by Wayne Friedman on Apr 14, 9:00 AM
Tribune Media had been planning a new digital national news site -- Tribune.com. But out of the blue, it applied the brakes.
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 13, 9:00 AM
Potential new writer's strike could have some consequences for the TV advertising industry - But this time around, much more mature businesses -- like Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, YouTube, and other digital platforms -- could benefit.
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 12, 9:00 AM
A new report says Comcast wants to start up a subscription video on demand service that will include NBCUniversal programming. . What if anything will Netflix get should such a service launch?
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 11, 9:00 AM
Ever wonder about the level of skepticism when more savvy customers continue to ask themselves: Am I looking at fake/slightly fake news or native advertising from a big brand?
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 10, 9:00 AM
There are always TV marketers that love a big TV rating -- no matter what. The downside? A show with some baggage will have a shorter list of advertisers. No matter -- you can make a go of it.
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 7, 9:00 AM
Google's YouTube wants to crack down on fake news -- believing some small, very narrow targeted videos might be just bad news. So it will stop advertising revenues for those less-viewed channels on its YouTube Partner Program -- until they've reached 10,000 overall views.
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 6, 9:07 AM
As Twitter did a year ago, Amazon will run Thursday night games alongside CBS and NBC, sharing the traditional linear TV package of games. It offered $50 million for "Thursday Night Football."
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 5, 9:00 AM
For marketers, highly valuable data-driven marketing information is coming in big waves and much of it can be confusing. This includes first-party sources (marketers' own CRM data), third party (syndicated research companies), and party (such as set top TV boxes) and other party data. Is any of this laundered information?
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 4, 9:00 AM
Reports suggest Apple is looking to reinvent that bundle -- kind of -- by including "premium" ad-free TV networks, such as HBO, Showtime and Starz, in a more simplified package of all TV networks.
by Wayne Friedman on Apr 3, 9:00 AM
Media consumers can be a suspicious lot. Then again, they can be lazy. If news is fake, it doesn't mean advertising adjacent to that content -- in written text or inside a bit of video content -- will have any ill effect on them.
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