Everyone's always been a critic -- but the Net makes their voices count

By Scott Kirsner, Globe Columnist  |  April 30, 2006

Roger Ebert may be endangered, Entertainment Weekly on its way to 
extinction. Have you noticed how many no-name critics are suddenly 
serving up pithy opinions about movies, books, music, and video games 
on the Net?

Amazon.com may have been one of the first sites, in the mid-1990s, to 
allow its users to share their thoughts about a book, just below the 
venerable Publishers Weekly or Booklist write-up. Now, such sites as 
Blogcritics.org collect reviews written by bloggers, and Apple's 
iTunes Music Store allows users to share their iMixes -- lists of 
favorite songs on a particular theme, like ''NJ Best," a selection 
from Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, and other musicians with roots in 
the Garden State.

''The cultural influencers are changing," says Brian Kalinowski, 
chief operating officer of Lycos, the Waltham Internet portal. 
''Expert opinion in the media used to drive culture. Now, it's peer 
recommendations."

Already, consumers can sample a broader range of critical opinion on 
the Internet -- some of it relevant and thoughtful, covering products 
that wouldn't ordinarily be reviewed by the mainstream media, and 
some of it biased or one-dimensional. (''This game rocks!" ) And 
marketers, such as movie studios and book publishers, are trying to 
figure out how Internet tastemakers figure into their relationship 
with their customers.

This year, for instance, movie studios have chosen to forgo advance 
critics' screenings for more new movies than they did during the same 
period of last year. The supernatural thriller ''Silent Hill" wasn't 
shown to critics before it opened on April 21 -- some of the first 
reviews showed up on the website AintItCoolNews.com that morning -- 
and yet the movie was last weekend's best box office performer.

And publishers such as Boston's Beacon Press are noticing that some 
niche titles, such as a recent collection of writings about Iranian 
culture, can attract more critical attention online than off. 
Publicity director Pamela McColl says that Beacon is still trying to 
assemble lists of influential book blogs -- ''there are a lot of 
blogs out there," she says -- but that the firm already provides 
review copies to some critics who write solely for the Net. Not 
surprisingly, McColl says that online reviews seem to be more 
influential among younger readers.

At press events where video game companies introduce products, Greg 
Kasavin has started to notice more non-journalists in the audience.

...

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2006/04/30/everyones_always_been_a_critic____but_the_net_makes_their_voices_count/



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