Categories
Random Thought

If everyone’s a creator, who watches?

The way the hype has been growing around vlogging, video podcasting, consumer/user/viewer generated media, some people have extrapolated that we’ll all end up producing video. I don’t think that will be the case.

Many years ago, at least 5 but probably closer to 7 or 8, I promulgated the idea of “Video production as another form of literacy.” I wouldn’t say the general acceptance of my idea was strong – in fact my colleagues in the production community were only too happy to explain to me why I was wrong.

Not surprisingly, I think I was right then and that I’ve been proven so by the above-mentioned consumer/user/viewer generated media.

Literacy, in the sense of “reading and writing” has not been an almost-universal skill for that long in history.

For most of human history, the vast majority of people in every society were illiterate. In 1879 in this country, 20% of the population was illiterate and more than 70% of the black population was illiterate. Yet by 1980 – in a few generations — nearly all adults in the US had achieved basic literacy. Regrettably, 860 million adults worldwide remain illiterate.
Presented by Dean Debra Friedman on November 18, 2005, as part of the “Downtown and Gown” lecture series at ASU’s Downtown Center.

In human history, literacy is recent. Before the printing press very few read – it was an elite skill akin to the ability to drive the complex machineries that produced video and television throughout most of last century. Pre-Gutenberg there weren’t the available books to teach more than a small number of people. Manuscripts were a scarce resource, few needed them so the limited resource was restricted by the high cost of entry. Just like television and video production throughout the last 75 or so years.

What has literacy achieved? Well, most people read and write at some times in their personal or work lives. But there is no one way of “using literacy”. Very few people are employed because of their writing ability (and fewer employed for their reading ability) alone. Of those that are the professional uses are incredibly varied: from the successful Novelist to the Textbook writer, to those that write ad copy, to business reports, to magazine articles, to notes about the call-you-missed. It’s all writing but few are professional writers.

But even if your writing ability isn’t key to your job, everyone needs to fill in a timesheet/work order/sick leave application and needs to be able to read warning labels.

You don’t have to make your living from reading or writing to be literate. You don’t have to be a full time professional “video person” to produce video occasionally. The parallels are very strong between the two forms of literacy.

That’s why I don’t think everyone will be producing content for the 7,684* video sharing websites out there, just like I don’t see the average literate American producing novels, short stories or other written entertainment or educational material for their associates. Some do, most don’t.

Oh, and there’s the evolving 1% rule.

It’s an emerging rule of thumb that suggests that if you get a group of 100 people online then one will create content, 10 will “interact” with it (commenting or offering improvements) and the other 89 will just view it. The Guardian, July 2000

Either way you want to consider it, it’s highly unlikely that this near-universal infatuation with a new-found literacy will lead to more producers than consumers.

*In February 2007, that’s a pretty extreme exaggeration. However, there’s a chance this blog will stay online long enough for it to be true if the current rate of YouTube cloners all keep trying for a googlicious deal.

Categories
Item of Interest

Using Scopes to measure video level

It’s always preferable to prove the accuracy of your video levels using external scopes as long as they’re downstream of your output hardware.

One common problem, as discussed in the BuZZ show of Jan 25, is the levels coming from Adobe After Effects. Video levels could be full range 0-255 in each channel (or 16 bit equivalent) instead of the 601/video range of 16 -235.
May be some useful information at
http://www.dv.com/features/features_item.php?articleId=196601411 (might have to set up a free log-in)
and for super technical background
http://www.poynton.com/notes/colour_and_gamma/ColorFAQ.html

Categories
Distribution Random Thought

What makes Television, Television?

I’ve been thinking a lot about what exactly is television? It seems slightly odd to continue to define television by the very limiting factor it’s being liberated from: broadcast and cable gatekeepers.

We could define Television as something that we watch on the screen in the corner, and that’s probably as reasonable a definition as any, but a little shallow. The announcements of devices like Appletv, along with similar devices from Sling Media, Netgear and announced features for Microsoft’s Xbox 360, mean that, by this definition, every contribution to YouTube is Television? I don’t think so.

