It depends how seriously they took themselves and how much they gave young people an opportunity to report what they see," he said. "I think young people need to be informed, but not pandered to with all sorts of jump-cut, MTV-style editing. On the other hand, I do believe that most conventional news is totally disconnected from most young people."
Karen Ruttner, a 22-year-old intern at a music-booking agency, gave The Observer the bottom line: "The truth is, when it comes to important news, I dont really care what people my age think. Id rather hear the professional opinions of, like, seasoned news vetspeople who know history and can really be comforting."
Josh Rosenblatt, 20, a student, said he had actually worked on Mr. Gores Presidential campaign in the former Vice Presidents home state of Tennessee in 2000and even he wasnt too sure about Mr. Gores new thing.
"I like him as a person and as a candidate, but I dont know how much I trust him with TV," he said. "I just think, for the average 18-to-21-year-old or whatever theyre aiming for, you cant fool them into liking politics. At the end of the day, they have to compete with The Daily Show."
But what do the seasoned professionals think of it?
"I think theres a market for it, but a small market," said Jim Murphy, the executive producer of the CBS Evening News. "How are they going to engage people? Personality? Smarts? You can do it by being hip, but news is not a hip thing. College-age kids and kids in their 20s are interested in whats going on, but it doesnt mean they want to consume news. Can you make them feel young, smart and hip by watching this? Sure. But can you do that with homegrown documentaries? No."
For now, Mr. Gore and his partners are still negotiating the $70 million acquisition of digital-cable network Newsworld International from Vivendi Universal after French-owned Vivendi agreed to merge the rest of its entertainment assets with NBC.
Another unresolved question: Will VTV air reruns of V, the 1980s sci-fi series about rodent-eating aliens who take over the earth? They should! That is, if their deal with Universal isnt Vaporized.
For now, the only place on the tube where you can see the Gore-like Vulcans is on Star Trek: Enterprise.
For now, the only place on the tube where you can see the Gore-like Vulcans is on Star Trek: Enterprise.
BWHAHAHAHAHAHAH!!!! Vulcan TV? Where is that famous pic of Algore looking like an orange rouge space alien?
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