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We're Not Who You Think We Are

Archives for March 2006

The Daily Loper – March 28, 2006

March 28, 2006 by Lopy

Todays links of interest:

  • ITunes bugs the Beatles
    Uh, yeah, because everyone is going to confuse the two Apples. Also, aren’t all the Beatles pretty much owned by Michael Jackson?
  • Tronical — Self Tuning Guitar
    Now if only someone would invent a self-tuning singer.
  • RIAA: Who are the pirates? Free and uncut!
    I guess I’ll have to buy Kind of Blue again.
  • TorrentSpy Says MPAA Can’t Reinterpret The Supreme Court On File Sharing
    The MPAA’s legal strategy seems to be ‘ignore the law and sue anyway’.
  • Big demand for classical downloads is music to ears of record industry
    For all you cello players out there, we offer hope.
  • CBS’ NCAA Coverage Spotty
    Many would-be viewers of CBS’ streaming coverage of March Madness were turned away, thereby missing the opportunity to waste otherwise productive hours (Note: Reg and probably money req’d — we’ll look for another source).
  • Facebook’s on the Block
    billion? Do I hear three????
  • Cablevision Tests Controversial Network-DVR Product
    Instead of storing content on individual set-top boxes, subscribers access from network server. Also Time-Warner is testing a service that allows users to start a show over that they missed the beginning of – but no fast forwarding. Boo!
  • TV show puts lawmakers on comedic hot seat
    Why politicians risk humiliation matching wits with Stephen Colbert. Turns out they think that’s how to reach the fabled "youth vote."

Filed Under: The Daily Loper

Sampling Your Way To Better Art

March 28, 2006 by Kassia Krozser

Was it just two weeks ago that I discussed darknets? Time really does fly when you’re having fun. I was reminded of that column as I read Scott McLemee’s discussion about the out-of-control litigation surrounding music sampling. Like McLemee, when I heard about the Ohio Players court case cited in the article’s lead, my first reaction was “They’re still together?”

Later in the article, McLemee notes that it usually the case that the person who owns the copyright isn’t a person — which doesn’t actually answer the Ohio Players question — it’s a corporation, generally the label. And thanks to copyright laws that increasingly favor the copyright holder — badly skewing the purpose of copyright protection — the age-old creative process is being threatened.

Okay, not really. Creativity being what it is (creative) means that artists will always find a way around roadblocks.

[Read more…] about Sampling Your Way To Better Art

Filed Under: Mediacratic, Music Tagged With: Copyright, Husker Du, ohio-players, sampling

The Daily Loper – March 27, 2006

March 27, 2006 by Lopy

Todays links of interest:

  • DRM Is Killing Music
    Fine tuning the anti-DRM logo.
  • KCSM-TV set to fight FCC’s obscenity fine
    College of San Mateo’s KCSM-TV was hit with a proposed 15K fine for eps of Martin Scorcese’s "The Blues" where people uttered variants of "Fuck" and "Shit." Has FCC ever heard of educational content, or context? Or rationality, for that matter?
  • Actors Back Bill to Protect Likenesses
    ‘We are suddenly cloned into something we’re not. We are robbed of our individuality, and our life’s work is tarnished’."
  • Bollywood pumps down the volume
    Is nothing sacred? Messing with the Bollywood formula is like, well, messing with a good thing.
  • Newspaper Suicide
    Molly Ivins isn’t mourning the death of the newspaper — it’s watching the press take its own life that really gets her.
  • A Web Site So Hip It Gets Laddies to Watch the Ads
    Is it me or is the next wave of the web aimed square at the coveted 18 -34 male market?
  • TiVo suit vs. EchoStar to begin this week
    They claim EchoStar stole the patent on their "multimedia time warping system" that allows me to watch one thing whilst recording another — the entire nut of DVR. This lawsuit could be Sydney or the Bush for Tivo.
  • Sony Banks Entire Company On Blu-ray
    Uh-oh.

Filed Under: The Daily Loper

The Viral Death Spiral

March 27, 2006 by Kassia Krozser

Are we already seeing the death of the viral video? I think we can all agree that the viral nature of viral comes from the fact that its spreads by word-of-mouth (mouth = email or cell phone). That major media companies are now packaging online clips as “viral” suggests that they don’t really get it.

