Commentary

Just An Online Minute... GoreTV

  • by August 28, 2006
So former Vice President Al Gore addressed a group of British TV execs yesterday in Edinburgh, Scotland and told them that while the Internet is a great democratizing force, TV remains the most influential form of media and people should have more control over its programming.

Gore, whose Current TV venture hinges upon participatory/citizen journalism and user-generated video, told the assembled execs that so far, the Web can't replicate "television's power," according to a Reuters report. "Most of what's happening in the encounter between television and the Internet has been the Internet cannibalizing television," Gore told the execs.

Gore recommended finding ways to use the Internet to give consumers access to TV and the way it's programmed. He suggested that citizens can participate in the democratic process by challenging inaccurate comments made by politicians, particularly in TV ads.

Gore noted that while user-generated Web communities and sites are powerful , they don't reach mass audiences. "You can stream that, forward it, store it, time-shift it, you can do lots of things, but you cannot broadcast in real time to millions of people over the Internet," Gore told the execs, according to the Reuters report. "The Internet is now creeping into the television domain, but it's still not creating the change that many anticipate will come."

Still, YouTube is streaming about 100 million video clips a day, and Current TV reaches nearly 20 million homes; nearly 30 percent of its programming is user-generated.

Is Gore underestimating the power of Web communities and the power of the Web to attract mass audiences? Or is he merely issuing a clarion call to denizens of the Web--all of us--to wake up and make our comments and opinions count? Either way, it's clear that regular people have the power to create and distribute media and make it matter. I think Gore is looking to put a fire under us to challenge the status quo and en masse, call out politicians--and anyone else, for that matter, who veers from the truth. It's a good fire to light, and we're up for the challenge.

Do not, I repeat, underestimate the power of the Web and its denizens. Internet users are capable of calling politicians, and anyone else for that matter, on the carpet--and biting them in the ass.

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