Getting Internet-delivered Television back on the familiar screen is certainly an important step toward Television 3.0 but the addition of user generated content reopens the question of what is Television. After thinking about it I’ve come to the conclusion that there are two factors that define Television other than by the distribution channel.

To my mind, Television is the business of creating entertainment or educational content on a regular schedule with attention to the craft skills of production.

Television is a business. Consumer generated media is a hobby. (A worthy, worthwhile hobby by all means.) People work in Television production because they like the work but it is just that: their work. Companies produce shows in the hope of making more income than they spent making the program. Networks and Cable channels pay producers for programs hoping to get more revenue from advertising than the program cost them. And so on.

The other part of the equation: the careful application of craft skills, is harder to pin down. Call it professionalism or craft skills, but there’s a certain something about well crafted Television (across a range of budgets for sure) that sets it apart from “consumer generated content”. Not to be complacent, there’s an increasing amount of that consumer generated content that’s demonstrating professional craft skills.

Categories
General

CNN article on HDTV making talent look fat!

This is the URL for the CNN article Does this HDTV make me look fat? mentioned during the BuZZ in Depth segment on the January 4th edition of Creative Planet’s Digital Production BuZZ.

Categories
General

What is it about “Innovation”

Microsoft constantly claims that any attempt to restrict (whatever it wants to do) will somehow “reduce innovation”. I’m hard pressed to remember any actual innovation that Microsoft have actually released. (The excellent Photosynthesis tech demo is indeed innovative but it’s not yet ready for market.)

Likewise I hear the big four record companies talking about “innovative ways to distribute digital media” when they mean Digital Rights Management destroying the features we already enjoy with their product – like being able to move it from device to device, computer to computer without having to remember to de-authorize one computer before starting on the next.)

Disney are “innovating” on MySpace by making a cosy little non-space that’s designed to please parents but has nothing going for it compared to the real Internet. If parents are worried about what their kids are doing on the Internet they should be parents and manage it, not rely on some walled garden that tries to isolate itself from the rest of the Internet: isolates itself from what makes the Internet actually useful.

So, I’ve come to the conclusion that “innovation” a really a code word for “we haven’t got a clue”. Another example is the Telecommunications companies who are “innovating” with IPTV by creating a poor copy (less choice, more lag time between channels, expensive infrastructure) of a cable system.

I’ve got news for them all: innovation means doing something new, different, unexpected, evolutionary, revolutionary. Triple-play telco bundling is not innovative. Doing a limited version of cable TV on IP protocols is imitation not innovation. What would be innovative is something that gave more choice, was easier to find programming you were interested in, wasn’t limited to a “broadcaster’s” schedule and wasn’t controlled by some channel or network gatekeeper.

That would be innovation. If it fails, better to fail at trying something new than the inevitable failure of poor quality imitation on an infrastructure totally unsuited for the purpose… I’m looking at you ATT Uverse and Verizon. High speed, high bandwidth symmetrical broadband is useful and will power the real innovation that’s coming in television delivery. But that’s not what the telcos are about.

They’re about imitation and convince themselves it’s innovation. How deluded do you have to be to work there?

Categories
Item of Interest

Digital Production BuZZ featured in Radio Times

I just heard that Dave McCandless, a UK media pundit, has featured my weekly broadcast/podcast Creative Planet’s Digital Production BuZZ. The Radio Times has a circulation of just over 1 million. The brief article is available online if you’re interested.

Categories
General

MXF at 25P and 50P

This post is from the BuZZ show of September 21 where links were mentioned in the Pick our Brains segment. These are the links.

720 50P Capturing and Editing in Final Cut Pro

720 25 or 50P, workflow with Final Cut Pro

Categories
General Item of Interest

How to protect the Internet from Politicians

The latest bit of insanity in legislation (part 654 in an ongoing series) has Rep. Michael G. Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) brining up a Bill to “ban Myspace.com from schools” in order to “protect the children”. Leaving aside the facts that parents are where the responsibility lies, and that, given the 80 million members, MySpace is safer than the school itself because more teachers have been convicted of molesting children than has ever come via MySpace or equivalent, this piece of extreme stupidity once again proves that Legislators don’t seem to have any idea of anything regarding the Internet.