VH1 has Web Junk 20 with the companion site VSPOT (and, yes, I’m amused to see that the New York Times article specifically notes that these so-called “viral” web moments are released to the VH1 website after they’re aired on the show). Bravo has its series Outrageous and Contagious: Viral Videos. USA Networks is reportedly working on a project as well. Already it’s enough, right?

Can you say Carson Daly? I thought you could. And despite the fact that jumping the shark has jumped the shark, the major media viral video craze has jumped the shark when a show called (wait for it) The Net with Carson Daly is poised for debut. What, blogging wasn’t good enough for him?

[Read more…] about The Viral Death Spiral

Filed Under: Mediacratic, Television Tagged With: carson-daly, MTV, outrageous-and-contagious, vh1, viral-videos, web-junk-20

The Daily Loper – March 26, 2006

March 26, 2006 by Lopy

Todays links of interest:

  • MPAA Puts the Screws to NiteShdw.com
    The MPAA continues its War On Bittorrent, this time with a twist. They’ve settled with a tracker site, but they aren’t allowing the site to use donations to pay off the settlement. I guess what works in Washington doesn’t always work in Hollywood.
  • Husker Du on Joan Rivers Show
    No. Seriously. It’s Husker Du on the Joan Rivers Show!! What are you waiting for?!?!?!! No seriously, you need to watch the interview at the end.
  • Apple Computer Set to Mark 30th Birthday
    Happy birthday to you, blah, blah, blah. And they said Apple wouldn’t survive to the ripe old age of ten.

Filed Under: The Daily Loper

The Weekly ‘Loper – March 26, 2006

March 26, 2006 by Jim Connelly

While you were trying to figure out what exactly the deals were with Tony Soprano and Chef, here’s what we were talking about:

  • LaLa Love You You can’t swap digital musical files that you have legally purchased, nor can you swap digital musical files ripped from physical CDs that you have legally purchased. But you can swap physical CDs that you have legally purchased. For now.
  • The New Music Model: DIY – Let’s all give a big amount of applesauce applause for Clap Your Hands, Say Yeah, and other bands are totally doing it their way.
  • Press Room? I Said Rest Room! – A hard-hitting investigation into the need for a Press Room at SXSW. Never underestimate the importance of comfortable chairs.
  • Radio Killed The Radio Star, Part One – A deep long look at a SXSW panel called “The Future of Radio,” and how the music industry and the government continue to find ways to make that future seem bleak, at best.
  • Radio Killed The Radio Star, Part Two – Who needs radio, when we have become our own musical gatekeepers. And: Signs of life, but are those exceptions or precursors to a new way?
  • TV Shows on DVD I’d Like To See – And why, sadly, we might never see any of them. As usual, rights issues (read: the need to squeeze every last penny from something) get in the way of consumer desires.
  • Television Without Potty – Finally got to use that headline!! And for exactly the type of post I knew it would accompany: the FCC continuing to run roughshod over free speech.

Filed Under: The Weekly 'Loper

Monkeynews: Downloading Kong in Europe

March 26, 2006 by Jim Connelly

King Kong is coming out on DVD on April 10th. In and of itself, that isn’t extraordinary — it’s been a few months since it hit the theatre, and now those interested in Peter Jackson’s take on the tale, but didn’t want to be bothered with sticky floors, ringing cellphones, commercials and overpriced vats of food can watch it in the privacy of their own homes. (Why they even had wait a few months is another discussion for another time).

That week, millions of people will trundle off to their local Best Buy or Blockbuster or rip open a package from Amazon, and pop King Kong into their DVD player. Unless they live in Europe, where instead, they can download it.

For the first time ever, a major Hollywood movie will be available for downloading on the same day as the DVD release. A non-self-destructing file, unlike other downloads in the past; and while it is more expensive than just purchasing the DVD, they will also send a physical copy of the DVD. Right. A physical backup copy for the downloaded digital file. And also, to give the consumer more choices on when and where to play the movie.

If successful in Europe, it’s only a matter of time before they try it here: and that will be long after shared copies of those downloads have already made it here. Given the time difference between here and Europe, it’s possible that a shared download of Kong will be played on some college kids laptop before his local DVD store even opens.

