The News is Broke

Quick, name a few things our children will never understand.

Analog clocks? Cursive handwriting (or handwriting altogether)? VCR’s? CD’s? DVD’s? Sub 25/M download speeds?

How about newspapers?

I don’t read newspapers. If there is a worthwhile article in a local paper, I may take a glance.

I get my daily up-to-the-milisecond news all day on the internets via Digg, CNN, Reddit, ESPN, Drudge, and HuffPo, etc etc.

When I wake up, usually before getting out of bed, I skim the New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal iPhone applications.

I already know everything that will be in the newspapers that day.

We are hearing daily that various newspapers are losing money and going bankrupt (Two more last week), but can we actually envision a world without them? Just because I do not read papers doesn’t mean I want them to fail, here’s why:

In the past ten years, newspapers have been absolutely crushed by a maelstrom of content, none more powerful than the internet and inherently, Craigslist. The best writers and best editors began to flee to the other side of the fence, the internet, thus the quality and morale of every major newspaper in the country decreased.

With a lack of newspaper quality came a lack of journalistic investigation. With the lack of investigation came a reliance on opinion-based punditry and corporate press releases.

Bill Simmons wrote in an article a month ago about how no one noticed Kevin Garnett was hurt saying, “In 1980, Bob Ryan of the Boston Globe would have sniffed out the B.S. signs of this KG story, kept pursuing it, kept writing about it, kept working connections and eventually broken it. True, today’s reporters don’t get the same access Ryan had, but let’s face it: If 1980 Bob Ryan was covering the Celtics right now, ESPN or someone else would lure him away.”

And that’s the bigger problem. Investigative writing for newspapers is dead. All the money left in communications is in opinion.

Peter Abraham, a writer for New York’s Lower Hudson Valley and Yankees blogger, was forced to take a weeklong furlough last week as per his paper’s parent company’s request. Gannett is also the parent company of our local paper, The Democrat and Chronicle, which has also sustained dwindling revenues and exhausting layoffs.

There is a TIME article about 10 papers in danger of bankruptcy within the next year.

So what is the solution?

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch outlined his his vision for digital newspaper delivery yesterday. His idea that news will be all digital is correct. More and more people are using the internet and going all digital is cost effective from a print and paper standpoint and environmentally friendly from the paper saved. All digital news is inevitable.

He also belives people will pay for online news content. There is where I disagree. Even if a paper or news outlet charges users for content viewing, other sites can copy the information, it will be emailed, people will share accounts and passwords, etc. Even the sites that charge for content now can still be found free in other mediums (Like iPhone apps.)

Mark Cuban believes another approach can be utilized saying, “papers should look at anything and everything digital that you can acquire and give away or sell to your subscribers.  It costs you next to nothing to host and allow the downloads, but you are driving traffic, and  immediately offering incremental value that isnt available elsewhere.” Theoretically, with credit card information on file, newspapers could become local Amazon vendors with a bit of creativity and hard work.

Maybe there is no future at all for newspapers. Maybe the folks at 4Chan will be the ones to uncover government conspiracies in the future and not the journalism pros, if there will even be journalism pros.

Maybe the government should bail out the news for American quality of life. Remove the advertisements, ensure story integrity, and make the news a not-for-profity entity. But then again, the socialism folks would never allow it.

And just because internet news is flourishing now, it is not going to last forever. Last quarter saw the first decrease in online advertising spending on record and ad-block use in browsers is growing exponentially. Eventually internet news could go bankrupt too.

The best shot for newspapers is an innovative creation that makes those that desire physical copies of their news willing to continue to pay for it in a digital distribution. Think of a bigger iPhone type tablet screen with newspaper and magazine ‘apps’ that can be bought through iTunes. The paper will update automatically in real time and have multi-touch support for flicking through pages, pinch to zoom, and the ability to save pictures to a drive and email articles. Could it work?

Jumping Ship to Google Chrome

A month ago I recommended through this blog that anyone reading should stop using Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser if they had not already.

PC’s are equipped with IE by default and most people simply don’t know there are alternatives available. I mentioned several alternatives, one was the recently released Chrome browser from Google.

