This is why Youtube is essential to Myspace (I don't know about Facebook, never use it), because almost everyone has some stupid video of himself doing something illegal on Youtube, linked to his Myspace page. I never wanted to "Broadcast" anything, but that's how I endde up on Youtube doing karaoke, some idiot friend of mine posted it
This link has been bookmarked by 22 people . It was first bookmarked on 13 Feb 2008, by dracmere.
-
18 Apr 08
-
17 Apr 08
-
-
Everyone, in the back of his mind, wants to be a star," Hurley asserts for probably the quadrillionth time, "and we provide the audience to make it happen. "
-
-
16 Apr 08
-
12 Apr 08
-
advertisers have been broadcasting themselves for decades and would very much prefer the status quo. The good news is that the status quo isn't long for this world.
-
-
19 Mar 08
-
#14 Fragmentation has decimated audiences, viewers who do watch are skipping commercials, advertisers are therefore fleeing, the revenue for underwriting new content is therefore flatlining, program quality is therefore suffering
-
dozens of networks are now making programs available online
-
-
13 Mar 08
-
NBC used Yahoo to premiere > Heroes > and AOL to offer sneak previews of its > Twenty Good Years > and > Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip > . > >
-
a spiraling vortex of ruin.
-
put fall premieres of shows like Smith and The New Adventures of Old Christine on Google Video
-
-
-
his eyes have the vacant look of someone whose body has a one-bar wireless connection to his nervous system.
-
-
-
#4 Lots of people can now watch themselves on sort-of TV, which is pretty fun in itself. The bonus is that others want to watch them, too
-
The networks say these are measures to promote the broadcast versions of their shows. The overwhelming probability is that the opposite is true, which bodes poorly for those invested in the status quo. One victim is local affiliates, which get a big chunk of their revenue from selling commercial space within network programs. The Internet, needless to say, bypasses them.
-
-
12 Mar 08
-
. #7 Fragmentation has decimated audiences, viewers who do watch are skipping commercials, advertisers are therefore fleeing, the revenue for underwriting new content is therefore flatlining, program quality is therefore suffering (Dancing With the Stars. QED), which will lead to ever more viewer defection, which will lead to ever more advertiser defection, and so on.
-
Because, at least until recently, the Internet has lacked both the riveting content and ad space inventory to absorb it.
-
-
-
Altogether, this stuff constitutes a bottomless reservoir of short-form video content for others to siphon off if they choose
-
Until now, advertisers have underwritten mass media to reach mass audiences. Indeed, they've paid increasing premiums for the opportunity as audiences have shrunk, because even in a fragmented media world, the largest fragment – network TV – is the most valuable. But now they realize that they are losing not only mass but critical mass.
-
-
-
Add Sticky Note"Broadcast Yourself."
-
-
-
04 Mar 08
-
Without being overly simplistic or melodramatic, the state of the Old Commercial Broadcasting Model can be summarized like this: a spiraling vortex of ruin.
-
The networks say these are measures to promote the broadcast versions of their shows. The overwhelming probability is that the opposite is true, which bodes poorly for those invested in the status quo. One victim is local affiliates, which get a big chunk of their revenue from selling commercial space within network programs. The Internet, needless to say, bypasses them.
-
-
15 Feb 08
-
"#2 Everyone, in the back of his mind, wants to be a star," Hurley asserts for probably the quadrillionth time, "and we provide the audience to make it happen. "
-
-
14 Feb 08
-
He insists he can't quite recall, you know, the $1.65 billion moment.
-
-
-
Lots of people can now watch themselves on sort-of TV, which is pretty fun in itself. The bonus is that others want to watch them, too.
-
NBC used Yahoo to premiere Heroes and AOL to offer sneak previews of its Twenty Good Years and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. And the brand-new CW Network celebrated its debut by posting for free Runaway and Everybody Hates Chris on MSN. Counting cable, dozens of networks are now making programs available online.
-
-
-
Fragmentation has decimated audiences, viewers who do watch are skipping commercials,
-
-
13 Feb 08
-
Everyone, in the back of his mind, wants to be a star," Hurley asserts for probably the quadrillionth time, "and we provide the audience to make it happen.
-
Public Stiky Notes
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.