Archive for March, 2008

Local TV site wins National Headliner Award

One honor handed out in the 2008 National Headliner Awards stands out, awarded to local TV station website WBALtv.com. My colleagues won second place in Television Affiliated Online Journalism for their coverage of the Domino Sugar Plant Explosion. WBAL was the only local TV site to win an award. ESPN won first place in the same category for their amazing presentation titled “Ray of Hope.” The package tells an amazing story, and the web producers should be proud of the interactive they built to tell this story about a special life.

But, take a look at the recipients for the Online Videography category. The winners are all from newspapers. “Reporting for Duty” from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch; “The Burning Man Experience; Electric Playa; New Frontier Implosion” from the Las Vegas Sun; and “Health Diplomacy” from the Miami Herald.

I congratulate the excellent work by the newspapers, but these awards provide further evidence of newspapers encroaching on videography — a category that would intuitively be dominated by broadcasters.

5 comments March 8th, 2008

User-generated content on its way out?

No. Hell no. This story is wrong. Flat wrong. If you work in the media biz, please don’t let anyone in your company start passing this story around. And if you need a second opinion, here’s Terry Heaton with the many reasons why.

5 comments March 8th, 2008

The WB to be resurrected on WB.com

The WB merged with UPN to form “The CW” back in 2006. And now Warner Bros. says it will debut WB.com, a Hulu-like site with free episodes of all the WB-produced series from 1995-2006. “We’re in the process of developing several Warner Bros.-branded Web destinations and will announce all the details in the coming weeks,” Warner Bros. TV Group said in a statement. WB.com will debut in beta next month.

2 comments March 8th, 2008

Recession ‘is now unavoidable’

Bad news for the media industry, especially local media: a dismal jobs report on Friday makes a recession almost inevitable. “Every time such a slump has occurred since the early 1970s, a recession has followed — or already been under way,” reports the NY Times. With advertisers already allocating less of their marketing mix to television and newspapers, adding a recession to the equation means painful times are ahead. The key, of course, is for local media not to slow their investment in digital media initiatives. That would be suicide.

6 comments March 8th, 2008

Disney.com to offer vintage shows

Some of Walt Disney’s classic TV shows will soon appear on Disney.com, “either for free or through some sort of subscription,” said Disney CEO Robert Iger. But the reasoning is something I haven’t heard so far: “Providing physical goods on DVD is tougher and tougher these days because shelf space is limited,” he said. Iger didn’t say which shows they’ll post online.

Add comment March 8th, 2008

Four companies considering Digg acquisition

TechCrunch reports that two media companies (that he does not name) and Google and Microsoft are “in heavy due diligence” with Digg. “Digg is prepared to take less than the $300 million Allen & Co. were floating late last year,” writes Michael Arrington. “Google, our source says, will likely bid $200-$225 million, which Digg would likely accept.”

1 comment March 7th, 2008

ABC says its online video good for TV

At an advertising conference, Disney-ABC’s Anne Sweeney said that video on ABC.com is driving younger viewers to the network on TV. And in a survey very similar to NBC.com’s below, ABC.com said it found that its streaming video users remember ads 87% of the time.

4 comments March 7th, 2008

Lesley Stahl co-founding new women’s site

60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl is joining some other big names to launch a new site targeted to women over the age of 40, WowoWow.com, which plans to debut this Saturday. “I wanted to call the site AllTheGoodNamesAreTaken.com,” jokes columnist Liz Smith, also a co-founder.

11 comments March 6th, 2008

Report: Technorati to start blog ad network

TechCrunch is reporting that Technorati is planning to launch an ad network for blogs, similar to Federated Media (which powers advertising on this site) yet more of a focus on smaller “long tail” players. Also, News.com is reporting that Federated Media is looking for a second round of financing in the $20 to $30 million range.

1 comment March 6th, 2008

NBC.com’s study on show streaming

NBC.com has the results back from another in a series of consumer surveys from people watching “NBC Rewind” video. As we’ve seen from ABC.com and others who have commissioned similar surveys, the ad recall for show streaming is off the charts: 86% in NBC.com’s case. And NBC.com said “ads with interactive elements were more likely to elicit higher brand recall as well as higher agreement that ads were entertaining and relevant.” The survey also concluded that 77% say NBC Rewind was a compliment, not a substitute, to TV. Press release with a few more details follows below…

Read the full post Add comment March 6th, 2008

Sneak peek of new NBCOlympics.com

Wow, I just watched a video demonstration (player below) of the upcoming new NBCOlympics.com, which promises to be the destination for the biggest online video event of all time. And it’s cool, to say the least. As we’ve written about before, NBCU along with MSN plan to offer 2,200 hours of live Olympics coverage online along with a treasure trove of video available on demand. They decided to go with Microsoft to power it all using Silverlight. First of all, each video clip is surrounded by related information, such as bios, stats and analysis, that apply directly to the athletes on screen. You can watch two events at once, using picture-in-picture. Or you can watch four different streams at once from the same event, like different camera angles of this track and field event. (Pardon the grainy screen grabs…)

While you’re watching a clip, a message may appear across the top of the screen, alerting you to another live event that’s just getting underway. Click it, and you’re instantly transported there. You can also send other people email alerts of live events. Pretty cool stuff, and I like the innovative ways to browse ongoing live events and “most watched” clips.

