April 28, 2008

LonelyGirl Jessica Rose Returns

It was Jessica Rose who had the first Internet only video show hit, way back in 2006.

Lonelygirl15, if you'll recall, was the headline-grabbing video diary of a pretty teenager, later exposed by net detectives as a brilliant, CAA-backed fiction. The lonely girl was by no means alone -- she had a team of writers and producers behind her, and though the door was closed on lonelygirl15, the frontier of "webisodic" video was wide open.

The situation with open frontiers is that the people seeking to colonize them, to borrow a quote from Ms. South Carolina, simply "don't have maps." Which is why, almost two years after lonelygirl15, no Web series has established a viable, let alone profitable homestead. However, more wagons are now arriving. Sony Pictures Television just launched C-Spot:



From Crackle: Roadents: Episode 3



an online comedy channel featuring six sharply produced programs with enough short episodes to fill a 13-week season.

And Jessica Rose is planning a comeback too. The almost-21-year-old actress from New Zealand will soon return to the online world as the star of Blood Cell, a new horror-thriller from Web TV studio 60Frames Entertainment, directed by Eduardo Rodriguez. The show, whose trailer is now up on deadcelldeadfriend.com, follows Rose's character, Julia, as she contends with an unseen murderer who will talk to her only via her fancy photo- and video-enabled cellphone. Which hopefully gets good reception because, as the name of the website suggests, if Julia's signal goes dead, a blond somewhere gets dispatched for good. To build their online audience, C-Spot and 60Frames will "syndicate" their shows on Sony's Crackle (see this and my other previous posts), Hulu, and AOL Video; while 60Frames can be seen on Bebo, Blip.tv, iTunes, MySpace and others. And everyone's on YouTube.

Revenue-sharing deals allow the creators to get a piece of the advertising pie no matter where their shows get watched. 60Frames and Sony Pictures hope to find the answer to the overriding question posed by Web-only tv: In an entertainment world dominated by multi-hour, multi-night programs like American Idol, how do you win repeat viewers with three minute webisode.

Even though more of the big name studios are tempted onto the web, the question still hangs in the air: what will it take for large numbers of us (14-year-olds included) to feel like the computer screen with its blinking and ringing distractions is a good place to watch TV?

Cybercast credit: Crackle

April 25, 2008

Now Playing in IMvite : You Know How To Love

In searching for links to my favorite artist, June Marshall, I've come across IMvite, a new (to me) “Web 2.0” media search site. The only clue I could find about what they do is this one-liner:

Search IMvite for millions of Video Clips, Games, Live TV & Radio Stations, and More.

What's caught my eye is the very high quality of the video stream and the size of the player -- 640x480 -- that are different and give you a much better viewing experience, as you may, or may NOT see:





Searching on the site is very fast. Well done, IMvite - except for your embed code if it doesn't work in Blogger and WordPress blogs....

Cybercast credit: Imvite

April 22, 2008

National Anthems - A Pangea Day Tribute

Take a look at these films. They are each just one minute long. They feature a choir in one country singing another country's national anthem: a simple idea that packs surprising emotional power.

Here France sings for the USA:





Kenya sings for India:




And Japan sings for Turkey:




They were shot by film directors in support of the upcoming Pangea Day, which I suggest you reserve in your calendar for Saturday, May 10.

Sites in Cairo, Kigali, London, Los Angeles, Mumbai and Rio de Janeiro will be linked live to produce a program of powerful films, visionary speakers, and uplifting music. It will be broadcast live to the world through the Internet, television, digital cinemas, and mobile phones. The 4-hour program will include visionary speakers and live music in addition to the featured films. Queen Noor of Jordan, CNN's Christiane Amanpour, musician/activist Bob Geldof and Iranian rock phenom Hypernova are among the presenters taking part.

Don't forget to check out the trailer here!

Cybercast credit: YouTube

April 19, 2008

YouTube to YouNewsTV - A Broadcast Interactive Media Play

Broadcast Interactive Media has figured out another way to make a business out of user-generated video: They are offering to work with local TV and radio broadcasters in more than 120 markets, to host their websites and split ad revenues.



They provide content management tools, local and national sales support, along with channel programming like YouNewsTV and Explore Politics 2008. If you are a local media provider, their services might be a solution for these burning questions:

• What is your online ad share in your market?
• Where would you like to be in a year? Two years? Five?

While local TV web revenue is on the rise, the average local online ad share for TV stations nationwide is less than two percent. The good news is that there are markets performing considerably better, approaching 20 percent of their local online ad share, so there doesn't seem to be a downside to explore if Broadcast Interactive Media can do better for you.

