Archive for October, 2009
Monday Inspirations
Monday, October 5th, 2009Monday Inspirations—Here are 3 weekly ideas for song lyric, poems, instrumental titles, photos, video, short story or anything they inspire you to create. Use the title if you like & make something!
64. Lonely Autumn
Leaves are changing color
and the wind is getting cold
Lonely autumn lonely autumn at the door
Yellow brown crimson gold
Warm beauty to have and hold
Lonely autumn lonely autumn at the door
The grasses dry their seeds fly
What was is gone no more no more
Lonely autumn lonely autumn at the door
65. Music Is My Habit
After doing this music stuff hours and hours upon hours each week, I’m beginning to feel an addiction coming on strong. Roll a quarter pound in a chocoate sleeve. Stuff a blue note in my pipe. Hit the main vein with smooth groove. Pledge allegiance to the whole note. Crank the volume because Music Is My Habit.
66. MixTape Rave & MixTape Wave
That word - mix tape - comes up a lot. I’m still working on exactly what is a mix tape. While I’m drumming it in the mind and tapping the table, you probably know what it is. :-) So - here goes. MixTape Rave, covers you with sound. MixTape Wave, roll you down and stand you up, get you pumped enough to strut - your stuff - you got the MixTape Rave.
Production Company News
Thursday, October 1st, 2009Death of the production company?
New iterations will ignore boundaries and combine disciplines
| Director David Rosen, resident futurist |
Bob Greenberg of R/GA will give a keynote at the Boards Summit in New York on the death of the production company paradigm. At first this seemed startling but, after reflection and research, it’s rather old news.
Bob’s point: New multi-platform methods of persuasion, espoused by marketers and new-fangled digital agencies, are designing and implementing campaigns that cross traditional boundaries.
He’ll say that these efforts are so complicated that they are nearly forced into producing these elements in-house, because only then will they be able to exercise the discipline and coordination inherently required to implement.
Of course, agencies have done the “production” thing periodically over time primarily for cost reasons. We in the production community have truly enjoyed seeing these efforts flail and collapse. Who is laughing now?
Now it is our own community that insists on using the old protocol to solve new questions (GM style).
Even those in editorial, who have expanded into new disciplines, like production/content, have done so by creating old model production companies complete with directorial rosters, traditional representation, and many of the other artifacts that have been declining in productivity and profit for years.
Could this be like starting a newspaper to compete with the internet? A case can be made that these are old solutions for entirely different new questions.
Many of us remember the time when a robust production community battled for a prolific stream of work from the large Chicago shops and regional agencies.
The world flattened with the appearance of new iterations, like Chicago Story, which teamed with a powerful national partner offering top quality work at moderate prices — the “flattening of the world” by the internet and fueled by the ignorance of SAG leadership and other unions.
While Story (nee Chicago story) still thrives, few others traditional shops, excluding the specialty companies, even exist.
The organizations that are still relevant will more likely combine disciplines like Don Hogue’s formula at Radar and, of course, the amazing case of Don McNeill and Digital Kitchen.
DK is credited with creating an entirely new genre and built an impressive brand ignoring traditional boundaries and eschewing the traditional director convention
These days, while DK seems to be evolving into a digital agency in the R/GA mold, it creates prodigious amounts of live action, motion and countless other iterations without resorting to the outside production resources and the director paradigm.
Instead, DK successfully rests on their prodigious body of work, reputation and creative lineage as assurances to their customers and partners.
Today, as visionary as the DK model has been, even it might also be considered old paradigm, in the sense that it relies on some pretty serious brick and mortar commitments to get the job done, which can inhibit flexibility, encourage bureaucracy and has the tendency to inhibit creativity (high class problem).
In my view, production entities will need to mirror the interdisciplinary approach of digital agencies to be relevant to the Agencies they have relied on for business traditionally, and to clients and new markets that are quickly emerging.
So, who is the will be the next “next”? —David Rosen
| David Rosen is an independent director and brand therapist. He is the founder of Flukebrand and a co-founder of story. Most recently he was Director of Integration and New Media Development at Filmworkers Club. |
iTunes Content Provider Page
Thursday, October 1st, 2009As a signed iTunes content provider, you’ll reach millions of music, movie, and TV show lovers and take advantage of marketing programs designed to help you maximize your sales on the iTunes Store.
iTunes 360
iTunes 360 is a marketing and advertising program cofunded by iTunes and content providers to promote music, TV shows, and movies. It’s a great way to maximize your sales and leverage your advertising budget. For more information, please contact your iTunes label representative.
iTunes Link Maker
Place links on your website that take visitors directly to an artist, song, video, or other media available on the iTunes Store. With iTunes Link Maker, you simply search for the item you want to link to and select it. The HTML code is generated for you, complete with a small iTunes badge. All you have to do is paste the code into your web page.
iTunes Badges
Your content is available on the iTunes Store, so let visitors to your website know instantly with an iTunes badge. iTunes badges are Apple-designed graphics that you place on your website. They’re available only to iTunes Affiliates. For more information, contact your iTunes label representative.
Custom Codes
The iTunes Custom Codes program is a promotional tool that lets you distribute music and video to fans and industry influencers. Tie specific content to an iTunes Custom Code and distribute it with total flexibility — using email, cards, flyers, or other media. Click here to request more information about iTunes Custom Codes.
iTunes Links
Make it even easier for people to find your content on the iTunes Store by using iTunes links. When customers click on your iTunes link, iTunes will instantly open to your page on the iTunes Store. iTunes links are available for music, TV, movies, and apps once the content is live on the iTunes Store.
Example iTunes Links:
- U2 - http://www.itunes.com/U2
- 24 - http://www.itunes.com/tv/24
- Wall.E - http://www.itunes.com/movies/wall-e
- Tetris - http://www.itunes.com/apps/tetris
iTunes Affiliate Program
Join the iTunes Affiliate Program and start placing links on your website to the U.S. iTunes Store. Link to songs, albums, artists, TV shows, movies, music videos, audiobooks, podcasts, applications, and more. You’ll earn a commission on all qualifying revenue generated by iTunes links posted on your website. For more information about the program, visit the iTunes Affiliates page.
Tell a Friend
Tell a Friend is a viral email marketing tool built into the iTunes Store to help you generate buzz and link fans directly to your artists and albums. The Tell a Friend feature is accessible from any artist page on the iTunes Store.
Become a content provider.
Complete the online application to become an iTunes content provider.
Content Providers FAQ
Get answers to frequently asked questions about becoming a signed iTunes artist or label.
iTunes Content Providers
If you are already a signed iTunes artist or label, log in.
iTunes Producer
iTunes Producer is a free software application that allows you to prepare your music for submission to iTunes. Use it to encode your music into AAC format; enter album, song, and artwork information; and send your prepared files directly to Apple for consideration. Log in to download iTunes Producer.
iTunes Hardware Discount
As a signed iTunes content provider, you’re entitled to discounts on Mac computers and iPod players. Log in to purchase Apple hardware.


