andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2009-01-09 09:37 pm
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All your media companies are fucked
I was chatting to
cairmen the other day about movie companies, and he was telling me that there's a major problem with the US movie industry - too many movies are being produced. And the problem isn't that so many of them are shit - it's that there's just no way to market that many movies, nor are there enough cinema slots to show them.
Way back at the dawn of time media was local - you'd produce entertainment for the people in your village (and usually for free). A global market has the problem that you can produce media for 6 billion people with a few thousand producers. If everyone produces media then you end up with so much media that everyone takes home a tiny slice of the pie, or even no pie. This is fine* if the entry costs into the market are massive - as companies go bust they won't be replaced, because nobody can afford to make that kind of risk, and eventually you end up with a few media conglomerates controlling everything, and they can all make a profit. When the barriers to entry are low enough that amateurs can make their own Star Trek episodes that actually look better than the original series - well, nobody is making money out of that.
Even worse, people are happy to produce lots of this stuff for free! Over here** you will find an infinite page of pictures scraped from 4chan. They're a mixture of photos, photoshops and art. Many of them are not safe for work, and an awful lot of them are anime-based. But that's not really the point - the point is that a hell of a lot of them are fucking impressive. Some of the people making them are incredibly talented. And they're making things and giving them away because they want to.
If you have ever had any interest in working in an industry where people are paid for producing art then you might find this a little scary.
Of course, none of this is new. But it does seem to be getting bigger. And you have to wonder what bits of industry will end up able to make money in the long run - and what niches they will be in.
*Clearly I'm using the word "fine" here in a very limited sense.
**Cheers to
johnbobshaun for the link. I has new wallpaper.
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Way back at the dawn of time media was local - you'd produce entertainment for the people in your village (and usually for free). A global market has the problem that you can produce media for 6 billion people with a few thousand producers. If everyone produces media then you end up with so much media that everyone takes home a tiny slice of the pie, or even no pie. This is fine* if the entry costs into the market are massive - as companies go bust they won't be replaced, because nobody can afford to make that kind of risk, and eventually you end up with a few media conglomerates controlling everything, and they can all make a profit. When the barriers to entry are low enough that amateurs can make their own Star Trek episodes that actually look better than the original series - well, nobody is making money out of that.
Even worse, people are happy to produce lots of this stuff for free! Over here** you will find an infinite page of pictures scraped from 4chan. They're a mixture of photos, photoshops and art. Many of them are not safe for work, and an awful lot of them are anime-based. But that's not really the point - the point is that a hell of a lot of them are fucking impressive. Some of the people making them are incredibly talented. And they're making things and giving them away because they want to.
If you have ever had any interest in working in an industry where people are paid for producing art then you might find this a little scary.
Of course, none of this is new. But it does seem to be getting bigger. And you have to wonder what bits of industry will end up able to make money in the long run - and what niches they will be in.
*Clearly I'm using the word "fine" here in a very limited sense.
**Cheers to
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no subject
I have an ereader - papreback are _so_ last millenium.
pperback
no subject
Plain text files might make it, but they don't have the art and layout design. Proprietary file types... maybe pdf, but are you really willing to say pdf will be around and devices will be back-compatible enough to read them in 50 years time? Libraries already have a serious problem with electronic file formats from 20 years ago.
And if I get a really bad book I can fling it very hard at the wall and jump on its broken corpse. Although you can do this with an ereader, I guess.
no subject
There is an open e-reader format: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_eBook
It's XML, so even if things change the data will still be retrievable.