Here's a letter about youtube's new partner program, written by an anonymous
youtube star who is certainly, definitely, Absolutely NOT Kent.

http://battellemedia.com/archives/003630.php
(via http://boingboing.net)

> ###
>
> *I'm a YouTube star, but YouTube wishes I wasn't. They would like to
> pretend I don't exist, rather than admit there are several roads to
> financial and critical success that don't lead through their corporate
> headquarters. *
>
> *If they could, YouTube would love to become the next gatekeeper, the next
> network. And in fact they have, they've gently plucked their stars and
> anointed them with advertising dollars. And someday you too can be touched
> by their magic wand and granted the status of weblebrity if you pass the
> test. *
>
> *Our site has won a lot of awards, been seen tens of millions of times,
> and is one of the most subscribed to around. But somehow, it was left out
> when "**YouTube Elevates Most Popular Users to 
> Partners<http://youtube.com/blog?entry=4b3PkL8HQcw>
> **". Okay, that's cool. *
>
> *We were approached last year, sure. They talked all about how we should
> shut down our personal domain and run everything through their site, and how
> that soon they were going to add a podcast feature to the site. They asked
> us if we'd heard of podcasting? *
>
> *"Um, yeah, we've created two of the most successful video podcasts," we
> responded. *
>
> *So that's the You in YouTube. They couldn't even be bothered to spend
> five minutes on our website to find out anything about us. Sweet. *
>
> *The biggest point of friction has been their opacity and lack of
> communication. I know they were in startup mode, but seriously, you'd think
> they'd want to foster good relationships with the people that were supplying
> the only legitimate content to their sites. We were the ones that were the
> new way -- the new media creators. *
>
> *And the big question for everyone was how are you going to make money?
> Well, we certainly were not making any green from YouTube. And until the
> last three months, they weren't publicly promising any cash to anyone. So
> what were we supposed to do? Just pray really hard that YouTube would
> someday pay us? That's sorta irresponsible. So we did what anyone would do,
> we started evaluating the opportunities that presented themselves and then
> took advantage of some of them. *
>
> *So when YouTube finally got its act together and offered us an
> advertising split, it was too low an offer. We were doing better without
> them. And with less strings. *
>
> *But seriously, why was that the first time they talked to us? Well
> actually they did ask for our mailing address early on, to send us T-shirts
> (they never arrived). *
>
> *If we had a dialog from when we really started to take off, this
> situation probably could have been avoided. But they talked to us once, knew
> nothing about us, and expected us to just be so pleased to be in business
> with them. *
>
> *Get over yourselves. *
>
> *Right now YouTube has a three tiered system, the top, or big media, the
> middle, indie content creators with audiences, and the bottom, random user
> submissions that get small numbers of views. *
>
> *At the top they've got some deals in place, but they're also getting sued
> in a big way. And the new company from Fox and NBC is also going to give a
> lot of competition. *
>
> *The bottom is pure long tail. The only money there is in the aggregation
> of content and selling ads against the massive volume of vids with low
> views. YouTube will continue to be king here. *
>
> *The middle is where our site lives, the indie content creators. This is
> the space that YouTube could just own, if they invested really heavily in
> terms of ad splits and career development. The terms that YouTube offers to
> these middle players will set the floor for what every other site has to
> offer the talented upstarts that create fun and entertaining shows. *
>
> *They need to be aggressive in identifying the new talent the people that
> can get more than 50k in views on their vids. And then bring them into the
> fold, help them. Let them know about podcasting, help them build a good
> merch operation, sell high value advertising against their content. *
>
> *This involves much more than they are doing now. Now they just elevate
> these indies into Partner status. Which means they give cross promotion on
> the site, the future promise of preroll/postroll ads, and a split of the
> advertising that appears on the page views on their site. *
>
> *What they are doing now is a short term play to get and keep the eyeballs
> of those indie shows. But what happens when those contracts are up? And the
> creators haven't really developed their careers? *
>
> *Some shows will stick with YouTube, but the savviest and the most
> commercial ones will move to other video sites that can provide better
> splits or signing bonuses. Creators will start to realize that their
> storytelling talents are rare and valuable. *
>
> *I don't know the terms this round of authors were guaranteed by YouTube,
> but I do know that we were offered was okay money, but something that we've
> already surpassed. And then when you factor in merch sales, and the value of
> having our own users and pageviews on top of that and controlling our own
> brand, we're coming out miles ahead of a typical YouTube power user. *
>
> *So what happens next? I dunno. I mean I know YouTube's got deep pockets
> now, but I also know that their technology is pretty commodity ( **
> http://www.jeroenwijering.com/?item=Flash_Video_Player** ), and I know if
> these deals aren't that successful, that the creators will flee to some
> other deep pocketed competitor. *
>
> *My biggest hope is that these creators can walk away. How many of them
> have a good lawyer reviewing that contract? *
>
> *Whatever YouTube is paying will be the marker. I expect Microsoft, Yahoo,
> and other players will follow suit, but with better terms to attract the top
> talent. *
>
> *Also I think that new kinds of media services companies - smaller and
> more focused than YouTube - will continue to cherry pick the best and most
> commercial properties to sell ads against at a much higher dollar value than
> what YouTube is able to do.
> *
> ###
>


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