Category: media blog

  • Here’s video of Pandora running on a car dashboard

    Here’s video of Pandora running on a car dashboard

    Given the rate that the millennials are using Pandora I would pay attention to this.  Data costs will continue to be an issue….for now.

  • Comedy Central Radio turns one, I can run a marathon and other things my brain is telling me

    Comedy Central Radio turns one, I can run a marathon and other things my brain is telling me

    COMEDY CENTRAL RADIO LOGO

    I love the sub-conscious.

    Last night my brain took me back to Comedy Central Radio.  When I woke up I wondered why.  Then I realized the date – we launched Comedy Central Radio last year on May 13th.

    A year later things are….different?….weird???   My position at SiriusXM was eliminated.  The main guy on the Comedy Central side of the deal is no longer with CC.  My former #2 who I had groomed to replace me had left the comedy department for a good opportunity…so he isn’t there.  So a foundation built, but other folks having stewardship.  I didn’t see that one coming.

    As I dusted off the cob-webs I headed off to brush my teeth and looked at the long sleeve shirt I had slept in, the one I had pulled out of the drawer to play beach volleyball in on a cool night.  It says NYC Marathon 2013.

    That’s the marathon that didn’t happen because of Sandy.  I was supposed to run that one.

    I have another shirt.  It says NYC Marathon 2014.  That one I ran.  I had to put my head down and train again, but everything was OK in the end.

    So that’s my personal takeaway this morning.  Head down, keep running.

    Check out some of the work I did creating Comedy Central Radio and the rest of my portfolio.

    ..

    I was happy to see that This Is Not Happening is making the leap from digital (web) to linear (TV).  That was a show we partially incubated on CCR, and I think was part of the great possibilities of CCR.

  • Commercials – Like Our Attention Spans – Are Getting Shorter – The Numbers Guy – WSJ

    According to Nielsen Neuro, Nielsen’s consumer neuroscience data arm, 15-second commercials can be just as effective or more effective than 30-second commercials.

    via Commercials – Like Our Attention Spans – Are Getting Shorter – The Numbers Guy – WSJ.

  • Classics: Batman: Knightfall BBC Radio drama | The Verge

    No great insight from me on this one, although I recall poking around at this (lightly) at one point when one of the Batman movies was coming out.  I think I couldn’t get internal traction.  Anyway, there are all kinds of cool BBC adaptations.  I also wanted to do something with the Star Wars adaptations they did.

    As for Batman…

    Interestingly, while the comic-book Batman depicted scenes of extreme violence, sadism, and death, for the most part the mainstream television programs and films never pushed things beyond a PG-13 rating. The BBC had no such scruples. Its Knightfall is not for the faint of heart. Crunching bones and burning bodies are treated with gratuitous audio fidelity. Listening to it as a 12-year-old, sitting alone in my room, I was terrified and yet unable to stop.

    via Classics: Batman: Knightfall BBC Radio drama | The Verge.

  • You watch 17 TV channels

    You watch 17 TV channels

    57 channels

    Interesting stuff from Nielsen which says that the average American household receives 189 channels but consumers only tune to 17 of them.

    One thing that strikes me is how I never watch anything live except for sports.  Even if I am home when one of my “big shows” is on, I will start it late so I can fast forward through the commercials.  These days it means starting my Game of Thrones – Mad Men twofer at about 9:20 so that I can zip through Mad Men.

    I think back to all the random breaking news stories I used to catch just because I was surfing around (Flight 800 comes to mind) and how now it’s entirely possible that something would happen and I wouldn’t know.

    Or maybe I just wouldn’t know from The Teevee.  Most of us keep our phone close and I’m likely to find out about something from twitter.

    Anyways…17 channels seems about right.  Yes?

  • iTunes Radio creates Blue Note Radio – why that’s important

    iTunes Radio creates Blue Note Radio – why that’s important

    blue note

    Slowly but surely the iTunes Radio giant is waking.

    Billboard reports that the Blue Note will have a label-branded station on iTunes radio.  That’s important for a few reasons.

    First, they are beginning to grow beyond being a record shuffler.  One of the problems on the consumer end is knowing what to listen to.  When offered too many choices it actually becomes overwhelming.  I personally love the iTunes radio Alt Top 50 station.  I can be cool without knowing what to look for.   Otherwise I’m just typing some band name into an engine….but what if I don’t even know the first band to type in to get the genome started.

    Second, it’s a label station.  Streaming royalties are all kinds of complicated, but there is something you can do called a direct license which can keep your costs down.  I don’t know the financial arrangements of this deal but it would not surprise me if there is some sort of direct agreement here along those lines.