I was impressed initially with the minimalist UI and the “smart” bar that controls all URL input, bookmarks, and Google searches.

When I got down to using it more often, I was impressed with the speed and stability of the thing.

In fact, I’ve come to use it as my default browser, leaving behind Mozilla’s FireFox.

It is by no means perfect, it has a long way to go, but it is enough of a foundation to use regularly. I find myself using it about 99% of the time with only a need for FireFox for really labor intensive internet use.

The Good

  • The thing is so fast- noticably faster than FireFox and IE.
  • The “smart bar” works like a charm.
  • It is simply the best browser for Java, PHP, or Rails viewing.
  • Isolated tabs mean that each tab open is run on its own. If one page fails, only that tab goes down, not the whole browser.
  • “Sandbox” security. At PWN2OWN this year, Chrome was the lone browser not to be hacked.
  • “Most Visited” Integration

The Bad

  • No support for add-ons or extensions. That means there is no Ad-Block Plus unless you’re tech savvy and know scripts.
  • Not available for Mac yet.
  • The built-in spell checker isn’t even close to FireFox’s. That is not so good when blogging.
  • There is always some concern of privacy and usage information when using Google’s products. I, however, don’t buy it. If you do have tin foil on your head, use the ‘Incognitio Mode’ which doesn’t track history, cookies, passwords, etc when in use.

All in all, anyone coming from Internet Explorer or Safari would notice a big increase in performance. Google’s browser attempt looks great and promises to only get better with third party support. If no Ad-Block is an absolute deal breaker, I feel your pain. Email and I’ll give you instructions on how to utilize ad-block in Chrome.

The Coming Collapse of the GOP Right

Im slippin, Im fallin, I cant get up

"I'm slippin, I'm fallin, I can't get up"

I spent a lot of time last year writing about politics. When Obama won, the whole game changed. Politics in America had irreversibly shifted from the ‘good old days’ and the ‘old boys club’ to the socially aware and politically active.

In January, before Barack was inaugurated, I wrote a blog about the new Republican Party. I wrote about the great divide within the party between the ‘Patriotic religious folk’ and the ‘fiscally conservative corporate type’. In Obama’s first few months that rift has grown and spread like a dry brush fire.

The Republican Party will be irrelevant within four years unless their direction changes.

That can be done in three very easy steps.

  1. Stop listening to past leaders. If Republicans continue to listen to the likes of Dick Cheney and his 9/11 sob stories and Sarah Palin’s hunting trips, they can forget about their party’s sustainability.
  2. Lose the Religious stranglehold. As Americans become more secular, making religion a political talking point is going to do more harm to the party than good.
  3. Adapt to socially changing views. Keep the conservative fiscal ‘old school’ mentality but be open to progressive social change, because it is inevitable anyway.

When I wrote that post, I didn’t know the shitstorm on the party would be so overwhelming, but is certainly has. In just four months, consider what has happened to the Republican Party.

-Rush Limbaugh somehow became the de facto voice of the party. Partly because the Obama administration crafted that by wanting Republicans to be portrayed as the vile AM afterthought and also, maybe more importantly, because no one in the GOP had the balls to stand up to him.

-But someone did have the balls! Newly announced Republican Party leader Michael Steele correctly said Rush Limbaugh was “an entertainer”. He was right after all, Rush makes hundreds of millions of dollars per year (and he is very good at what he does) to conduct an entertainment talk show on the radio. That is his job, he is an entertainer. So Rush takes offense to Mr. Steele for some reason, in fact, he writes a lengthy bitch letter on his website and spends most of his show tearing down his own party’s leader (face palm). And then what happens? The freakin leader of the Republican Party publically apologized, for being correct mind you, to Limbaugh by kissing his big fat ass. The GOP’s leader was catering to a radio talk show host. What a mess.

- Longtime Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter made an announcement that shocked colleagues on both sides of the aisle, Specter said, “he had become increasingly uncomfortable as a moderate in a party dominated by conservatives” and would join the Democrats. The switch gave the Senate dems 60 members, meaning they had a filibuster proof majority on the hill, making Mitch McConnell more insignifcant than Sanjaya.

