Posted on 06/06/2011 5:52:35 AM PDT by abb
For many Internet users, YouTube is synonymous with online video. But Mike Michaud and several friends who live in suburban Chicago are trying to change that.
Mr. Michaud co-owns Channel Awesome, an aspiring Viacom of the online video world, which promotes online shows about video games, comic books and assorted realms of popular culture. He was a casualty of the recession, having been laid off by Circuit City, the electronics retail chain that later was closed, and now he is a beneficiary of the advertising rebound, having doubled his revenue last year, enough to employ seven people full time.
People may still scoff at online video, but this is a real business now, he said over breakfast recently. Channel Awesomes primary partner is not YouTube, but Blip.tv, which distributes made-for-the-Web series and surrounds them with ads. The companies that create these series are small, are popping up in unexpected places like Mr. Michauds home and are creating unlikely stars in lucrative niches.
Channel Awesomes best-known weekly show, Nostalgia Critic, which another Circuit City cast off, Doug Walker, produces from his home five minutes from Mr. Michauds, draws about three million views a month. Several of Blips top production partners are on track to earn at least a $1 million in ad revenue from Blip this year, said Dina Kaplan, a co-founder of Blip.
Like YouTube, Blip splits advertising revenues with Web series producers. But unlike YouTube, which also streams amateur videos, and Netflix, which streams feature films and television shows, Blip is solely focused on those producers. Rather than competing directly, it is trying to carve a niche next to YouTube in the expanding world of Web video.
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(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
ping
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/06/technology/internet/06dropbox.html?hpw
Data Grows, and So Do Storage Sites
Nearly 60 percent of adults with online access own at least two Internet connected devices, according to Forrester Research. Just under 3 percent, or 4.5 million people, have at least nine different gadgets. If that seems to be a lot, think about this: a person may have a home computer and a work computer, and other members of the family may each have computers. Then count smartphones and tablets, and its not hard to get to a large number of machines.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/06/business/media/06couric.html?hp
For Couric, ABCs Pitch Proved Best
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=151679&nid=127476
Ex-Tribune Execs Sue For Retirement Benefits
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=151661
Buyers Balk At CBS Asking Price, Lower Rates Negotiated
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304432304576367442653094256.html
Pulling Out Weeds Online
As Digital-Ad Techniques Proliferate, Specialists Aim to Simplify the Landscape
My Brother in Law has already designed Presentation Expert. This system is a Subscription Based video delivery system! See link
http://www.presentationexpert.com/stw/?p=lmnjjzf84e1e4102glip
Popmodal.com is a conservative alternative to YouTube. I think there is a Christian one, too.
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/469177-Breaking_News_FCC_Future_Of_Media_Report_to_Be_Unveiled_Next_Week.php
FCC ‘Future Of Media’ Report to Be Unveiled Next Week
http://articles.philly.com/2011-06-03/business/29617502_1_bidding-binswanger-brian-tierney
Philadelphia Inquirer building up for sale again
http://www.wwd.com/media-news/fashion-memopad/memo-pad-cindis-challenge-3639938?navSection=media-news&toc_preselected=65
Glamour Magazine Off to a Bumpy Start in 2011
If the NY Slimes is pimping Channel Awesome, then it’s leadership must be harder left than Soros.
If they’re not pimping, then youtube did something to royally piss the slimes off, and they are firing a warning shot across youtube’s bow.
I learned a long time ago that the NY Slimes doesn’t report the news. They don’t report anything. That’s just a disguise.
What the slimes does is advocacy and opposition research, depending on the topic.
The NY Slimes is more ideologically pure than Barack Obama. They’ve been at this for well over a century and they have their formula down.
That’s amazing that they(networks) are getting any increases.
Old habits die hard. Advertisers, once they get comfortable, don’t want to move. But the move toward online advertising is inexorable and will eventually supplant television.
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