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Education Media Television

How Should On-Demand Content Work? 12

Shirlockc asks: "A recent Slashdot thread on how NBC is planning to offer on demand movies, and this NPR story on The Changing Face of Television has me asking: How will content (be it TV, movies, old, new) be distributed? I also include books -- content is content, the medium for the content changes but good content will always sell. Has anyone thought to try a pay-on-demand for content ie., subsidize the production costs by getting the audience/fans to pay for new episodes, thus skipping the broadcast networks? I know there was a campaign to raise money, in this way, to save Star Trek Enterprise, and there was an attempt to bittorrent a Star Trek Spoof recently on a pay-for-download basis. For shows with a decent cult following (eg., Firefly, Arrested Development, etc.) isn't it possible to fund the production without network participation (assuming all license agreements can be cleared?"
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How Should On-Demand Content Work?

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  • For on-demand content, I want to push a button and have some guy named Joe hand me a DVD of the content within 300ms.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Have it your way.
      I would rather push a button and have some girl named Josephine come naked and bring beer.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 18, 2005 @11:15PM (#14068494)
    The concept of bringing the shows to the fans directly is possible and doable, but very few producers with proper credentials want to do it, because they're terrified it will end up losing them money somehow. A show I've created was on the verge making the move to the web when some fool added up numbers and mused out loud that they might only make 90% of what they'd make from standard international distribution... (but really, he was saying: "If we become the biggest hit show in the history of mankind, our licensing revenues would eclipse the GDP of western Europe! Beat THAT, Internet!"). So the idea was shelved, because there's a bit too much certainty in fans-per-show than suckers-in-foreign-broadcasting-company. So I'd say you need someone to make the AJAX of web shows, and THEN all your favourite shows will be re-invented for the web, with cheaper effects and b-er-list actors.

    Of course, the whole concept may be flawed anyway. Very few people will pitch in to make anything anyway. We, the /. readers of the world, are too cynical and selfish to invest in anything other than gadgets for ourselves. Here, take this example: I've got plans for a series about a group of charismatic con artists who swindle $5M from WoW players through an elaborate scheme. It's got comedy, drama, danger, sex, the works. 13 episodes, 10 minutes each, one a week, and an online puzzle that ties into the plot. If I can raise $7,000, it can go ahead. Who's with me?

    [crickets]

    Right.
  • Amazing (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by Punboy ( 737239 ) *
    Wow, you can tell how amazingly enlightening this article is. A whopping 2 comments in 30 minutes. Must be a slashdot record. ;-)
    • Perhaps it just shows how everyone finds flaws in pay-per-view systems, but no-one has clear idea how one should work in order to work properly.

      I've been drafting a business plan with couple of my friends for a ip-tv solution which would offer streamed video over internet, protected by drm, but still platform independed. We have semi-working software and delivery point at tier-1, so bandwidth isn't an issue. Only thing basically missing is the program licensing.

      For the cash model, we've been thinking of off
      • You should see Blockbuster and Netflix as competitors with their monthly flat rate and delivery services. Perhaps instead of charging $20 for 10 movies a month, maybe limit it per day or week. Currently I get 6-9 movies per week with Blockbuster btw.
      • Re:Amazing (Score:3, Insightful)

        by macshit ( 157376 ) *
        2 or 3 commercial breaks lasting 2-4 minutes, depending on the movie rating

        "Commercial breaks" are one of the most execrable things about watching a movie on television; why the !@#$ are you emulating that?

        During a series originally intended for TV, it doesn't matter so much, because they're structured around the need for commercials, and for films, before and after are fine -- but not during the movie.
  • It is just a mater of time and we will get video entertainment on line. Little companies like ICraveTV got legally crushed when they rebroadcast TV on the internet. Cable companies don't like it as you might drop the lucrative TV part of their service. Telco's are still crying because the lost out on being the number one in internet access. These companies are stagnent and have a vested interest in seeing video on demand over the internet fail.

    But if a big player with lots of influence, cash and techni

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