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Internet Video: This Is Only the Beginning

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Uploaded by on Dec 19, 2008

Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2008/10/19/Scott_Kirsner_Inventing_the_Movies

Journalist Scott Kirsner draws on film history to ponder the potential of online video, and criticizes the motion picture industry for being slow to adapt to the new medium. Kirsner urges Hollywood studios to regard the internet as less of a tool for digital piracy and more of "an opportunity to make money."

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Journalist Scott Kirsner presents an illustrated spin through his new book, Inventing the Movies, which offers a technological history of Hollywood -- and an exploration of why revolutionary new ideas so often face intense resistance in any industry.

In Hollywood, even after the debut of "The Jazz Singer," studio chiefs still dragged their heels on adopting sound technology. Technicolor was founded in 1915, and helped bring "a rainbow of colors" to the silver screen in movies like "The Wizard of Oz" and "Gone With the Wind" -- but it wasn't until the 1950s, when TVs started showing up in American living rooms, that Hollywood rushed to convert to color production. In the 1980s, Universal Pictures and Disney sued Sony over the Betamax; within a decade, they were making more money from home video than ticket sales.

And even today, most studios don't offer their full catalogs in digital form (hoping to make more money by selling us high-def DVDs) and Hollywood's top cinematographers prefer to shoot on film. Scott's very interactive talk is geared to both movie buffs and techies -- and will be followed by a discussion about why people resist new ideas, and how innovators can overcome that resistance - The Hillside Club

Scott Kirsner is a contributing columnist for the Boston Globe Business section. His column Innovation Economy, appears in the Globe every Sunday. Kirsner’s writing has also appeared in BusinessWeek, Variety, The New York Times, and other publications.Kirsner is the author of the book The Future of Web Video, editor of The Convergence Guide: Life Sciences in New England, and a contributor to The Good City: Writers Explore 21st Century Boston. Kirsner was part of the founding team of Boston.com in 1995, and he is a graduate of Boston University’s College of Communication.

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  • Interesting points. I liked the comments about the business model and the creative possibilities. Youtube is still young and it may be a while before we realize its full potential. Its exciting to be a part of its development.

  • You can make money from YouTube, you can have adverts and each view you get gives you like 10p to your PayPal (About 20 Cents) When you watch a video that has an advert, the person who uploaded it gets about 10p to their PayPal account, and theres two small lines to show you when the advert will come on.

  • Hehe. Before I started watching more intelligent programs I thought all americans said 'you know' at least once in every sentence :D

  • The "you know" virus strikes again.

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