YouTube vs. TV? YouTube says the battle -- if there ever was one -- is over.
In a flashy presentation to advertisers Wednesday night, Google executive
chairman Eric Schmidt declined to forecast that Internet video will displace
television-watching. Instead, he declared: "That's already happened."
Schmidt said "the future is now" for YouTube, which recently passed the
milestone of one billion unique visitors every month. But, he added, with the
Third World in mind, if you think that's a large number, "wait until you get to
six (billion) or seven billion."
Schmidt and YouTube, which billed the event as a "brandcast," shifted away from
the video platform's relationship to TV. A year ago, YouTube seemed to have its
sights set on reinventing television by funding the launch of more than 100
channels from well-known media brands and Hollywood personalities.
But that initiative went unmentioned at Wednesday's presentation, held at a
Lower East Side pier as part of a week of "NewFronts," (digital media's version
of the TV tradition of promoting programming and selling ads). Though the model
for the evening was TV, YouTube used it to distinguish itself as something
entirely different.
"It's not a replacement for something that we know," Schmidt said. "It's a new
thing that we have to think about, to program, to curate and build new
platforms."
The presentation featured performances by Snoop Dogg and Macklemore, as well as
YouTube personalities such as Felicia Day. YouTube focused on its global reach,
community engagement and enormous audience.
"I thought that YouTube was like TV, but it isn't. I was wrong," said Robert
Kyncl, YouTube's global head of content. "TV is one-way. YouTube talks back."
One fact highly touted was that more 18- to 34-year-olds watch YouTube than any
cable network.
Though companies such as Yahoo and AOL have used their NewFront presentations to
announce new slates of original programming, YouTube made no programming
announcements Wednesday night. But it did announce a partnership with the
Association of National Adverstisers' Alliance for Family Entertainment to
create more digital family content. YouTube also celebrated DreamWorks
Animation's purchase Wednesday of the teen-focused YouTube network Awesomeness
TV for $33 million. DreamWorks CEO Jeffery Katzenberg appeared with Awesomeness
founder and CEO Brian Robbins, the former Head of the Class actor.
"This is a whole new form of content, content delivery and content consumption,"
said Katzenberg. "It's the medium of the future and the future has already
arrived."
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News Column
YouTube Declares Victory in Battle with Television
May 7, 2013
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Source: Copyright Winnipeg Free Press (Canada) 2013
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