Things that once would have been called online video sites are starting to be called channels, and they’re likely to be on YouTube, not on a separate site. We’re sliding right into that
language. YouTube, after all, is in the channel business.
One of the latest is Teen Vogue, launched by Conde Nast earlier this week. It starts with five “channels” within the
brand. The interesting thing, if you think of existing brands branching into video, is that savvy brands aren't necessarily launching them as Websites. I think that’s a hard concept for some
established publishers to get their heads around, though not for Conde Nast, which now has video channels for several titles including Vanity Fair and the grown up Vogue, too.
In fact, if you
go to the Teen Vogue Web site, the first story is a tip sheet about how teenaged girls can start their own YouTube channels. It’s virtually pointing you out the door, so to speak.
StyleHaul is the clothes-conscious gorilla in the YouTube space, with thousands of fashion and beauty channels, and the Kin Community suite of channels is doing that for a 18-49 year old community of women what Teen Vogue no doubt hopes it can do for a younger
demo.
Dawn Ostroff, the president of Conde Nast entertainment, formerly headed the young-adult centered CW network and before that was the programming chief at the Lifetime cable network. She
knows from channels.
So in almost every demographic category, there are now channels of itty-bitty programs, and using that word—channels—is a
significant morphing of language as online video continues its own march into becoming TV. That move is not absolutely the best thing, I don’t think, for the future of content. Bigger has
usually meant dumber, right before it has meant mindless. (Example: The movie business now keeps itself busy remaking comic books. That’s entertainment.)
I begin to wonder what happens
if the stuff we once watched on a more or less personal device is made with a bigger, broader, more general audience in mind. No doubt, that’s where the audience can be led, and pretty easily,
because for a large part of their lives, that’s where they’ve already been.
But it’s different.
Karl House, global head of sales and business development for Global
Head of Sales and Business Development for DECA (Digital Entertainment Corporation of America) , the company that runs Kin Community,
says one of the radical differences between YouTube and a separate Web video site is that YouTube, by its nature, invites user interaction.
That’s what it’s all about. That is not
what big-honkin’-screen TV is about, hardly at all, but particularly for advertisers, that intimacy is a huge selling advantage for Internet content providers, or could be.
AN
ANECDOTE I COULDN’T FIT: The struggles of one advertising medium to keep its distinct advantage has been fought before. Thinking about the drift of media, I was reminded of an utterly
marvelous 1965 ad promoting the impact of radio advertising, written and performed by the incomparable satirist Stan Freberg.
“On television,” Freberg, the radio cheerleader,
explains to a skeptic, “your tube goes black for a minute just before the commercial comes on. That serves as a warning device for millions of people that they’ve got a split second to get
out of the room.”
His interrogator says, “But can’t you still walk out when a radio commercial comes on?” Freberg responds, “Not at 60 miles an hour.”
The spot ends with this jazzy tune, “Who Listens to Radio?” sung by Sarah Vaughan and arranged by Quincy Jones. It’s Friday, and it’s a great way to end your week, and who
knows when you’ll ever get a chance to hear this again?
I’m gone, on vacation, until Aug. 7. Some excellent
guest blogs will be in this space next week.
pj@mediapost.com