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  1. There are no quality online video series.
  2. Online Video has no viable commercial future.

…or so Ari Rosenberg asserts in his April 29th Online Publishing Insider article, Online Video Has No Character .

In this post I’m focusing on Ari’s first premise- there is very little quality original content on the web.  (My focus here is original online video series- television content repurposed for the internet is, as Ari notes, an entirely different story).

When I first started working in online video almost four years ago I had the opportunity to hear the incredibly inspiring online video pioneer Fred Seibert speak.  Fred had recently launched  Next New Networks, and espoused his view that there, in the salad days of online video, we needn’t waste time and money striving for perfection because for now at least  ”good enough” was enough to be successful online.

Four years later “good enough” has produced thousands of hours of “who cares?”. Most video series are fine, sometimes well written sometimes well acted, sometimes well shot…in fact I would describe most video content as fine, but ”not good enough for tv”.

Now that’s depressing. For the first time in entertainment history, independent artists have the ability to green light their own passions, to have their work viewed by a global audience, to shape cultural history. Instead, collectively we have arrived at a paradigm of derivatism and mediocrity. In fact I think the notion of TV is indeed the very problem, right down to the .tv domain. The term “internet tv” implies TV budgets, TV stars, TV formats and a one way viewing experience.  Already we are doing ourselves a disservice.

Online video series may not offer big stars or big budgets, but online we have the opportunity to invent new creative paradigms.  No longer constrained by the 2 dimensional 4.3 screen, or FTC rules or 22 minute story arcs or corporate funders or expensive production that forces us to cater to the common denominator,  we have the occasion to expand our idea of visual storytelling, to build new and unimagined interactive storytelling experiences and to harness our  communities in ways bound only by current technology, which itself is constantly evolving and creating new creative possibilities.

Online video series and the artists that create them will thrive when we embrace the interactive properties that are inherent to the internet. This is where our creative strength lies. This is where they key to compelling story lines and original, memorable characters lie. And who knows, maybe we’ll even stumble upon a business model along the way.

I’ll address Ari’s second point about online videos long term commercial viability in a follow-up post.

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It has been so long since I’ve posted to this blog…the sidebar widgets are sadly out of date, and my life has moved on in ways I would never have imagined since “Queston of the Week” first gave me wings.

I’ve thought about leaving this blog behind…and I might just do that… or perhaps I will bend it to more powerfully reflect where I am now in my life…

Click Here to Read More

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Two episodes ago I began a new segment on Question of the Week ….wanting to celebrate the vision and courage of other artists who are committed to make a living doing what they love most I have begun featuring the work of an etsy artist every week and asking the artist to participate by answering the weekly question…

In the case of an artist who makes wearable art (jewlery,clothing).. I buy the item and wear it on my show (I neither ask for or want anything for free… my goal is to support artists and that means finacially too) … and I know I have increased traffic to these artists web sites cuz I can track clicks from my sites

So.. I am offering FREE publicity on a show the artists can be proud of.. guaranteeing that at least thousands of people will be exposed to their work, as well as “artist of the week” status on both ifnotnow.net and this blog…..

These artists have nothing to lose and everything to gain…

and yet… we have no “artist of the week” in last weeks show.. why? I contacted TWO, count them TWO different etsy artists (a jewlery designer whose work I have bought and wore in last weeks episode and also a photographer) and neither even bothered to return any of my emails.

Why do you think these artist turned down the opportunity for greater exposure?

My theory… our greatest fear is our own success

What’s yours?

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When Nick and I shoot I try very hard not to think about my answer to the question of the week (see previous entry) before he turns the camera on me… often I am completely surprised by what comes out of my mouth.. and generally that spontaneity results in really, really honest answers… but not always. When reviewing the footage, I can always tell if I am not telling the full truth by the the way I hold my mouth… if I am holding back in any you can almost touch the tension….
tension

so… if “producing my own show, because I finally decided that I was enough, and didn’t need anyone else to decide that for me”, wasn’t the most courageous thing I’ve ever done what is? [click to continue…]

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What is your greatest fear?

by kathryn on March 18, 2007

in internet tv,video,women

The only thing we have to fear…

Was FDR right? Is fear itself, “nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror” our greatest enemy…. or are you more terrified by that which can be named… nuclear war… small spaces… failure?
What is you greatest fear? We want to know…. www.ifnotnow.net


Digg!

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