Of course, the downside in all of this is it will require a free Silverlight download to watch. But you have to admit, Microsoft couldn’t have found a better kick-off event to get its Silverlight players distributed quickly. Here’s the clip of the presentation below. You’ll need to fast-forward it to 1:17:00…

(Full disclosure: My site, KING5.com, is an NBCOlympics.com affiliate)

6 comments March 5th, 2008

Silverlight gains momentum with new deal

Microsoft’s Flash-like software, Silverlight, will now be part of Move Networks, which helps power video on ESPN360.com and ABC.com’s high-definition video. “Every time a user downloads Silverlight, they will also download the Move plug-in,” said Move CEO John Edwards. “Our main focus with media companies is really taking quality to the next level. We think that really stimulates viewing and, thus, stimulates better metrics, and better metrics stimulate more relevant advertising and better, more intelligent programming.”

Also, Microsoft has teamed with Nokia to put Silverlight on mobile devices.

Add comment March 5th, 2008

Briefs: NBC Local, MLB, Omniture, Yahoo, LA Times

-   NBC Local Media acquires marketing assets of Skycastle Entertainment
-   Online News Association blasts new MLB online restrictions in letter
-   New version of Omniture to include tracking for video and mobile devices
-   Yahoo buys some time in upcoming proxy fight with Microsoft
-   LA Times to post news to Clear Channel’s digital billboards

Add comment March 5th, 2008

Potential buyers line up for Weather Channel

Landmark Communications wants as much as $5 billion for the Weather Channel and Weather.com, and preliminary bids are due next week. So who’s interested? NBCU, Time Warner, CBS and Comcast, among others. Meanwhile, Silicon Alley did some rough math and valued Weather.com at $2 billion. “Is that realistic?” Peter Kafka writes. “More so than any other news niche, weather information is a commodity… Weather.com is undoubtedly a valuable URL, but beyond that, not sure what the site offers that isn’t easily duplicated or displaced.” In other words, as weather information become available everywhere, will Weather.com be able to hold its dominance in traffic?

3 comments March 5th, 2008

CNN is ‘back in the game’

The NY Times has an in-depth story on the resurgence of CNN, both in ratings and revenue. “In the last four years CNN, which includes not just the flagship American network, but Headline News, CNN International and CNN.com, doubled its profits,” writes Tim Arango. “The crux of the plan was to have the ad sales department sell sponsorships across platforms — the flagship network, Headline News and the Internet — as well as to streamline management so fewer people were making the important decisions.” Profits have grown from $200 million in 2004 to nearly $400 million now.

I’m sure CNN.com has played a rather big role in CNN’s resurgence.

1 comment March 5th, 2008

Pluck acquired by Demand Media

The company run by former MySpace Chairman Richard Rosenblatt, Demand Media, has scooped up Pluck for a reported $50 to $60 million. Pluck is best known for powering the social media tools on USAToday.com, and it also operates the “world’s largest” blog syndication network.

Add comment March 4th, 2008

NFL to whine to Congress

Sigh. In Congress on Wednesday, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell plans to accuse Comcast and Time Warner of discriminating against the NFL Network. Oh, and he’s going to rip the FCC, too. Plueeze.

2 comments March 4th, 2008

Web trumps TV for news in new survey

Updated: Nearly half (48%) of respondents in a new survey from We Media and Zogby International — internet users who took an online survey — say the internet is their primary news source, up from 40% just a year ago. Only 29% said TV is their primary news source, with radio at 11% and newspapers at 10%. Of course, younger users are even more internet-centric: 55% of people 18-29 say the internet is their primary news source. The study also found that the internet (32%) even beat TV (21%) and newspapers (22%) for the most trustworthy source of news.

While these numbers are skewed in favor of the internet because of the survey’s methodology (see more below), this is worth a hard look: 67% believe traditional journalism is out of of touch with what Americans want from their news. “For the second year in a row we have documented a crisis in American journalism that is far more serious than the industry’s business challenges — or maybe a consequence of them,” said Andrew Nachison, co-founder of iFOCOS. “While the U.S. news industry sheds expenses and frets about its future, Americans are dismayed by its present. Meanwhile, we see clearly the generational shift of digital natives from traditional to online news — so the challenge for traditional news companies is complex. They need to invest in new products and services - and they have. But they’ve also got to invest in quality, influence and impact. They need to invest in journalism that makes a difference in people’s lives.”

It boils down to one word: relevancy. The internet, by definition, is more relevant because you can self-select what you want to read and watch. But I think the tendency for local and cable TV news to focus on lowest-common-denominator coverage (urgent crime, breathless disaster, amazing anti-aging face cream, danger lurking to kill your children and your dog, too!) is accelerating the transition from television to the web for news.

Adds Aaron in comments: “I’m shocked, shocked to learn that internet users prefer to get their news on the internet! This is just as useless as the Magid-HA survey from last week. Zogby controlled for age/race/region, etc., but didn’t control for internet usage habits, so we have no idea if these respondents spend more or less time online than the average American. I will ask this — how many infrequent/occasional internet users do you know who will voluntarily take time to fill out internet surveys?”

11 comments March 4th, 2008

Broadcast Interactive inks deal with Mochila

Broadcast Interactive will integrate Mochila’s syndicated content into its content management system, which will allow affiliated TV sites to set-up real-time feeds or pull in selected content by hand. Release…

Read the full post Add comment March 4th, 2008

Packers.com switches to breaking news layout

Brett Favre is leaving, and Packers.com is getting hammered. So it switched to a lighter breaking news format to handle all the traffic. (Thanks, Chip!)

New home page on the left. Old on the right.

3 comments March 4th, 2008


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