-So at a time where the party is in full-blown crisis, Rush Limbuagh gets on his extra wide chair and tells Arlen Specter to hit the road, and to take John McCain and his daughter with him. WTF? Seriously, WTF?

First, Rush Limbuagh tells John McCain, the long-time GOP Arizona Senator who was the Party’s forking Presidential nominee six short months ago, to get lost. John McCain represents everything that is still good about the GOP. He is willing to work across the aisle, holds moderate social beliefs, and he is smart and respected. Yes he sold his soul trying to reach the political apex as President by bringing in Sarah Palin, but you can’t blame anyone for trying to advance their career. And John McCain will be one of the first to privately note how dumb Palin really is.

Second, he tells Meghan McCain to leave. Why? He is afraid of her. Meghan, the 24 year old politically savvy conservative who knows how to use Twitter, is becoming a more important force on the right than anyone. She is socially progressive (supports gay marriage), called GOP voice Ann Coulter “Offensive, Insulting, and Confusing”, sees her party losing influence with her generation, embraces the advancement and utilization of technology, and when being told to leave by Limbaugh responded on Twitter that she is “red till she’s dead.” Meghan McCain represents an actual hope for the party’s future and Limbaugh tells her to piss off. What a mess.

- Esteemed conservative pundit Bill Bennett said conservatives need to stop talking about Rush Limbaugh and Sarah Palin because “they are not the future of the party”. Duh! Even though I disagree with his politics, I usually enjoy Bennett’s thoughts on CNN. Bright dude.

- Former Republican Bob Barr says, “The GOP is in very deep trouble”. Barr, who was the Libertarian party’s Presidential nominee, noted the GOP has a “lack of any coherent philosophy, vision or leadership.”

- Republican Presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee said last week that the Republican party could become as “irrelevant as the Whigs.”

- U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter resigned his seat. Souter quite clearly held on long enough that Obama could choose his replacement and not George W. Bush (He did get two appointments after all). Obama gets a chance to nominate a young progressive leaning judge who could theoretically serve for decades.

I am by no means a political scientist or expert pundit. I’m a dude who watches the world around me. I see a major shift in how Americans think and act in their daily lives. Maybe that has to do with the economy, maybe it is the new President, or maybe something else. But everything I see changing favors the Democratic Party going forward, so much to the point where I think the GOP could really become defunct.

Maybe the Libertarians will continue their rise, maybe another political force will evolve. Either way, Republicans are tracking to lose more ground in 2010 and even more in 2012. If they have any hope left, someone needs to step up and save them.

TIME wrote a great article on this subject and a good friend of mine Erin also brought up the topic on her blog. I’d advise anyone that wants to read more to take their eyes onward, they’re both much smarter than I.

Just Because…

If you need any more proof that South Park is the single greatest show of all-time, here you go.

Unfortunately Viacom prevents the actual music video from being seen by mainstream audiences on YouTube with copyright claims, so you get the full song without the visual content.

Still, the song is where the brilliance lies. 

Hopefully one day these ‘experts’ will accept the internets and realize open mediums are new entertainment. Anyway, listen to the lyrics and acknowledge South Park as the single greatest force in entertainment today. Sorry J.J., I’m sick of your time travel mindfucks.

I can go on and on about the RIAA and MPAA but no one listens rationally to logical thought. That said, South Park is the greatest show of all-time. I would love any MASH, Seinfeld, or Friends fan to dispute this- please…make my day.

A Global Currency?

So long dollar? Au revoir euro? Hasta luego peso?

In 2009, I am as much a citizen of planet Earth as I am a citizen of the United States.

So with our open international economy, wouldn’t it make sense to use one currency?

Am I crazy? No, I’m not.

In fact, a United Nations panel of economic experts are “pressing for a new global currency reserve scheme to replace the volatile, dollar-based system and for coordinated steps by rich countries to stimulate their economies.”

