"Hollywood is no place for a professional comedian; the amateur competition is too great." Fred Allen
"They are spoiling the oldest art in the world - the art of pantomime. They are ruining the great beauty of silence." Sir Charles Chaplin (on the invention of talking pictures)
"Making films means, first of all, to tell a story...What is drama, after all, but life with the dull bits cut out?" Sir Alfred Hitchcock
Testing: The Big Kahuna is now in rehearsal. Everything is on for the 07/07/07 launch. Check it out here.
Bonus: Delamination Now!
Friday, July 06, 2007
Thursday, July 05, 2007
Photo: Ron Fell. Beautiful. Thank you!
"Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient premises." Samuel Butler
"He who is silent is forgotten; he who abstains is taken at his word; he who does not advance falls back; he who stops is overwhelmed, distanced, crushed; he who ceases to grow greater becomes smaller; he who leaves off, gives up; the stationary condition is the beginning of the end." Henri F. Amiel
"No facts however indubitably detected, no effort of reason however magnificently maintained, can prove that Bach's music is beautiful." Edith Hamilton
Thank you: Folks that keep track of these things tell me that our little company has received some kind of recognition for our international work. Again, thank you very much. LATER: It appears that several of our clients have been honored. They have been more than generous in extending praise to our firm in their acceptance of those honors. Any announcement of our involvement, as always, will be theirs to make, however, in advance I thank them for their kindness. It is an honor to serve.
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Photo:
Rhythm & Booms
by
Ting-Li Lin
A local grad student.
Check out his Studio
and his Blog
Fine shot. Thank you!
Happy 4th of July
My thanks to Pieter Ardinois for checking in from Belgium and for the shout out. Cheers!
"Good taste is the modesty of the mind; that is why it cannot be either imitated or acquired." Emile de Girardin
"Charm is a way of getting the answer yes without having asked any clear question." Albert Camus
"The man who is prepared has his battle half fought." Miguel de Cervantes
Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Photo: flatwater by Bucky4 Very cool. Thank you!
"Don't part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live." Mark Twain
"Know the true value of time; snatch, seize, and enjoy every moment of it. No idleness, no laziness or procrastination." Lord Chesterfield
"The universe is full of magical things, patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper." Eden Philpotts
Brier Dudley writes Ten thoughts about the iPhone. Thanks to Dave Winer for the tip. Speaking of Dave, he is totally spot-on about his "feelings" with regard to his iPhone...
"You don't want to give it to someone, you want to just hold it. I know it sounds silly and dorky, geez it's just a phone, after all, but it's not. It's a totem. A symbol. A charm. A fortune cookie. It's personal. It's mine."
Purchase behaviors are driven not by logic, not by reason but by emotion, by feelings. Dave's suggestion captures the reality of the matter in two words..."It's personal." It's always personal. Reality is perception, the perceptions deeply related to personal experience. Bravo Dave! (As a rabid BMW owner I can relate to, appreciate and respect what Dave says about the ultimate driving machine)
Cable Q2 Averages (news/talk): O'Reilly continues #1 in HH (1,734,000), P2+ (2,211,000) and 25-54 (442,000). The other 25-54 nightside leaders...2. Greta 381,000
3. H&C 371,000
4. Shep 298,000
5. King 284,000
6. Brit 257,000
7. Anderson 253,000
8. Dobbs 233,000
9. Olbermann 198,000
10. Grace 187,000
Others...Scarborough 158,000; Hardball 129,000; Glenn Beck 111,000; Deutsch 72,000; On the Money 44,000.
Overall, Cable prime Q2 leaders: 1) USA 2) TNT 3) TBS 4) Fox News 5) Lifetime 6) ESPN 7) Toon 8) Discovery 9) N@N 10) A&E
Breakfast shows: Fox & Friends 275,000; MSNBC 165,000; CNN 154,000; Squawk on the Street 9A 116,000; CNBC Morning Call 109,00
Misc notes: CNN's Democratic Primary Debate averaged 2.8 mil viewers, besting all other debates of this election cycle to date. Charles wins the 6:30 race in Q2 (total/25-54) 7,990,000/2,440,000; Brian 7,540,000/2,310,000; Katie 6,130,000/1,940,000.
Must fix TV: "We're going to have to reinvent the broadcast television business. Advertisers aren't getting the value out of a 30-second spot that they used to, so we need to help them deliver impressions in a way that the audience won't ignore or skip." Marc Graboff, NBC TV. Read the entire Fortune interview by Barney Gimbel here. Good job Barney!
Bonus: NBC Universal CEO Jeff Zucker gives his view from the top, in two parts, FT.com video here.