But maybe, just maybe, the movie studios will look at what they call “piracy” as indicators of demand — what people are willing to pay for if it was only available — as opposed to indicators of just how contemptible their audience actually is. If so, it’s another major step to anything, anytime, anywhere.

  • The Internet Revolution Takes Off As Hollywood Offers Downloadable Movies

Filed Under: Movies, Services Tagged With: download, DVD, king-kong, monkey, News

The Daily Loper – March 25, 2006

March 25, 2006 by Lopy

Todays links of interest:

  • Inc. 500 Company Builds World’s Largest Laptop
    It’s nice to know that, in these days of everything getting smaller and smaller, that some people still value making their products larger.
  • South Park’s 10th Season Debuts to 3.5 Million Viewers
    Looks like the Chef hoax worked out ok.
  • Ben Stiller’s “Heat Vision and Jack” Pilot on YouTube
    A story about a super intelligent renegade astronaut and his talking motorcycle. Hard to believe this series never got picked up. Watch it now before it’s pulled.
  • Technical Divergence is the New Technical Convergence
    Thoughts on the nature of technology and how divergence seems to be a more likely scenario than convergence. The Internets have very very long tails, after all.

Filed Under: The Daily Loper

The Daily Loper – March 24, 2006

March 24, 2006 by Lopy

Todays links of interest:

  • ’99 Red Balloons’ Video to Air for an Hour
    Noted as a public service announcement.
  • Toshiba Delays Hi-Def Players
    Given the constant shift of release dates, one thinks it might not be a case of the world note being ready for hi-def as much as hi-def not being ready for the world.
  • Google Hits 500!
    The S&P 500 that is. What did you think I meant?
  • Recasting the Concept of Podcasting: Part I
    80% of all podcasts never make it to a portable player. Care to guess how many of those go unlistened to?
  • An Orchestra Of Laptops
    Gives a whole new meaning to the term "band geek".
  • WB Censors Its Pilot, Serves It Uncut on the Web
    How to work around FCC fines? Go where they can’t catch you. WB (or rather the late, great WB) is showing heavily, well, censored content on television. You can catch the full program, in all its girl-kissing glory, online.
  • CBS and Yahoo! Bring ”60 Minutes” to the Internet’s Most Popular Destination; A Preview of the Service Launches Sunday with Rare Tiger Woods Interview, Full Offering Starts This Fall
    First off: this wins the ‘loper award for longest headline. Second, just not feeling the love. How will I find this service? Do I need to find this service? And is "60 Minutes" really hip enough to start blogging?
  • Extraterrestrial Radio Putting Listeners in a Trance
    It turns out that satellite radio offers variety. Who knew that radio could do that? And, yeah, terrestrial stations are panicking. They might even consider dumping the corporate playlist. Kidding…
  • Designs On The Disaffected
    Office Pirates debuted last month. You noticed, right? It’s perfect for the disaffected office worker — if a little on the corporate branding side that disaffected office workers get enough of during the day.
  • NBC Seeks to Come Off the Mat
    NBC wins the tap dance known as the upfronts thanks to a promise to exploit the hell out of alternative media. The other nets? Not so much.
  • Advertising, Disrupted
    Traditional television ads are dead. Dead I tell you. In the future it will all be about the database of intentions.

Filed Under: The Daily Loper

The Window Crack’d

March 24, 2006 by Kassia Krozser

Used to be that you could count on the solid, steady pace of windows. Just as seasons follow one another in stately procession (though Winter can be unruly at times), so do media windows. Or, rather, so did media windows.

In their ongoing effort to prove that initial theatrical release is no more than a giant, rather expensive marketing campaign for the DVD release, the period before a $50 million grosser hits the DVD market has dropped to 4.5 months. It remains unclear why this time frame remains so long, but maybe that’s because tradition is hard to shake. We’ve talked about the idea of simultaneous releases more than once here at Medialoper.

[Read more…] about The Window Crack’d

Filed Under: Marketing, Mediacratic, Movies

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Previously on Medialoper

  • Certain Songs #2580: Supertramp – “Even in the Quietest Moments”
  • Certain Songs #2579: Supertramp – “Bloody Well Right”
  • Certain Songs #2578: Supergrass – “Sun Hits The Sky”
  • Certain Songs #2577: Supergrass – “Alright”
  • Certain Songs #2576: Superchunk – “If You’re Not Dark”

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