Just saw this..First off congrats to Andrew and Joanne.  
Second.....this just confirms my belief that online content will 
become more and more professional (ie, networks creating stuff or 
making stuff availible online), unless you were one of the first few 
or you have a strong plan, time, talent, etc....indie content or 
personal vlogging, I don't think will sustain over the long term, not 
at it's current level anyway.  anyway....interesting read!

Heath
http://batmangeek.com

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10007032-36.html?
tag=cnetfd.blogs.item

Sony Pictures Television has signed a distribution deal with 
pioneering Web series Rocketboom, which has been producing a quirky 
daily newscast since 2004.

Under the terms of the agreement--which reports pin in the seven 
figures--Sony will handle all distribution and ad sales, as well as 
use its Crackle.com player on the Rocketboom.com Web site. (Until 
this point, Rocketboom has used a YouTube embed on its home page.) 
It'll also see additional distribution on Sony's network, which 
includes the PlayStation 3 console.

Sony bought Crackle, then known as Grouper, back in 2006.

Created by entrepreneur Andrew Baron, Rocketboom rose to fame with 
actress Amanda Congdon as host, but she left the show on unfavorable 
terms in 2006 and has since struggled to find a new niche in online 
media. Congdon's replacement, Joanne Colan, is still at the helm.

In a post on his blog, Baron explained why he chose to seek a 
distributor (a rarity in the Web video world) rather than raising the 
money through a venture round: he didn't want to sell out. Mentioning 
venture-funded video start-ups like Revision3 and Next New Networks, 
he wrote, "While these networks have provided immense value for the 
growing transitioning space, they are all controlled now by venture 
capitalists which tend to have as their primary objective, a sale."

Baron added that it often hasn't helped the quality. "Aside from the 
hit shows which have spawned the networks, most of the other shows on 
these networks have not lived up to their predecessors, content-wise, 
and new shows are often canceled soon after they are launched." 
Indeed, Revision3 and Next New Networks have both seen new programs 
debut only to peter out after only a few episodes--something that a 
major TV network can handle, but which can be a serious wound for a 
video start-up.

"Instead of gaining capital to burn while continuing to build or seek 
an advertising solution, we now have one of the most prominent 
advertising solutions out there," Baron wrote, "along with increased 
distribution, a road map for expansion and a guarantee that I believe 
is an unprecedented deal for this space."

What he was saying, albeit obliquely, is that Rocketboom did need a 
leg up. As more and more early Web video shows have either faded away 
(Lonelygirl15 just ended its run, and The Burg's creators ended the 
project to collaborate on a new show backed by former Disney chief 
Michael Eisner) or acquired (Wallstrip was bought by CBS Interactive, 
and Revision3 now syndicates Wine Library and Epic Fu) 
remaining "indie" operations need to stay afloat. Sony can provide 
Rocketboom with better exposure as well as a more streamlined 
advertising operation.

Baron is no stranger to shaking things up, having catalyzed one of 
the blogosphere's most navel-gazing debates when he briefly put his 
Twitter account up for sale on eBay.


Reply via email to