“A new global reserve system that may be viewed as a greatly expanded SDR (Special Drawing Rights), with regular or cyclically adjusted emissions calibrated to the size of reserve accumulations, could contribute to global stability, economic strength and global equity,” the panel said.

The commission, led by US economist Joseph Stiglitz, a frequent critic of globalization and unbridled free markets, is primarily aimed at finding solutions for developing countries.

“Developing countries are lending the United States trillions dollars at almost zero interest rates when they have huge needs themselves,” Stiglitz noted. “It’s indicative of the nature of the problem. It’s a net transfer, in a sense, to the United States, a form of foreign aid.” (Source)

But the United Nations is just a separate international entity with no policy making responsibility right? Obviously, since the UN told George Bush not to invade Iraq and he did  anyway. But Sarah Palin doesn’t know what the Bush Doctrine is, Palin ’12, I digress.

But the movement for a single global currency isn’t limited to just the UN. In light of the global economic crisis that started in America, world leaders are trying to restructure the international markets to stabilize future swings, many believe a global currency is a good step.

French President Nicholas Sarkozy, English PM Gordon Brown, and EU honcho Jose Manuel Barroso are talking up an international summit to discuss an “urgent overhaul of the world’s financial architecture”. Sarkozy and the EU leaders will call for “globally coordinated regulation of the financial industry, elimination of tax havens and a compensation system in which traders are not rewarded for dangerous risk-taking,” among other things.

"F#@KING Americans!"

Further, Sarkozy says about currencies, How many should there be? What should the agreement between these great currencies be? Should we organize a discussion?” (Source)

But it is not just the big bad European Union calling on reform possibilities.

China is calling for a new global currency controlled by the International Monetary Fund.The comments, in an essay by the Chinese central bank governor, reflect Beijing’s growing assertiveness in economic affairs. Gov. Zhou Xiaochuan’s essay did not mention the dollar by name but said the crisis showed the dangers of relying on one nation’s currency for international payments. In an unusual step, the essay was published in both Chinese and English, making clear it was meant for an international audience.

“The crisis called again for creative reform of the existing international monetary system towards an international reserve currency,” Zhou wrote. (Source)

Benn Steil writes in an article entitled Goodbye US Dollar, Hello Global Currency, “The right course is not to return to a mythical past of monetary sovereignty, with governments controlling local interest and exchange rates in blissful ignorance of the rest of the world. Governments must let go of the fatal notion that nationhood requires them to make and control the money used in their territory.” (There are a lot of good links in that article that further this conversation worth reading FYI)

Of course this debate will ignite fears of biblical prophecy of the ‘end times’. Revelations 13:15-18 reads, He (the false prophet or antichrist, or Barack for many idiots), so that it could speak and cause all who refused to worship the image to be killed. He also forced everyone, small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on his right hand or on his forehead, so that no one could buy or sell unless he had the mark, which is the name of the beast or the number of his name.  This calls for wisdom. If anyone has insight, let him calculate the number of the beast, for it is man’s number. His number is 666.” I don’t know how exactly that translates to a world currency fear but whatever.

The global currency proposal also draws more fears that religious concerns.

You can make a fair argument by saying a global currency is at the very core of government’s plan to dominate the world. Control money and you control the destiny of states, you eliminate national sovereignty. A.W. Clausen, president of Bank of America once observed, The control of money and credit strikes at the very heart of national sovereignty.”

Further, Georgetown professor Carroll Quigley notes, the goal of the banking families and their minions consists of “nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole…controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences.”

That might be a little over the top but it serves as a fair argument for any opponent of a global currency.

Will it ever happen? Who knows, we’ve seen more international change in fifteen years, let alone the past fifteen months, than perhaps any period in history. I would not be against a new currency, I’m open to change and progress, and I don’t worry about money anyway- It is just paper when it comes right down to it.

Any thoughts on the matter? Comment or shoot me an email.

ManRam The Sham

So it wasn’t just Manny being Manny. It was Manny being Super-Manny.

And I don’t care.

When A-Rod got popped, I wasn’t surprised. Manny? My eyes went to his almost $8M 50-game salary rather than the positive test.