April 16, 2008

April’s Fool Joke from VideoEgg?

but I could only get to it now....

Message received 4/1/2008: Attention: my.videoegg.com users

“It is with our sincerest regret to inform you that we will be closing the doors on the Videoegg Publisher Platform and related services at http://my.videoegg.com/. You can download all of your content from our servers, so be sure to stop by our site to reclaim your belongings.

Our last day of service will be May 31, 2008. Account creation and video uploading are already disabled.

We understand that you may have some questions and direct you to our updated FAQ to find the answers to common questions. It's been a great ride, so let's enjoy these last months together, reminisce about how far we've come, and finish strong with some awesome video blogging.

Thank you for your participation and for your support of Videoegg. It's been a pleasure working with you.”

As of 4/3, there is nothing on the site about this. Hopefully it’s a joke - maybe from a competitor?

Here is a video from them … that is, if you can view it at all now, or after May 31!





FYI, we signed up with VideoEgg right after they hatched. Never really used the service, not sure why; yet I’d be sad to see them fold.

Cybercast credit: VideoEgg

April 13, 2008

Google's Play for the Empty TV Spectrum

After winning open access by losing a bid to acquire a valuable portion of U.S. broadcast spectrum, Google is at it again. At least that’s the way it looks to me. They are now calling on federal regulators to provide access to another, "unused" part of U.S. TV signal space for wireless Internet access. Google says the signal spectrum, known as "white space" in the TV industry, is an "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to provide ubiquitous wireless broadband access to all Americans."

"As Google has pointed out previously, the vast majority of viable spectrum in this country simply goes unused, or else is grossly underutilized," Google Media Counsel Richard S. Whitt, wrote in a letter filed with the Federal Communications Commission on Friday. "Our nation typically uses only about five percent of one of our most precious resources. Unlike other natural resources, there is no benefit to allowing this spectrum to lie fallow. The airwaves can provide huge economic and social gains if used more efficiently, as seen today with the relatively tiny slices utilized by mobile phones and WiFi services."

Here is what Shelly Palmer of Media 3.0 has to say about this (and other issues):




This isn’t the first time Google proposes using this untapped spectrum. It is the first time however it has outlined its plans publicly. The filing came days after the federal government announced the winners of an expensive auction that raised 20 billion dollars, by selling off important chunks of the old analog broadcast spectrum. They will be phased out in February 2009, when the U.S. TV industry converts to 100% digital broadcasting.

"The unique qualities of the TV white space -- unused spectrum, large amounts of bandwidth, and excellent propagation characteristics -- offer an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to provide ubiquitous wireless broadband access to all Americans," Whitt wrote in Google's letter. "In particular, this spectrum can provide robust infrastructure to serve the needs of under-deployed rural areas, as well as first responders and others in the public safety community. Moreover, use of this spectrum will enable much-needed competition to the incumbent broadband service providers."

Not surprisingly, Google has already started the "technological groundwork" to utilize this untapped spectrum. Once coupled with its new "Android" open source mobile communications platform, Google would be able to provide "uniquely low-cost mobile broadband coverage for all Americans" as they put it. It would also enable them to extend and move beyond its core competency of online search into a broad and ubiquitous communications infrastructure.

Broadcasters are supposedly pleased by the details of Google's disclosure, but remain concerned about some of the technical aspects. In particular, they question whether use of TV's white space spectrum - located between channels 2 and 51 in the over-the-air broadcast signal - might not cause technical interference with television broadcasts. Their concerns are:

1. Spectrum sensing alone doesn’t protect viewers against interference from mobile devices.

2. Adding geolocation and beacon sensing may not be enough to make mobile operation feasible.

3. Mobile personal device operation in the same band as TV broadcasting may continue to be a guaranteed recipe for producing interference.

National Association of Broadcasters Executive Vice President Dennis Wharton seems to want it both ways as he welcomes and at the same time damns Google’s plan:
"We are pleased that Google now seems to realize that spectrum sensing alone won't protect viewers against interference from unlicensed devices. Unfortunately, simply adding geolocation and beacon sensing does not mean that mobile operation is suddenly feasible. Portable, mobile personal device operation in the same band as TV broadcasting continues to be a guaranteed recipe for producing interference and should not be allowed under any circumstances."

The big questions in my mind are: Will Google play the wireless carriers against the broadcasters? Does it need to? Will they go it alone for the sake of opening up this spectrum too and win by losing again?

I wouldn’t bet against them.

Cybercast credit: Google Video. Who else, really???

