Error message

Access denied. You may need to login below or register to access this page.

July 2014

Has Video Killed The Video Channel? A look at Canada's Much...

What if the government made a channel play music videos? And prevented any other music video channels from being on the dial, so long as that channel played 12 hours a day of music videos.  And, backed it up with a funding program to provide budget assistance to foster artists and creatives?

Sounds like a dream, right? That's the situation in Canada actually, where multimedia company Bell Media's reigning video channel Much — formerly MuchMusic — is suddently regretting that exact situation. The channel has a near monopoly on the dial, but with a license agreement that required it to have at least 50% of its programming be music videos. And a large block of those had to be by Canadian recording artists and/or produced or directed by Canadian talent. And to make sure there was always content, there was a funding program that paid up to $30k per video.

But, even that's not enough if Bell Media president Kevin Crull's assessment last month is correct: "Kids do not watch music videos on television. You're not going to wait for somebody to program a music video when you have a million available on Vevo. And so that has hurt the channel." And per The Globe and The Mail, MuchMusic reportedly lost just-under $1.5 million last year as ad revenue fell by nearly 30%.

Much has been unsuccessfully trying to officially prune back their music video content for years — a 2010 petition to reduce it to 25% was rejected by the the CRTC (essentially the Canadian equivalent of the FCC) — perhaps with an eye on how South of The Border channels like MTV and Vh1 have been able to constantly reinvent themselves, even while keeping music integrated with their other programming..

For now, Bell Media is stuck with a channel that made perfect sense when founded in 1984, but is now itching to evolve. Last week Bell Media announced the layoffs of 91 staffers at Much and sister channel M3, with the cancellation of most of their music shows.

Tick, Tick, Tick...

Weird Al Parodies "Happy" with "Tacky"

Nerdist does seem like the right place to premiere a new Weird Al video, even though I'd think most nerds would grumble about the quality of the player. Or maybe I'm a nerd. Anyway, here's "Weird" Al Yankovic, who was likely doing music video parodies before you were even doing videos. "Happy" is more homage than parody: We get Al, followed by guest stars Aisha Tyler, Margaret Cho, Kristen Schaal, Jack Black, and Eric Stonestreet, all doing the Happy Dance to the camera. 

Except: Shouldn't this video be 24 hours long?

Unlocking The Truth aka Lords Of Flatbush Metal Get Signed

Remember these guys we first showed you a year ago? Unlocking The Truth aka Malcolm Brickhouse & Jarad Dawkins — two (then) sixth graders from Flatbush, Brooklyn whose metal prowess was showcased in The Avant Garde Diaries, a Mercedes Benz initiative that spotlights the next generation of innovators (metal and otherwise).

Well, the boys signed a big record deal that if all goes to plan, which always happens in the music business, will net them close to two million dollars. 

Metal: for the win.

Xunny Dey "Chameleon" (Xunny Dey, dir.)

We are all Chameleons. In this digital day and age we have adopted a "Digital Behavior". It is in this era that we have more power to feel and do anything anytime, where we have more control to make decisions to explore and maneuver the social environment. We are able to blend into situations with greater ease because we are aware and informed through online instructions and feeds, which are constantly keeping us a step ahead. This is the evolution of our chameleon-like nature.

Pages