This is an era where we now have to assume just about everyone was taking something to boost their performance and longevity. And I don’t care.

Scott Boras, who oddly represents a lot of guilty players, made a really good point in an interview in this month’s Playboy by saying, “Each era has distinctive features—from equipment and rules to pharmacology, surgical advancements, labor agreements, federal and state laws—that impact performance. The game is always changing. The Hall’s [of Fame] scroll of admission must be drafted with a fluid and broad pen. Only then can it recognize excellence from every era.”

I agree with him. There are lots of different variables from each time. Domestic game to international game. Only white players to all races of players. Pitchers going all game versus the advancement of the bullpen. Huge ballparks to smaller ballparks. Players hitting the bar after the game to players hitting the gym after the game.

It would be really easy for all of us to sit here and label them “cheaters”, we not only allowed this, we wanted this. Baseball was a dead sport. Cancelled season and cancelled world series. When McGwire and Sosa started hitting all of those home runs that summer, we got nostalgic, and we fell back in love. America’s game took full shape. Kids had their slugging heroes like Dad had Maris, and Gramps had Ruth. We overlooked that these guys brains were bulging out of their heads because we didn’t care.

When I read Juiced by Jose Canseco, he talked about how baseball was entertainment. He recalled a game where fans were heckling him and chanting “steroids”, and Canseco proceeded to just start flexing. The crowd laughed and probably told their friends all about it. Entertainment value? You bet.

Are we in an era where the purity is out of sports? I have to think so. Look at the empty Yankee Stadium. No fan can afford tickets and no Dad can bring his kids down to the field pregame to try and get an autograph. Then the kid has to ask the Dad why they don’t sit in the $1,250 dollar per game seats. Pure? Please.

St. Louis fans should just start preparing now…Pujols? Please.

You can look across the entire major league and make fair arguments for everyone. Sheffield, Bonds, Vladdy, Brady Anderson, Bret Boone, Pettitte, Clemens, A-Rod, Gagne, etc etc. 2004 Boston team…Millar, Mueller, Bellhorn, Ortiz, and Manny? I mean you’re just kidding yourself if you think those guys are all clean. 

Sports are no longer pure, maybe they never were, or maybe I’m just old enough now to realize it. Manny, A-Rod, Clemens, and Bonds might be publicly shamed and out of the Hall of Fame, but look at their bank accounts. It was never about the stats for these people. Wake up.

And I really don’t think outlawing PED’s is going to help. Steroids aren’t for brute jocks anymore. They have become so sophisticated that when taken correctly, they can prolong life, halt illness, and make you look better in a swimsuit. Look at Sly Stallone and Suzanne Somers. PED’s are becoming more and more a part of modern medicine and will definitely increase in usage in the upcoming decades as we learn more about our genetic makeup.

So Manny and Boras did the smartest thing they could do, take the suspension and be quiet. Everyone already knew and everyone will accept it in a day or two. The people are still going to come see ManRam in July when the Dodgers are amidst a pennant chase and fans will buy tickets on the road to boo A-Rod. Cash money stacks playa. 

Sports are pure? Please. Pay up bitches.

Be.

All of us have to be something in life. Be a sibling. Be a parent. Be a boss. Be a student.

Often we’re told what to be; Be green. Be cultured. Be nice. Be kind rewind.

Whatever happened to just being?

This is something I have kind of always had feelings on but it can be a bit tricky. Without going too deep into existentialism or the merits of what ‘time’ is, can’t we as humans just exist in the moment?

I talk all the time about the now, not the was or the will. The now is reality. It’s tangible, flexible, and adaptable. We can control our actions and thoughts at any moment of time. There is no need for timetables, deadlines, and benchmarks. We use those things because 1) we’re lazy, and 2) society has created such.

We can do anything we want at anytime. Go back to school. Finish that book. Learn Spanish. But we put stuff off, that itself creates anxiety and resentment, but I’ll ignore that for now. We use time metrics to justify our desires and that is what I am advocating against. You know what I’m talking about.

“I’ll go on a diet tomorrow!”  – “I’ll stop drinking starting New Years!” – “I am going to write a book one day!”