Fortunately this piece of lunacy is unlikely to go beyond grandstanding by Rep. Fitzpatrick, but if it did the “Deleting Online Predators Act” would be devestating for the Internet because it’s badly drafted and way too broad. If Wikipedia were commercial it would not be available in schools or libraries. And, just btw, MySpace and equivalent social networking sites now cover half the Internet’s users.

I say every legislator in every assembly should show a working knowledge or the subject before they’re allowed to vote on, let alone draft, legislation.

Categories
Distribution Random Thought

What’s left for the Labels and Studios, Networks or Channels?

It seems that somewhere along the line we adopted a national culture that embraces the idea of “eliminating the middle man” as a societally desirable goal. Sound fair, unless you’re the middle man. In technical jargon this is called Disintermediation, although that sounds far more cruel than simply being eliminated!

The intermediary almost always starts with a useful and well defined role. Once upon a time, access to the airline and hotel booking system was complex, requiring a lot of training. Who needs to go through all that just to book one vacation a year (in a good year)? So we had an intermediary – the travel agent. A skilled professional who’s primary role was to interpret the Byzantine workings of Sabre for mere mortals booking travel! Technology moves forward and a good portion of the travel market is now booked directly by the customer, through those same back-end systems, but with sufficiently customer-friendly interfaces that it’s worth the effort to master it.

I’m not sure if travel agents have completely gone by the wayside – in fact we’re far from that – yet. But it’s inevitable that a travel agent will become a luxury for those who don’t have time to get online. Right now I book 100% of my travel online, but my mother still values the skill of the agent to find a good deal for her. That’s probably a generational thing, so if the trend toward self-booked travel will continue as each successive set of nephews or nieces will trend even further toward self-booking. Simultaneously the reluctance of the mature end of the age spectrum will slowly drop as sites and systems become more and more user-friendly. They’re already heading there.

So, an industry displaced by new technology has to reinvent itself or face extinction. The important thing is that, for many, many years the travel agent provided a valuable service, for which they were deservedly compensated. But when a channel, a middle man or intermediary, faces new technology that disrupts and inevitably destroys their business the choice is to adapt and find a niche to survive in, or die. Such is the nature of life on earth.

Heading the way of the dinosaur are our content aggregators and distribution channels: the Record Labels, the Motion Picture Studios, the TV Networks or even the cable channels.

If the assumption is that every channel or service is in place because it serves a function (or once served a function) that was considered valuable then Record Studios, Motion Picture Studios, Television Networks and Cable Channels (thank you Ted Turner) all all in place because of a valuable service, or services, that they provided. Unfortunately for them, the technology is rapidly making the service much less valuable, if it has any remaining value.

Let’s consider Record Labels as a clear paradigm to follow, mostly because music is much further through this cycle than is filmmaking (including production of entertainment to fill 500 channels with nothing on).

The Record Label performed several valuable services for the artist:

1) The cost of recording was high, so they pre-paid it, on the gamble that it would pay off, and all charged back to the artist’s future earnings, but we won’t go into the politics of it all, right now.
2) The cost of producing a record, physically, was relatively high, because of the up-front costs of producing the first disk, beyond recording the album.
3) Distribution was expensive, paying all the wholesalers and providing for margin at retail, plus those trucks and trains full of vinyl disks.
4) Promotion was expensive, simply getting the word out was expensive, particularly when there were only mass-market channels.

But technology has taken the value out of each of these in turn. First, the cost of recording dropped to the point that every star-struck teen and their friends can produce professional quality audio (even better if they know how to apply knowledge to the accessible toys of production). A purpose-built studio is always going to be better, but even there the cost, at least in this part of Los Angeles, of a recording studio has dropped to be very affordable. But even if the final sound is not at recording-studio-silence-and-perfection, the difference is small. Remember Pareto’s Principle also known as The 80-20 Rule? Even the worst bedroom with a bit of modern recording gear gets a kid 80% of the way to the sound. Like DV, the quality is “good enough” to be accepted in the professional sphere. Strike 1.

