Showing posts with label on-demand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label on-demand. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

MixWit

That's the name of another music on demand program.

Just type in your favorite songs and add them to your playlist. Customize your cool retro cassette face (I choose TDK, but pick BASF, Maxell or any number of others). Type in the title of your mix, save your playlist and you are ready to link and/or play your playlist right there. See my link and listen to my playlist at the end of this post.


I chose top-40 songs for my playlist, but they seem to have a huge library from Elvis to Led Zep to George Benson to Sinatra. Just for kicks I typed in the Bay City Rollers, Abba, and even Ripple from the Dead--all there. Listen here: My MixWit Playlist

P.S. While searching around I found some interesting audio on the site including a JAM Jingle demo. Excellent, I am a jingle freak! So, I start the audio and my next surprise...my friend Leigh Jacobs (former Philly PD and current Critical Mass Media research expert) introducing his new Magic 103 jingle package! Take a listen. JAM Jingles w/Leigh Jacobs intro!

Monday, March 31, 2008

What, Me Wait?

If you are thinking that "one way media" will stage a comeback with under 30's (and older, frankly) once they get tired of all that downloading and social networking nonsense...think again.

Some highlights from this NY Times story:

We Want It, and Waiting Is No Option
By DAVID CARR

The need to hold media that you consume — the physical purchase — is going away ,” said Clay Shirky. Mr. Shirky is an adjunct professor at New York University’s graduate Interactive Telecommunications Program and the author of a new book, “Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations.”

...the Web is not competition for traditional media, but a completely different system that empowers both groups and individuals, a place where choice is not only an option, but an imperative.

...the idea that someone would buy a physical object that contained a finite number of songs arbitrarily selected by someone else seems quaint.

“Forget 15-year-olds; my 4-year old saw a show on broadcast television at our baby sitter’s house and asked to see it again when she went back there,” Mr. Shirky said. When told it wasn’t on television right then, she asked, ‘Is it broken?’ ”

“Storytelling is a hard problem that is cognitive rather than technological,” he said. “It requires a specific set of skills, and there are business models that enable storytelling, but maybe don’t require the whole manufacturing or broadcasting business that goes with them.”

...
It
seems silly at a time of hulking, glorious in-home entertainment centers to watch a show on a 13-inch laptop...

“It’s the classic quality-is-king mistake,”
he said. “Remember what audiophiles said about MP3, that it would never last because the quality was not there. But
past a certain threshold of quality, most normal people don’t care. The ability to share files was actually far more important. Good enough was good enough.”

So maybe changing the equation isn’t so much a matter of throwing out old media as adjusting to hybrid models that enable an infinite inventory on a digital shelf — embracing, rather than trying to control, choice.

While this article doesn't specifically talk about radio; there is so much of this article the applicable to radio. Our business is the ultimate "one way" medium and unless we continue to work towards unrestricted interactivity our fortunes will continue to shrink.

Everything we do going forward must be focused in two areas: entertainment (not just 10 songs in a row with limited interruption) and on-demand content & connectivity that our fans can access anywhere, anytime.

This seemed worthy of repeating......
the idea that someone would buy a physical object that contained a finite number of songs arbitrarily selected by someone else seems quaint. In our business the "physical object" is our radio stations. If we are to continue to play the hits (yes, the hits are the hits) we have to offer something more. Entertainment content will not please everyone, but without it the non-stop music machine will continue to erode...pleasing fewer and fewer listeners since they can get those hits on-demand--elsewhere.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Have You Heard Of Hulu?

Meet Hulu...
Movies, TV, and a social networking component all in the same place-on demand and FREE!
From their website:

Hulu's ambitious and never-ending mission is to help you find and enjoy the world's premium content when, where and how you want it. We hope to provide you with the web's most comprehensive selection from more than 50 content providers including FOX, NBC, MGM, Sony Pictures Television, Warner Bros., Lionsgate, and more to deliver premium programming across all genres and formats, television shows, feature films, and clips. Watch full-length episodes of current primetime TV shows such as The Simpsons and The Office the morning after they air, classics like Miami Vice and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and clips from Saturday Night Live, Nip/Tuck, and others. Hulu also offers full-length feature films like The Usual Suspects, Ice Age, Three Amigos!, and The Big Lebowski as well as clips from films such as Napoleon Dynamite, The 40 Year Old Virgin, Devil Wears Prada and many more. Hulu is free and ad-supported — available anytime in the U.S.

Hulu was founded in March 2007 and is a joint venture owned by NBC Universal and News Corp. In addition, Hulu has closed a $100 million investment from private equity firm Providence Equity Partners. <--------yes, the same people that just bought Clear Channel's TV division
The selection is pretty amazing and they add new content every day. If you missed SNL Saturday night, no problem it's on the site the next day. Bill O'Reilly's Talk Points Memo, no problem, there it is. Available to share on your website, email, or link. As you will see later in the post you can even edit a show down to a short clip that's easy to share.

I haven't watched a movie yet, but the TV shows have very short commercial interruptions that seemed like a small price to pay for all this for free. Sounds a lot like the radio model--except for the length of the breaks. You can also buy any episode or movie you like enough to own.

Traffic to Hulu has been growing fast; already attracting hundreds of thousands of unique users.

Content is king and Hulu has amassed of lot of it including WKRP in Cincinnati. Check out this hilarious clip...I laughed 'til I hurt.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

The :90 Tell All

Mass Media Challenged.

A British company named MediaSnackers offered this explanation...and it's spot on.



Watch this video anytime-on demand.

Can you say that about your radio programs?