As Anne Frank best said, “How wonderful it is that no one has to wait, but can start right now to gradually change the world.” Why wait if you really want to do something?

So back to my point. Most of the stresses and difficulties in life come from past negative experiences or anxiety about future events. This makes sense because the individual moment is short and quick. Time backwards and forwards is infinite in comparison to the now.

So here’s my thought, if people spent more time focusing on the present moment, they’ll be happier. Here’s what I do to refocus on the now.

  • Close your eyes. Without visual perception, your outlook will ironically become clearer. You become more aware of your surroundings and find a peace within yourself from acceptance of your environment.
  • Listen to your heart beat. This is best done alone but sometimes I listen and feel my pulse and marvel at how amazing the human body is. This easy task humbles anyone into realizing we are here in the moment living.
  • Not to be spiritual but consider zazen. It is a meditation-like zen buddhist practice that means “opening the hand of thought”.
  • Consider a more minimalist lifestyle. If the recession has taught us anything, it is that Americans have lived in such extreme excess for so long it caught up to us. We have so much crap around our lives that doesn’t bring any joy. Smaller is better and decluttering limits sensory overload, which will result in the calming of the mind.

As Owen Wilson’s Hansel character says in Zoolander, “I care desperately about what I do. Do I know what product I’m selling? No. Do I know what I’m doing today? No. But I’m here, and I’m gonna give it my best shot.”

So without being preachy, try to focus on the now more often and work on letting go of the was or the will.

Just “Be”. I think you’ll like the idea.

Continued NBA Playoff Predictions

The second round of the NBA playoffs commence tonight, here are my thoughts on each series.

Boston Celtics vs Orlando Magic

Unfortunately for the reigning NBA champions, the road to a repeat only gets more difficult in Orlando. Coming off one of the greatest playoff series, in any sport, against the upstart Baby Bulls, Boston is going to have to dig really deep if they want to keep their championship hopes alive. Orlando proved they could win without Dwight Howard (And actually looked better running the court) so the series doesn’t hinge on one player. That said, Boston will have to find a way to stop Howard because Chicago lacked a big man of his caliber. Despite Boston having to turnaround so quick, I think they have enough gas in the tank to put up a good fight. Orlando is a good young team and this could be the best series of the remaining four.

Pick? Boston in 7.

Cleveland Cavaliers vs Atlanta Hawks

King James will be named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player this afternoon in front of his teammates as his high school alma mater in Akron this afternoon. The 24 year old is the third youngest MVP in the league and only coming into his own in his sixth NBA season. Cleveland is fresh and playing as a team better than anyone left. I really don’t see anyone in the East that can challenge them.

Pick? Cleveland in 5.

Los Angeles Lakers vs Houston Rockets

I think the Lakers are the best team in the NBA. I think they have too much offense for any team to handle if they’re playing well. If Houston wants to win this series, and I really think they can, they need to do two things very well. Yao Ming needs to get easy buckets and the ball often. If the Lakers are rough with Yao and he struggles to get easy buckets, Houston has no chance. If Yao controls the offense for Houston, they will be in the hunt. Secondly, Houston needs to play Ron Artest and Shane Battier as often as possible. Both are physical and scrappy defenders who can slow and frustrate LA’s potent offense. If Houston can get an opening win tonight it will go a long way for their shot of victory in this series.

Pick? Los Angeles in 6.

Dallas Mavericks vs Denver Nuggets

I love Mark Cuban and I love Dirk’s playoff game, but I really don’t think Dallas is going to be able to overcome Denver for a win in this series. It can be argued Dallas got lucky in round one but that’s too easy, they’re a very good team, but they just don’t look like they have the game left to stay with Denver. Denver isn’t a great team, but they just look fresher and more in sync than Dallas does. Go Mavs, but this is looking like a Nuggets win.

Pick? Denver in 6.