So, not long after the cost of recording dropped from the hundreds of thousands of dollars, to thousands of dollars, the cost of producing a CD dropped dramatically – burn individual units with Stomper-labels lovingly applied, or do a run of 1000 for less than $1 each, printed, with bar code and ready for retail. Strike 2.

Strike 3 was the Internet, and digital distribution. The Labels could live with Strikes 1 and 2 because it left them as the gatekeepers to the distribution and promotional channels. Even if you record and press yourself, you would still need the Label for distribution and promotion. But with the Internet with its file sharing and its bittorrents, the Labels really started to get worried. A band could, if anyone had heard of them, distribute their material free, or even sell it direct.

Phew, fortunately, if you never hear about the band or artist, free and direct distribution isn’t going help! The Labels might be down 3 for 3 but they still had a chance of keeping control of promotion.

Promotion. Once you’ve got the cash to spend on a marketing blitz, you can pretty much get your return on the artist back, even if success is moderate. There’ll still be a value-ad for the Labels. There’s nothing to replace that, surely.

Logged on to MySpace anytime? If not, go do it now.

I’m sure it’s not the only site like it. Social Networking online – the hot new growth area of the Internet – is the biggest word-of-mouth market, with viral capability, ever invented. And there’s no publicity like word-of-mouth publicity. It’s going to be a lot more credible because it’s from one of your Friendsters. You get a couple of million MySpaceCadets telling each other how great those free tracks were, and the profit from the next tour and sales of your CD at the venues are likely to be better than they were going to be before! Concerts have been the long term profit center for the artist.

In fact, in this deal, the artist is going to end up with a much bigger cut of the dollar take. Even if they don’t make a cent off the music they give away, artists signed to Labels don’t often see a lot back for their CD sales after the Label charges them, against any advance or royalty, for all that Production, Pressing and Promotion – every dollar of it.

Now the music industry is way further down this path than any other sector, but all parts of their story are in place. It is inevitable that there is no future role for Record Labels as they have been known. (I hear they’re thinking of retraining as travel advisors to the super-rich.)

This isn’t going to play out to the end game in 2006, but the trend is well underway and the conclusion is inevitable.

The movie industry is heading down the same sequence. The cost of producing a “film” (be it on chemical film or digitally ) has also dropped. The cost of producing entertainment Television to an acceptable quality standard is now entirely based on the cost of the content. Rocketboom demonstrates that it’s possible aggregate an audience without spending traditional amounts of money on production. And have you seen their ad rates? $40,000 for 8 ads tacked on the end of an episode thanks to an eBay auction. Starving artists live another year. Even more relevant – this is “consumer generated media” right outside established genres.

Given the relative ease of aggregating a mass (enough) market at relatively low cost, what role is left? The word-of-mouth through the social networking sites will be what’s important. I’m taking a poll on which studio or label will be caught red-faced manipulating or attempting to manipulate a social network. (I’m also expecting that someone will comment and demonstrate where that’s already happened.)

In the television realm, do people want to watch channels or do they want to watch programs? I would contend that the value of TV Networks, and subsequently the explosion of channels is that viewers got choice of programs. With the exception of, maybe, the Shopping Channel and Soap Channel, few people sit and watch “a channel’ all the time. They jump from channel to channel to choose the programs they want to watch. People want to watch programs, not channels and both advertisers and program producers will be better off without the intermediation (middle man) of the channel or network, just like musicians will be better off without the Record Labels.

Let’s consider a case study. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart has, according to wikipedia one million viewers a night, although other sources have it as high as 1.3 million. Let’s stick with the one million mark for the moment, it makes the numbers easy. Unfortunately I couldn’t find anything definitive on either the cost-per-episode nor ad rates for the Daily Show but let’s run some numbers.