    Also remember that iTunes is a record store and can help Blue Note move product by creating awareness via promotion and placement.

    Now apply that logic to bigger labels, bigger artists.  Yep, there’s a business here that could be good for Apple, labels and consumers.  A win for all.

    I keep wondering when iTunes Radio is going to go all-in.  Should be very interesting.

  • Pondering the digital video ad

    Pondering the digital video ad

    video ad

    The below got me thinking….

     

    Who, after all, has actually ever watched a digital video ad? Such interruptions — nearly everybody in the business sniffs at the most common form, pre-roll, that unrelated, often skippable ad before the video — fly in like mosquitoes and are as annoyingly swatted away. And, save for the promise of extreme silliness, cuteness, humiliation or gore, who really is an eager viewer of Internet videos?

    via Wolff: Madison Avenue and digital video.

     

     

    This morning I have been watching my own behavior.   A few ads have played in the sidebar of sites, completely ignored by me.  I let one run out while I tinkered in a separate twitter window on my Mac.  So yes the ad played, but was it seen?

    Like many people I will click out of an ad after five seconds when that option is presented.

    What I won’t sit through is the thirty second pre-roll.  I don’t care how excited I was to see the content, if you expect me to sit there for :30, I just won’t.  My life goes on.

    Fifteen seconds seems more tolerable.  Probably because I can check twitter or my phone or scratch my nose and it is almost over.  Still ignored, but at least not X’d out.

    Solutions?  Well, if I had that I would be a billionaire.  I know that on radio I felt we should bring things full circle and go back to having Title Sponsored shows.  Instead of The Bob Hope Show you had The Pepsodent Show, Starring Bob Hope. And the Pepsodent live reads would work their way into sketches.  Similarly, you haven’t lived until you have heard Bing Crosby sing about Chesterfield cigarettes.

    I think this could work for television as well, at least with comedies.  I’m not sure there would be much of a difference between say The Patton Oswalt Show and The Sony Show starring Patton Oswalt,

     

     

  • Time to go do the work

    Time to go do the work

    Don Draper

     

    I have almost nothing in common with Don Draper other than when I occasionally drop into what I call my “Fat Don Draper” speeches in a creative meeting However, as I have spent the last few months riding out some golden handcuffs, I have been strangely reacting to the parts of Mad Men where Don is sitting around his apartment with nothing to do.  That feeling I know.

    Last night Don rolled up his sleeves and decided to do the work.

    This morning I find myself a full “unrestricted free agent” as I like to say.  I am free and clear to run your radio station, your comedy offerings or whatever the future holds.

    Ten years ago I found myself in this boat and a friend called and told me to get in touch with Jeremy Coleman who was looking for someone to run the comedy format on satellite radio.  The what on what?   What wound up attracting to me that gig, as I told Jeremy in that meeting, was that there was no “book” on how to do the format.  It hadn’t been done, thus there was no blueprint.  Ten years later it’s a format that is expected on all these services, and there is even a terrestrial radio version.

    And like Don, it bugs me that someone else has my stations now.  I launched them all, and I always knew they would go on without me, but boy it makes me creatively itchy to get back in the game.

    My ten years before that was in News-Talk, something that I still love.  I was waxing poetic last week about my adventures with Bob Grant.  Whatever you may think of Bob, I worked with him every day and I will tell you he was a master of his craft.  Lets have lunch some time and I will go on and on about working that show.

    So here I am.  Unrestricted free agency.  Time to go do the work.

  • AOL releases 16 original shows, Nielsen to do the ratings – CNET

    Interesting game-changer.  One of the challenges we had at SiriusXM was that we didn’t have traditional ratings.  “How many people are listening?” was a common question.  I had a polished rap about total subscribers, the business model and total value…but saying an actual number would have made life easier.  Kudos to AOL in believing in their product to back it up with numbers.

    Here’s a sign that Web-only shows are now going neck and neck with television: Nielsen, the well-known ratings-data analyst, will begin rating new AOL original series. AOL is the first digital client to get Nielsen’s ratings for its original shows.

    via AOL releases 16 original shows, Nielsen to do the ratings – CNET.

  • Nielsen Study: Radio ads return $6 in sales for every $1 of ad spend

    Nielsen has an interesting new study which should make the sales department’s life easier!

     

    In this first major radio effectiveness study, the research found that each dollar of ad spend generated an average sales return of $6 from the listeners in the 28 days after they heard the ads.

    via For Advertisers, Radio is Worth Listening To.