Monday, July 02, 2007
"It is with life as with a play - it matters not how long the action is spun out, but how good the acting is." Seneca
"Knowledge comes by taking things apart: analysis. But wisdom comes by putting things together." John A. Morrison
"A principle of policy once established, be it sound or unsound, is almost sure, through evolution, to exert an influence far beyond that created at the time of its original inception." Alfred P. Sloan Jr.
The weather here at home has been nothing short of spectacular these last few days. Back in the office today.
Robert Scoble is now writing a column for Fast Company, check out his first here. Meanwhile father and son contrast and compare Nokia's N95 and the new iPhone here.
Everything is Miscellaneous the new David Weinberger book is a wonderful read. David does an outstanding job of story telling and in the process makes his case about the new principles of digital disorder that are changing, well, everything. Highly recommended. Amazon info here. David's book blog here. Bravos David!
The rest of the story: The King won the hour, Fox took prime. Thanks to Steve Donohue of Multichannel News we have comparative data. In the 9pm hour - The King and the heiress 3.1 mil, H&C 1.6 mil, Scarborough 502K. Prime - Fox 1.858 mil, CNN 1.851 mil, MSNBC 279K. Word around LES this weekend was Rosie will get her own prime shot on MSNBC.
Thank you very much for all the emails especially those on the Google Audio AdSense initiative. Broadcast sales channels remain among the least efficient. Further, one could make the case those traditional broadcast sales channels are less than effective in new business development. The mindset on the part of broadcasters seems to be "it's our audience, our inventory, we will sell it on our own (with the assist of our national rep), thank you." The disconnect has three parts...
- Getting better v Getting different. Broadcasters are focused on working harder, some would say smarter, the goal being to get better at local sales. The areas where progress is being made...1) more aggressive silo switch pitching thanks to advances in competitive tracking and 2) NTR. Broadcast is still, primarily, focused on other broadcast. As a practical matter, broadcast is getting better and better at calling on - generally - the same clients. Real new business development (defined as those new to the medium or new to electronic) continues to represent a small percentage of the rev stream. The result is suppression of share growth. Getting better is not yet producing meaningful growth.
- Averse to the risk of new. The coverage of last week's Interep meet suggested Farid would rather fight than switch, that doing business with an ad exchange would indicate his sellers had not done their jobs. It is not either or but rather and. My thought is (provided proper rules of engagement) the business and clients ad exchanges are most likely to bring to stations would, in fact, be new. These are the clients broadcast has failed to pitch. Absent a plan to change the way broadcast is calling on non-broadcast spenders to continue being averse to the risk of new sales channels seems less than wise. The argument that ad exchanges will advance the commoditization of station avails and work to diminish market values and AURs presumptively involves station folks going off the rez. Broadcast needs to own up to the facts - given the present business structure - some inventory will never be sold, some clients will never be called on. Coopetition is one solution. Another is Doc Searles' Project VRM. Ad exchanges could serve an important role in real new business development.
- The new sales channel value proposition. Broadcast needs to take a flyer on new sales channels. The value of what Google is potentially bringing to the table is somehow not being communicated effectively or not being understood. Perhaps it's being lost in translation. Broadcast needs to move beyond the notion of remaindering and remnant. If the Four Seasons can sell their inventory online without putting their good name and business at risk so can broadcast. The solutions needed here should be more buyer-centric, less seller-obsessed. To borrow a phrase from my favorite modern day military strategist "Less Clausewitz, more Sun Tzu." My thanks to Thomas P.M. Barnett.
Even more important - your cost to create avails likely remains constant. That is one of the flaws in most AUR calculations. The average against inventory sold is one pov. The ratio of inventory sold v cost of inventory creation is another. The next time you calc an AUR take into account the unsold avails. Let's use a radio example. 12 units per hour x 24 hours = 288 avails. Given a 75% load, 216 are sold, 72 remain unsold. Include the value of the 72 @ 0. Another pov - divide the day's take by the total number of avails to arrive at a real-world evaluation of performance. Change the denominator.
Congrats & cheers: Jason Kilar named CEO of the new News Corp - NBC online video jv. Erica Farber my former RKO colleague and now fellow Rockwell Award honoree, well deserved! Sorry my schedule did not allow me to be at The Conclave this year, it's always a good meet. Mister Ed Lambert on his appointment as OM of the Bend Radio Group. A wonderful move for Mr Ed and a very smart hire by BRG. We do miss Oregon, what a beautiful part of the world. Google on acquisition of GrandCentral, Wesley Chan delivers the details here. Wieden & Kennedy on winning the Nokia creative assignment - very cool.