If the show sold for 10c per episode and kept the same audience (What, this entertainment isn’t worth a dime?) then each episode brings in $100,000. Cost to the viewer per month (assuming all new episodes), something like $2. And we know that’s more than Comedy Central are getting as a basic cable channel, per subscriber to a cable or satellite system. For “disposable television” – view it once but it has little or no repeat value – like The Daily Show or Daily News – about 10c a program is what I’d like to pay, and 25c is the maximum I’d pay for that type of programming. Prime Time type programming would likely lever 50c out of my pocket per episode, and maybe for Monk I’d go to $1 an episode. Applying that directly to the production company… In this case we have 5.4 million viewers, most of whom would go to 50c an episode, the producer would get $2.6 million an episode. I think those numbers stack up.

The other model is to consider it from an advertisers point of view. Who is it worth being the exclusive sponsor of The Daily Show, or Las Vegas? It’s probably a more cost-effective buy for a car company to directly finance the production and be the only advertiser in the show, probably with a little product placement action going on. In parallel with the low-cost-to-buy-but-no-ads version at 50c (say). This concept is carried forward in an article by Mark Pesce called Piracy is Good? How Battlestar Galactica Killed Broadcast Television

Whichever way you cut it, the middle men – the channel aggregators – look like being disintermediated progressively in the coming years. And there’s not much they can do about it. There are better, new models, like Mark Pesce’s. There are new micropayments systems coming that will charge through an RSS feed, only for what’s downloaded – pay for what’s interesting – in parallel with advertising supported content. Everything old is new again: back to the days when “Soap Operas” were indeed sponsored by a soap company.

Categories
Business & Marketing Random Thought

How business can be its own worst enemy

Seems that I am on a theme where, if a supplier won’t provide the service I want to buy, I’ll go somewhere else. Well, it’s happened again. A website I used to have open most of the time for quick reference to the information finally drove me away tonight. Why? Because they’ve loaded their pages with so much flash-based advertising that having that site open used more than 70% of my processor capacity by itself.

I have nothing against sites that have advertising although I do object to the processor load that Flash ads force on me. Advertising is a given on the Internet, and until this site forced me to act, I was prepared to ignore their, frequently intrusive, advertising for the free weather service they provided. Much more up to date than the OS X 10.4 widget, which is often 2-3 hours out of date when it loads.

I almost reverted to that old standby – walking to the door and opening it – to check the weather when I noticed that ubiquitous RSS feed button on the site. Bliss, joy, glory!!! One click later and my weather is now in my favorite RSS feed aggregator (NetNewsWire Lite). Two items in the feed: weather prediction and current conditions. Exactly what I kept the browser window open full time to get.

Absolutely a reminder to me, and probably anyone in business, that the customer has to come first. The moment we start creating pages that are so heavy in advertising that they become unwieldy for the customer, we effectively put ourselves out of business. It’s not like this site has tremendous overheads – they’re only aggregating and presenting information from the National Weather Service. That the page is taking on advertising that slows my computer is greed, and greed only.

Worse still, the site has no feedback link so I can’t even help them improve by providing feedback. As a serial entrepreneur for more than 30 years, I don’t enjoy negative feedback but I want it and encourage it. I love it when people have positive comments about our products or my presentations. That feeds the ego and helps me know what works. But it’s the negative comment, or the critical opinion, that I can use to improve my presentation and/or product.

And indeed, some of the best improvements to the products have come from critical customers. Thank you. Feedback on presentations helps me improve for future presentations. The subsequent audiences thank you.

In the day of alternate distribution our customers have many ways to get the information we supply like using an RSS feed instead of going to a website, something I’m a huge fan of because of the efficiency. RSS feeds can (and some do) contain advertising and I don’t mind that, because it’s one ad per feed message, generally small and definitely not the processor-hogging flash banners that have become seemingly ubiquitous.

Customers have a choice. If we don’t focus entirely on their need, we’re only in business temporarily. If we’re in post production and don’t focus on the customer’s need for improved communication in the context of their business and message then there are plenty of alternatives. No longer are we the “gatekeepers” to production values because, frankly, anyone can buy or borrow the means of production with quality matching the best broadcasters of just a few years ago. Even HD has no significant barrier to entry.

When was the last time you solicited your customers for how you can improve?