Friday, August 29, 2008

Broadband Media Can Bring New Life to Stodgy Awards Shows With Internet Broadcasting

As award show season approaches, producers, directors, and promoters scramble to get the best hosts, the best acts, and the best content, hoping to attract more viewers than ever before. Their success will directly affect the amount and quality of sponsors they can snag to help pay for the events themselves, with budgets often reaching upward stratospherically into the millions and millions of dollars for a mere several hours on television. Perhaps award shows should broaden their focus to include extra features and abilities that only the Internet and live broadband broadcasting can provide as part of their concerted efforts to attract viewership.

With live Internet broadcasting, award show producers could offer a myriad of exciting interactive features. How many of us remember those funny moments when winners are announced and they are nowhere to be found? Of course, a camera probably can’t and shouldn’t be mounted within the confines of a powder room (for privacy and decency), but the more cameras that are available to internet viewers, being allowed to shuffle between them at will, could offer an interactive and personal experience, allowing for a depth of coverage never before available. The four hour awards shows would not seemingly drag on if you were afforded the ability to switch to camera 8, for example, allowing you the ability to watch your favorite star’s reaction as they won, lost, or ate their soup. The exciting idea would be that each individual viewer could and would have the ability, in a sense, to become both director and viewer of their own, personally experienced award show. Internet viewers would have the ability to skip the boring acceptance speeches of the audio-visual or short animated film winners (boring is, of course relative, for some viewers this might be riveting television) opting to watch instead the goings-on in the backstage lounges setup by corporate and media sponsors. Wouldn’t it be more enjoyable watching your favorite stars “let their hair down” and party backstage amongst their peers after winning or alternately losing their award? Interactivity could be offered by entertainment television with Internet broadcasting, allowing winners of promotions the chance to interview their favorite stars on the red carpet, from the privacy of their home. The possibility of spontaneity could return to live awards shows that have become so terribly scripted and perfectly executed.

Broadband media’s far-reaching abilities are only beginning to be realized, due to the continuing efforts of innovative companies like Whiteblox, that are committed to researching and providing new opportunities to internet users worldwide.

About the Author: Gregory Demetriades is Chief Executive Officer of Whiteblox, a leading provider of integrated broadband video solutions.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Live Concert Applications and Broadband Media Advances

Personal computers are becoming a necessity and an important fixture in more and more homes in the United States and across the globe. As home computer popularity grows, businesses and service providers are extending offers and wares through emails and online advertising. Gone are the days of junk mail, today, junk email and pop-ups are the norm. Along with advertising and sales, the Internet has opened doors for large multimedia events such as sports, concerts, and festivals, to be broadcast live into homes worldwide, reaching millions. New advances in broadband media abilities combined with advances in home computers are allowing interactivity and audience enjoyment and involvement in ways never before imagined by venue owners and concert promoters alike.

Live music shows are becoming more and more extravagant each year. Large fleets of commercial tractor-trailer trucks are now used to transport the millions of dollars of gear necessary to mount a show the size of an act such as the Rolling Stones or the like, and costs of putting on such shows, what with renting a venue, paying a crew, and renting equipment, are definitely on the rise. No matter how large a particular venue might be, there are only so many seats housed within, and only so many tickets available to be sold and bought by fans. What if there was a way to bring the show to fans, fans that would be willing to pay for tickets to view their favorite musicians from their homes? Enter the world of live broadcasting and broadband media. New advances in broadband media are supplying solutions and new avenues to generate ticket sales and heighten audience experience. No longer do “superfans” of groups need journey thousands of miles to see their heroes prance about and play upon the stage. Broadcast media pioneers like Whiteblox can provide Internet viewers with the ability to not only hear their favorite music in pristine, high fidelity audio across bandwidth, they can provide viewers with high resolution visuals as well. With multi-camera ability, viewers are interactively able to pick the camera angle at will, zooming in on their favorite guitarist’s blistering solo, or perhaps checking out the beautiful girl in the front row. The possibilities are endless and the forecasted sales are mind-boggling. Imagine what sort of numbers a reunion of an esteemed act like Led Zeppelin could generate if promoters would broadcast it on the Internet for eagerly awaiting fans? Would broadband be up to that sort of viewership challenge? Providers like Whiteblox would try their best to be up to that challenge.

About the Author: Gregory Demetriades is Chief Executive Officer of Whiteblox, a leading provider of integrated broadband video solutions.