People think YouTube because that is what the MSM and companies are 
feeding them.  Look at Apple, they promote YouTube on the Apple TV, 
on the Iphone, etc.  TV shows now are referring to YouTube, and there 
is that whole Google buying them for over a billion dollars....so of 
course when regular people think of online video or video blogging, 
they are going to think YouTube.  But I also think that YouTube is 
not just people talking into their camera's, I mean there is a lot of 
variety beyond just talking into the camera.

I personaly don't know what the big deal is, it could be worse.  I 
tell people here in Cincinnati what I do and they go "you're doing 
porn?"  I'd love for them to go, "oh, like YouTube" and then I could 
go, "Well, sorta but....."  

As long as YouTube is the 800 pound gorilla it's going to be what 
people talk about.  The biggest issue I really see it as, is that 
some serious artist's haven't figured out how to promote on YouTube 
to get that mass exposure and substain it.  I've talked to a lot of 
local filmmakers here, and most of them try YouTube, they will put up 
a trailer or something and it goes no where and then they see what is 
popular and go "well, youtube is just a bunch of kids, talking into a 
camera and cat videos" and dismiss it and then dismiss the idea of 
online distrubution.  THAT is the attitude we need to work on, you 
can't do a fly by, there is no magic pill, it's hard work to make 
good stuff and get it noticed, but it's always been hard work, so....

Heath
http://batmangeek.com
http://mobilevlog.blogspot.com

--- In [email protected], Rupert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Yeah.  I agree. It's the term that people understand.
> You yell vlog or video podcast, people go "Huh? What?"
> You yell "video blog", you got a panic on your hands on the fourth 
of  
> July.
> 
> However, David Howell was raising concerns the other day on 
Twitter  
> about the connotations of the term.  The general public knows the  
> word, and they *think* they understand it...
> 
> BUT they think solely in terms of Youtube, and the picture that 
comes  
> into their mind when you say 'video blog' is that of a person 
droning  
> into their webcam at great length about what they've done today.   
> People aren't aware that video blogs and user-generated (sorry)  
> online video comes in a million flavours.  That's a barrier which  
> stops intelligent and creative people being aware that there's  
> challenging, varied and engaging new content online by independent  
> vloggers, artists and filmmakers.   At best, they know about the 
big  
> name shows.  And soon, they'll be spoonfed commercial 'channels' 
via  
> things like Joost and Windows Media Center.
> 
> As a community, we now need to put as much (if not more) effort 
into  
> evangelising about the content as we have previously put into  
> evangelising about the technology.
> 
> Rupert
> http://twittervlog.tv/
> http://feeds.feedburner.com/twittervlog/
> 
> 
> On 1 Nov 2007, at 06:37, Mike Meiser wrote:
> 
> I hadn't thought to check into this in a long while.
> 
> video blog vs. vlog vs. video podcast
> 
> Which terms is winning out?
> 
> http://www.google.com/trends?q=video+podcast%2C+vlog%2C+video+blog%
2C 
> +videoblog&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0
> 
> Alternate tiny url:
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/3b6j4u
> 
> It would appear that "video blog" is THE clear term of choice, which
> makes me quite happy. The masses have pretty much spoken at this
> point. I think it's safe to say the dust is starting to settle and
> can't forsee anything changing the picture anytime soon.
> 
> In fact the only thing more popular then "video blog" is simply
> "podcast", with an order of magnitude.
> 
> http://www.google.com/trends?q=video+blog%2C+podcast
> 
> On a side note it's interesting to note that while popularity the 
term
> podcast has obviously peaked the term videoblog continues to rise 
very
> steadily. Most interesting.
> 
> I would think that podcast is the prefered term for audio specific
> media, but I could well be wrong, which brings me to my next point.
> 
> **Google can't tell us what people thing these terms mean.**
> 
> Do people think of podcasts as generally audio only?
> 
> What percentage of these articles that are refering to "podcasts" 
are
> actually referring to video specific podcasts?
> 
> When people here "video blog" what do they think?
> 
> When people here "video blog" do they think simple "youtube"?
> 
> or do they think "like a blog but instead of text primarily video"?
> 
> Is blog itself yet a household term, or do people still think it 
means
> "to throw up"?
> 
> And finally and most importantly... what is the state of RSS in 
all  
> this?
> 
> My guess is the vast majority will never know the term, RSS. Nor do
> they necissarily need to.
> 
> They may understand two things: 1) subscribing, 2) syndication (if
> they make media).
> 
> RSS is undisputeably and undeniably integral to this space. As 1) a
> subscription mechanism, 2) a serch mechanism, and 3) a syndication
> mechanism even though the vast majority of the public may not know 
it
> or even need to know it.
> 
> What interests me though, is how far have we come in loosening media
> from the confines of the "web page" so it may flow freely beyond the
> boundries of the traditional web to set top boxes, portable devices,
> cell phones and such.
> 
> How far have we really gotten in that big picture?
> 
> What percentage of web originating video is viewed on a web page?
> 
> What percentage is viewed on the web page it originated on, as 
opposed
> to through a syndication, reblog, or search site?
> 
> Just some late night ramblings.
> 
> -Mike
> mefeedia.com
> mmeiser.com/blog
> evilvlog.com
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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