I think a lot of times in playoff sports, the opening rounds always outweigh the finals because teams are fresh and real magic can happen (Think of that Bulls-Celtics series). LAts year’s NBA finals were an exception with the Lakers and Celtics and I think this year’s finals will indeed outweigh the opening rounds. It is rare when it happens but memorable when it does. Cleveland and Los Angeles are on a collision course. I don’t see any other team capable of beating either. I think LA will handle Denver in 5 or 6 in the Western finals and I think Cleveland can beat Orlando or Boston in 4 or 5  games in the Eastern finals.

Lebron vs Kobe. Fans are begging for it. The NBA is begging for it. Advertisers are begging for it. A finesse offensively explosive Lakers team with Kobe, Bynum, Odom, and Gasol versus the LeBrons. A team of improving role players led by the single greatest force in the NBA since Mike. It could be a finals talked about for generations and I think it is going to happen. And when it does, LA in 6. Just too good.

Hulu is the New NOW Medium

This week Disney announced they are the latest to hop onboard the Hulu express with a 30% investment stake along with ABC content like ‘Lost’, ‘Desperate Housewives’,  and ‘Grey’s Anatomy’. Disney will get three seats on the 12-member board, the same as News Corp and NBC Universal.

Disney’s arrival on the scene, after months of negotiations, means three of the four major US broadcasting networks are now directly involved with Hulu: NBC, Fox, and now ABC- only CBS is absent with their stand alone TV.com venture, but if rumors are any indication, it won’t be long before they join Hulu. Hulu Chief Executive Jason Kilar said about CBS,  ”We’d love to have them be a part of Hulu … ultimately it’s their decision.” 

So what does this mean for viewers? 

If Time Warner’s broadband usage cap proposals are any indication, more and more people are choosing internet video as their medium of video delivery. It is convenient, increasingly available, improving in quality, and cheaper (free) than paying for cable or movies. 

Disney’s involvement is obviously huge. They bring popular content and a promise to dedicate ~$25M in advertising to Hulu on its network. ABC’s media player sucks to be quite honest, anyone that had to deal with it will welcome the intuitive user friendly UI that Hulu offers.

But Disney’s foray into the foray also signals a shift in internet video quality and credibility. Google must be uneasy. They spent almost $2B for YouTube, and while the site will always have a purpose for cat vids and drunk girls, it hasn’t turned into the media powerhouse everyone thought it would. Hulu is more attractive for advertisers, has infinitely higher monetizable traffic, and can control its content’s advertisements. YouTube gives too much (I hate saying that) power to its users and while lining up some good content recently, it lacks in revenue per video and revenue per user. And as Hulu continues its rapid growth in the US, it will continue to cut into YouTube.

YouTube still rocks traffic comparisons

YouTube still rocks traffic comparisons

Think of how annoying it is to see those copyright content removed claims on YouTube…happens all the freakin time. Hulu viewing is like watching a movie or television. Video is clear, cleanly streamed, advertisements aren’t invasive (and almost welcomed), and content is neatly organized in an easily accessible manner. YouTube will always be there for ‘How-to videos’ or ‘Eating challenges”, and that is great for the internet, but it is horrible for business.

Consider this point: The more traffic that YouTube gets, the more it loses money. The more traffic that Hulu gets, the more it makes money.

It doesn’t take an MBA to figure out which is the more viable long-term solution. Google might be fine with YouTube as the tool it is. But if they are serious about delivering video content on the internet, they better react quickly.

So Hulu is no longer the ‘future’ of video delivery, it is the now. It is going to change things:

  • how broadband internet charges its users (Usage caps are inevitable as sad as it is)
  • how advertisers decide to tackle rapidly changing market demographics on the internet in a recession
  • how content is monetized (South Park has offered their shows for free on their website for years)
  • how are advertisers going to combat the rapid growth of ad-block in browsers?

Youtube is a massive maelstrom of user generated content. It has been an invaluable tool for the internet’s growth but the YouTube model is dying. Hulu is now the premier professionaly generated video content site. I am sure reveneues aren’t even close to YouTube yet but as traffic climbs, I guarantee those revenues make up a considerable gap in the next year with this Disney deal. CBS will have to join to remain viable so it will get even bigger then. If you haven’t used Hulu yet, try it out, I think you’ll really enjoy it.