Wednesday 18 June 2008

Amid the deals, Banff delegates fret about piracy, changing viewing habits

BANFF, Alta. - From the creators of prime-time hits to behind-the-scenes executives attending this year's Banff World Television Festival, it was an ongoing concern as deals were made and success stories were celebrated: how to protect TV content from being pirated amid rapidly changing viewing habits.

"The collective community over the glowing campfire of TV is gone," John Saade, senior vice-president of ABC Entertainment, said Wednesday, the final day of the Banff festival.

Audiences now want to access shows whenever and wherever they want, Saade said. That often means surfing onto YouTube.com to watch pirated clips of shows, or even entire episodes of their favourites.

"It's scary," Doug Ellin, the creator of the HBO hit series "Entourage," said in an interview at the festival earlier this week. "You spend a lot of money producing these shows and producing content and if people are stealing the content, you're not going to be able to produce it for much longer."

Like the music business before it, the television industry is grappling with what to do about piracy. Not only that, it's trying to determine how to gauge viewers - and thereby attract advertisers - when so many people are no longer watching TV the old-fashioned way and traditional ratings measurements are being viewed with skepticism.

"The networks and advertisers are really struggling right now and trying to figure out how to measure ratings because clearly just measuring Nielsen boxes doesn't work anymore - people are watching TV in too many different ways," said the Ottawa-born Stephanie Savage, one of the co-creators of the hit show "Gossip Girl."

"They are watching it on PVR and playing it back when they want to see it, they're downloading shows from iTunes, they're watching shows streaming online, they're sharing shows with their friends, they're watching on iPods in subways - it's not as simple anymore."

In his book "The Pirate's Dilemma: How Youth Culture Reinvented Capitalism," British author Matt Mason points out the allegations of piracy are as old as technology itself, adding it's actually a sign of innovation, not thievery.

"Some of America's greatest innovators were thought of as pirates," he writes. "When Thomas Edison invented the phonographic record player, musicians branded him a pirate out to steal their work and destroy the live music business, until a system was established so everyone could be paid royalties."

Edison, he points out, went on to invent filmmaking and demanded licensing fees from anyone making movies with his technology. This led to the creation of a band of filmmaking pirates, including William Fox - the founder of 20th Century Fox - who headed to the wild frontier of Hollywood in the early 1900s to become the movie moguls of their day.

Piracy is not going away, Saade said, adding that the television industry can adapt to rapidly changing viewing habits if it avoids making the colossal mistakes made by the music industry.

"What you have to do is make sure that you are ahead of the curve - making your content available at any time, at any place, for anyone who wants it, and you don't put so many restrictions in that you go the way of the music industry, which was basically criminalizing its own audience," he said.

Instead, networks and broadcasters have to give technologically savvy viewers what they want.

"So what you do in the digital space is ensure that if you want to see one of our shows, we're going to give you an extremely high-quality version of that show," he said.

"You may have to sacrifice about 30 seconds of commercials here and there, certainly not the kind of commercials you'd see on broadcast, but if you want to watch it on your iPod, if you want to watch it on your cellphone, your computer - we've got to make it available. That's the only way we can get ahead of pirating."





News from �The Canadian Press, 2008




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Monday 9 June 2008

Rihanna - Rihannas Take A Bow Tops Singles Chart

Rihanna's Take a Bow is number one in the UK singles chart.

In a reversal of last week's chart, the US singer knocked the Ting Tings' single, That's Not My Names, off the top spot.

It wasn't all bad news for the Ting Tings though as they managed to displace Neil Diamond at the top of the album chart.

Former number one single Four Minutes by Madonna and featuring Justin Timberlake was a non-mover in this week's chart and was the third best selling song in the UK again.

Will.I.Am and Girls Aloud singer Cheryl Cole's song Heartbreaker charted at four this week.

While Sam Sparro's Black & Gold made up the top five.

Wiley's Wearing My Rolex charted at six in the chart and soul singer Duffy's new single Warwick Avenue was the seventh best selling single.

Usher's Love In This Club, September's Cry for You and Coldplay's Violet Hill made up the top ten.


25/05/2008 19:13:03




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Tuesday 3 June 2008

'Star' to be born in new light

Warner Bros. restoring George Cukor's 1954 film





Warner Bros. Motion Picture Imaging is restoring George Cukor's 1954 "A Star Is Born" in 6K resolution.


The film, starring Judy Garland and James Mason, is believed to be the first restoration project where the scanning, restoration work and mastering will be completed at that resolution.


Digital film restoration is most commonly accomplished at 2K, though an increasing number have been using 4K. A 4K file contains four times as much picture information -- measured in pixels -- as a 2K file, and 6K contains 2 1/4 times as much as a 4K file.


Ned Price, vp mastering, Warner Bros. Technical Operations, said that the facility's reason to go to higher resolution was because "The original camera negative contains more information than 2K, though 2K is today's typical display resolution. But we anticipate higher display resolution in the future. So we are attempting to preserve the asset, rather than just create an element for exhibition."


The key goal of the project is preservation, but the restored version of the film will also eventually be released on Blu-ray Disc and standard DVD.


"There has been photochemical work done on this particular title, but with new digital tools we are able to retrieve the original color balance of the faded negative in a way that we could not reproduce photochemically," Price said. "We made film preservation elements since the film had differential fading, meaning ... the edges of the film had more oxygen and deteriorated quicker. By scanning it, we're able to get a completely flat field of color."


Numerous restoration industry leaders share the belief that the community needs to step up to a resolution higher than 2K for restoration and preservation. Still, opinions vary, as more storage and bandwidth is needed to handle these larger files, which along with cost, is a challenge.


"6K is typically a costly proposition, so that's why we are testing the waters on 'A Star is Born,' " Price said. "As the size of data is more easily managed and the tools become more accessible, we will increase our resolution."


Restoration of "A Star Is Born" is expected to take four to six months. Said Price: "Our expectation is that the restoration would live for easily 100 years."


Warner Bros. Motion Picture Imaging, the studio's digital post and restoration facility, has recently restored such titles as "Bonnie and Clyde," "Dirty Harry," "Cool Hand Luke" and "How the West Was Won."



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