Archive for the ‘Online Media’ Category

Grammy Awards Winners Suckered By Industry Spin


Many artists at this year’s Grammy Awards signed a letter which the Recording Academy intends to send to Congress regarding the controversial Performance Rights Act. Daryl Friedman, a VP for the Recording Academy says: “In speaking to these talented artists, I heard three constant refrains. First, their concerns for background singers and musicians and older legacy artists who need to be fairly compensated; second, their willingness to sit down with radio to work out a solution; and third, if radio still refuses to talk, their commitment to take the fight to Washington.”

The Grammy Week January 2010 statement reads as follows:
“We, the undersigned artists, believe in the partnership between music and radio. We believe that artists (including the background singers and musicians and the great legacy artists of the past decades) deserve to be compensated when their music is used by radio. We support the Performance Rights Act because it is fair to radio and fair to artists. We encourage the radio industry to work with the music community and Congress to pass The Performance Rights Act. Together, we can create a true partnership that benefits radio, artists and musicians, and fans.”

Artists who signed the statement include Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Tre Cool, Mike Dirnt and Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day, Stephen Stills, Kenny Aronoff, Sheryl Crow, Anthony Kiedis, Chad Smith and Flea of Red Hot Chili Peppers, Phil Soussan, Jackson Browne, Don Was, Dave Matthews, Josh Groban, Travis Barker, Andrea Bocelli, Apl.de.ap, Taboo, Will.i.am and Fergie of Black Eyed Peas, Drake, Mary J Blige, Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks and David Foster. Recording Academy President and CEO Neil Portnow says, “Standing right behind them are thousands of unknown and up-and-coming music makers who face the question of survival every day. In the coming decade, unless they can make a living at their craft, the quality and creativity of the music will be at risk.”

These artists have, of course, been brainwashed by the record industry spin machine. They don’t seem to understand that passage of the Performing Rights Act will result in fewer music-focused radio stations. Their assumption is that, since music-intensive radio has provided free commercials for their recorded music for the past 5 decades, stations will continue to do so. Perhaps they don’t realize that the reason radio stations became music-intensive was because music provided a mutually-beneficial symbiotic relationship for the radio and music industries: cost-effective programming for the stations and free promotion for the record labels. If the Performance Rights Act is passed, station management will decide that it’s more cost-effective to air talk programming, artists will receive less exposure and the record labels will continue to lose money.

Update: With Congress back in session, both the the National Association of Broadcasters and MusicFIRST have amped up their lobbying efforts. The NAB’s campaign is pretty innocuous, Stop The Performance Tax. MusicFIRST, however, has decided to play nasty. Here’s the logo for their site, PiggyRadio.com

Radio Changes Mean Opportunity

This week, Donnie Simpson ended his career on broadcast after a 41 year career, 32 of those in Washington, DC radio. Donnie’s not the first nor the latest major morning show talent to leave the industry over the past few years. As the competition for advertising dollars becomes more fierce and the slices of the pie become increasingly smaller, traditional radio broadcasters have been looking for ways to cut costs.The introduction of Arbitron’s people meter and its real-time PPM ratings have influenced how management thinks about morning show talent. People smarter than me including Larry Rosin, Mark Ramsey, Alan Mason, Fred Jacobs and Jerry Del Colliano have commented on radio management’s interpretation of those PPM results and I’d encourage you to read their always insightful blogs.

The net result, however, is that talented personalities like Donnie Simpson will no longer be available on traditional radio. However, I suspect that this situation will actually work in their favor. These personalities are well-liked and trusted by their listeners. They are brands unto themselves. With a relatively small investment, they can work out of their home and create their own daily podcasts which their followers (Seth Godin would refer to Donnie’s listeners as his “tribe”) can access and listen to at their convenience. Businesses which achieved a positive return-on-investment (ROI) by advertising on Donnie’s show can cost-effectively target that audience by supporting his podcast. And he doesn’t have to share the revenue because he’s eliminated the corporate middleman.

A model for this approach is already in operation in Grand Rapids, MI. Dave Jagger and Geri Jarvis’s morning show was canceled in 2008. They launched their daily podcast last summer with financial support from a local bank that had been an advertiser on their radio show. It’s been reported that they’re getting 35,000 hits on their podcast download and over 18,000 daily visits for Dave & Geri On-Demand. It’s estimated that they’ll gross $ 100,000 for their first year. And, of course, they won’t have to share that income with station owners.

In the not-too-distant future, internet access will become ubiquitous on car dashboards. As happened when homes became cable-connected, during the next 10 years the playing field for broadcast radio, internet radio stations and podcasters will be leveled.

A study sponsored by the Association for Downloadable Media and presented this week by Edison Research’s Tom Webster shows that podcast listeners tend to be educated, affluent and receptive to sponsorship messages from trusted podcasters even though they hate advertising on commercial radio and TV.

Smells like opportunity to me.

(Thanks to Rit Ranger for suggesting this blog)

Help Haiti Now

Tracy Kidder, author of the book Mountains Beyond Mountains about Partners in Health founder, Paul Farmer, wrote in the New York Times that with the destruction of so much of Haiti’s already inadequate medical infrastructure, “Partners in Health probably just became the largest health care provider still standing in all Haiti”.

According to a PIH spokesperson, Partners In Health’s nine hospitals, staffed with more than 100 doctors and 500 nurses, are all miles from the quake’s epicenter and escaped major damage. The organization is working to set up emergency operations in Port-au-Prince, but in the meantime has established a triage center at its headquarters in Cange to deal with a stream of earthquake victims — patients with broken bones, deep cuts and even limbs severed by falling debris. But they need money to replenish their rapidly dwindling supplies. If you’d like to help..

Stand With Haiti

Ready To Have Your Reality Augmented?