April 10, 2008

EyeTV Tuner - The Third Generation



If you're tuned into Macs more than Windows and have been using Elgato's EyeTVhardware and/or software, the new 3.0 version expands your options in a big way, enabling you to:

1. Watch, pause, fast-forward and rewind live television on your Mac, at your desk or in the comfort of your living room.
2. Search the Program Guide using any criteria.
3. Record hours of television.
4. Create subscriptions to TV series and topics of your choice.
5. Manage saved episodes, and organize them in Smart Playlists.
6. Edit unwanted content from your recordings
7. Put them into iTunes in one easy step.
8. Export for current media types and playback devices or burn to DVD.
9. Share EyeTV recordings with other Macs on a local network
10. Play back using Wi-Fi Access on an iPhone and iPod touch and selected smartphones.

Here is what Jeremy Horwitz, Editor-in-Chief of iLounge says:

"What's great about EyeTV is the incredible scope and generally smart, intuitive functionality of the software: what you get here is now officially leagues beyond what TiVo and its many lesser competitors offer in today's digital video recorders.

April 7, 2008

Tell Your Story in Video : Compel Me to Watch

You can be a tech wizard; hire real(ly good) actors and actresses; spend on marketing like no tomorrow; you can do everything in style, yet end up with a dud. If your story and the script, based on your story sucks, nothing will save it from oblivion. Fortunately, there are videos about how to make very good videos, such as the one from Norm Mintle at Regent University. Here he explains the techniques of storytelling, specifically the importance of creating a story that follows Confucius's advice: "Involve me and I will understand." In other words, you must make it so compelling I can’t stop watching.





I must admit that this, and the other pieces I plan to post could be considered "infomercials." FYI, I have no connection to Regent, nor do I receive anything from any other source (meaning advertising revenue) to show them. I find them compelling enough to show. I trust so will you.

Upcoming postings will be about:

- Casting
- Cinematography
- Lighting

Cybercast credit: YouTube and Regent University

April 4, 2008

ATT Mobile TV - Will You Watch It?



Ok, so this blog can't handle the ampersand sign ... that's why you see ATT in the text.

ATT plans to start offering live mobile TV service through Qualcomm's MediaFlo in May, after more than a year of delay. It says that they decided to wait until May to offer the service because it is "a brand new service on a brand new network, and two brand new devices," the devices being the LG Vu and the Samsung Access.

As one of the lucky subscribers to be (if you are so inclined), you will get access to eight channels of live TV plus two exclusive channels. Pricing information will be available in May when the service officially launches.

Verizon Wireless has been offering the service for more than a year. However it has not published specific subscriber numbers, but Qualcomm's CEO Paul Jacobs said during a speech at the Tech Policy Summit in Hollywood on Wednesday that the uptake has been going slower than the company would like, according to RCR Wireless News.

Jacobs blames the carriers for not advertising the service enough. He said that carriers might be waiting for MediaFlo to increase its coverage, which he said will happen in February 2009 when TV broadcasters will transition to digital TV, the article said.

Some mobile experts question whether people really want to watch TV on their phones. Verizon is charging $15 a month extra for eight channels of live TV. Perhaps the price point is still too expensive for consumers who on average spend about $40 to $50 a month on cell phone service. And as the economy dips further into a recession, I question how willing people will be to spend extra money on what I'd consider an unnecessary service like mobile TV.

It will be interesting to see ATT's customers' response to the live TV service. ATT already offers an on-demand video service to customers who buy certain 3G data packages. Stay tuned for the results - they could foretell the future of smart phone TV uptake.

April 1, 2008

Shatner Is a Shaman - Merges Revver and LiveUniverse

Not really but a good way to capture your attention, isn't it?

The Revver and LiveUniverse deal is true, though. Revver did announce that they are now "part of the LiveUniverse network of sites." Sounds official (everybody at the companies waxes eloquent about this wonderful turn of events, as expected) yet I can't shake the feeling this is not good for the larger community. Why? Because it means one more of the original cast of video sharing sites has bitten the star dust.
LiveUniverse claims its sites are visited by more than 55 million unique users each month, so video creators on Revver are now exposed to a much bigger audience. We'll see ... literally.

In association with this new partnership, Revver's best known creators GameZombie, Black Nerd Comedy and Pansy Warrior Princess all began publishing live shows on LiveVideo, LiveUniverse's signature live broadcast portal. Want your own live show? Head over to LiveVideo.com and check it out. Here is one from ShatnerVision, called "Shatner Is A Shaman." Enough said....





Cybercast credit: LiveVideo and ShatnerVision