Since I learned about it last summer, I’ve become intrigued by the possibilities offered by Augmented Reality or AR technology. Some of my earlier blogs have highlighted AR applications which can be used to help you “try on” clothes prior to making an online purchase, to get information on your mobile audio/video device (aka phone) about a business as you approach it walking down the street or to find your car in the mall parking lot.

I showed this Pranav Mistry “SixthSense” TED video to my students last night and could tell that it opened some of their eyes to new possibilities. Mistry describes “SixthSense” as a wearable gestural interface that augments the physical world around us with digital information and lets us use natural hand gestures to interact with that information.

Watch it and I think you’ll be amazed, too.

What do you think?

Merry Christmas !

Merry Christmas.

E.B. White wrote: “The miracle of Christmas is that, like the distant and very musical voice of the hound, it penetrates finally and becomes heard in the heart over so many years, through so many cheap curtain-raisers….So this day and this century proceed toward the absolutes of convenience, of complexity, and of speed, only occassionally holding up the little trumpet (as at Christmas time) to be reminded of the simplicities, and to hear the distant music of the hound.”

Feliz Navidad ! Joyeux Noel ! Buono Natale !

How Will Augmented Reality Impact Your Life?

Earlier today I was interviewed about augmented reality on Bob Cudmore’s radio show which is simulcast on radio in the Amsterdam, NY area on Lite 104.7FM and 1570AM and which is also streamed at www.1570WVTL.com

As I’ve mentioned in previous posts, John C. Havens first made me aware of augmented reality this summer on his BlogTalkRadio series. Since then, BusinessWeek’s Stephen H. Wildstrom has been following the trend while Esquire magazine, John Mayer’s new album and the new book about Michael Jackson have actually employed the technology.

To clarify, with virtual reality the environment is totally computer-generated and the user becomes immersed in that computer-generated world where nothing is real. (Think The Simms and Grand Theft Auto). With augmented reality, computer-generated applications
(apps) are imposed onto the real world using the web camera on your computer or SmartPhone to provide additional information or to enhance your real-life experience.

Zugara’s Webcam Social Shopper lets you try on clothes (virtually) then take pictures to send to your Facebook friends to get their opinions:

Baby Boomers might watch this video about Microsoft’s Xbox Project Natal and think it’s just about games but the last part of the video shows some very practical applications for augmented reality technology:

In an earlier posting, I’ve talked about some new iPhone apps which Baby Boomers might find useful.

At one point, a lot of us thought that GPS units were a little frivolous. If you have a GPS unit now, you probably think of it as essential.

I’d be interested in whether or not you can foresee augmented reality becoming an integral part of your lifestyle.

Integrating My Blog With Facebook

Our experiment with new media continues. We’re learning how to successfully integrate my blog into my new Brindle Media Facebook fan page. http://www.facebook.com/search/?q=Brindle+Media&init=quick

What Should We Celebrate?

I tend to be a bit too analytical and so focused on a goal. Unfortunately, when I’ve finally done everything necessary to achieve that goal, my reaction will be more, “OK, that’s done. What now?” rather than one of joy. I get so wrapped up in the details of the work that I forget to celebrate the accomplishment. That’s not a good quality-of-life strategy.

So, I was moved by a recent Harvey Mackay column which reflected on holiday season celebrations and observed: “I often wonder why we limit our celebrations the rest of the year.”
A Whole New Mind
In his book, “A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule The Future”, Daniel H. Pink notes that Henry Ford fired assembly line workers for laughing or even smiling while on the job. Ford felt that workers who were having fun were a danger to efficient production. Fortunately, that kind of thinking is as outdated as the Model T.

Harvey Mackay feels that work should be done “in a place where we can be excited, enthusiastic and passionate about what we do.” So here are some suggestions he makes:

1) Celebrate often
2) Big celebrations are great but get-togethers to celebrate small
successes are good, too.
3) Be creative in your celebrations. The basics are food, fellowship
& fun. Build on that base.
4) Share the responsibility of creating a celebration. A fresh
perspective can create unexpected positive results.
5) It doesn’t have to be perfect. It’s the intention of the
celebration that’s important.

You can read Harvey’s entire column here: http://bit.ly/Mackay

So, what should we celebrate next ?!

Augmented Reality Apps

Augmented reality is the overlaying of digital data on the real world. In a world where pretty soon that mobile device most of us use to make phone calls will also replace your laptop, your GPS, your radio and who-knows-what-else the concept of augmented reality is not as outlandish as it initially seems.

In a recent article, Mashable listed what the editors deemed “10 Amazing Augmented Reality iPhone Apps”. These were the ones that seemed the most practical for Baby Boomers like me:

    WorkSnug


Workslug
This app identifies Wi-Fi hotspots and potential workplaces like coffee shops, bookstores, libraries,etc. and provides user reviews. Right now, it’s only available in London but versions for Manhattan, San Francisco, Berlin and Madrid are due to be released soon.

    AugMeasure


AugMeasure
With this app, you can use your iPhone to gauge short distances up to a foot (30 centimeters) and, using the built-in camera, shows an overlay onto the live image on your phone’s screen which changes as you move the phone.

    Car Finder


Carfinder
And when was the last time you forgot where you parked? Once your car’s location is set, Car Finder creates a visible marker that shows the car, how far away from it you are and tells you in what direction to head.

Do you think you’d use these apps? What apps would you like to see developed which aren’t yet available?

You can check out the other apps that Mashable recommends at http://bit.ly/iPhone_app

Can Companies Make $$$ And Be “Green”?

Saratoga Springs resident, Bruce Piasecki has consulted Toyota and HP about the capitalistic benefits of going green. Hear Bruce’s perspective in this interview on the Small Business Advocate podcast.

Click here to learn more about Bruce’s book.

Twitter