Can iTunes Resurrect Old Time TV? 214
An anonymous reader writes "With iTunes selling a couple of popular TV shows now there has been significant hesitation from other television producers to follow suit and put their content on the Web. It has also sparked activity from the actors unions who want additional compensation for what appears online. But there is also existing content that stands to be revived in this new context, older television shows from the 50's and 60's that have been squeezed out of the traditional broadcast by popular shows of more recent vintage. It was suggested to a producer who is presently digitizing 27 episodes of a 1950's show called Captain Zero to offer it up on iTunes for a buck an episode. Is this an opportunity for these old shows to strike while the iron is hot and while the owners of more contemporary content are caught like deers in a headlight? As the Captain Zero article points out purveyors of old time radio programs have enjoyed a significant revival by embracing web-based technology. Why not old time TV?"
Public domain, et al (Score:5, Informative)
You can get entire seasons of old TV for a buck....
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:3, Interesting)
No, I've never actually been inside of a Wal-Mart.
However, even at bargain bin prices, it's not worth it. $5+ for a movie that's 20, 30, 40, 50 or even 60+ years old is not worth it.
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, that is so on topic that it isn't even funny- That is why the online distro is such a good idea. You aren't paying 5$ for the movie. You are paying 50 cents for the movie, and then You are paying for the freight to get it to the store, to heat the store, pay the staff, buy shopping carts, advertise, press the DVD, the DVD case, the shrink wrap and on and on etc etc etc.... With the online distro, you cut out so much of that expense....
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2, Interesting)
On the flipside, buying a DVD and getting it onto your iPod might prove pretty challenging, so the opposite might be true (that i
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Or, you could go all out, build a file server and one media box for each TV you want connected, network then with at least 100mbps-capable NICs and stream the videos from the server. This is technically on the shady side of the law, but if you only use legally-purchased DVDs
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:5, Insightful)
Woow. That's an impressive statement.
25+ years old: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079944/ [imdb.com]
30+ years old: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0068646/ [imdb.com]
40+ years old: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0059578/ [imdb.com]
50 years old http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0038650/ [imdb.com]
60+ years old http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0022100/ [imdb.com]
Saying that any of those movies are not worth 5$ bucks just shows the world what a moron you are.
Cheers,
--fred
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Absolutely. (Score:3, Informative)
Kurosawa, Tarkowski, Wells, Hitchcock.
Seven Samurai, Solaris, Citizen Kane, Psycho.
They are old!
Burn them!
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a lot out there I'd pay good money to get on DVD, like Get Smart. Unfortunately they won't make DVDs of that series (though 1 or 2 Get Smart movies are printed and some series bootlegs exist).
I wish that just about everything was available on non-VHS media. Even some shows SciFi series from around 1999 or 2000 are being held back.
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
What would tempt me is if you could buy the film for $1 on an iTunes like site and then get redirected to somewhere that would allow you to buy a better quality version in DVD form.
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
When prerecorded tapes first appeared, there was an explosion of video-stores... every one a cash-cow. But, unfortunately for most of those early stores, the consumer base quickly ran through the Joan Crawford ouvre, and its attention settled largely upon new releases, where it remains today. Seems reasonable to expect the same growth profile for these hand-held revivals...
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
You can get entire seasons of old TV for a buck....
Which means that they are effectively going out of print, and pretty soon you won't be able to get them at all.
It simply is not worth it to the publisher to sell a DVD collection when people aren't willing to pay more than a buck or so per episode.
I've looked through the bargain bin. Mostly, they seem to have everything but what I'm looking for, and I expend several bucks worth of my time just diggin
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Re:Public domain, et al (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
ipod... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ipod... (Score:5, Insightful)
I assume the overhead is low and, in an era where new, expensive HD content is raising the bandwidth bar, these old 4:3 shows would be light on the pipes and relatively easy and cheap to deliver.
I for one would happily pay to see old episodes of shows like The Saint or The Prisoner without having to pay for a whole additional tier of cable TV service just so I can get channels like BBC America (and then hope they run the shows).
Listening to Podcasts like "Soap Detectives" [soapdetectives.com] has gotten me into listening to old radio shows lately and I'm amazed by how entertaining they are.
On demand, online delivery of old TV content sounds like a sure winner to me.
Re:ipod... (Score:2)
Yes, online delivery seems particularly good for old (or even just unpopular/obscure shows) to be distributed. After all, I'd imagine the reason you can't find those "vast piles" anywhere is that the distribution channels are too tricky and expensive. A lot of mone
Re:I think big media already owns most old content (Score:2)
Re:I think big media already owns most old content (Score:2)
Because at the prices people are willing to pay for these old shows, they won't make back the shipping, packaging, or media costs--none of which are relevant to online sales.
Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson got paid an average engineer salary to develop unix, yet only Bell Labs and now the open group make money off of every copy sold. They agreed to work for x amount a year.
Re:Well (Score:2)
Even if actors' work doesn't require more talent or hard work (which is debatable), they're not interchangable so some lucky ones end up getting rich. I don't think there's any getting around it unless computer-generated "actors" ever catch on.
Re:Well (Score:2)
If an engineer wanted to forgo their salary and try to negotiate a royalty-based contract, they are free to do so.
Next time
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:3, Insightful)
Plus, in the end, actors' names do have an obvious impact on the financial success of movies (please, lets as
Re:Well (Score:2)
So, in other words, since people who create software were dumb enough not ot form unions, actors deserve the same treatment, despite the fact that they do have unions?
Great idea.
Re:Well (Score:3, Informative)
The average actor in the union makes $7500 a year acting, the average programmer makes several times that. This has less to do with unions and more to do with standard contract of the industry. Programmers tend to go towards salary (+ maybe stock options) which is a much safer bet than royalty based pay scales.
Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
And then that changed, and actors were willing to accept less guaranteed pay for more points. And studios were happy to offer points because it mitigates their risk. This has three effects 1: more and more expensive movies get made, as the risk is artificially spread out over multiple parties, 2: the median actor salary goes down, and 3: actors take a more active role in the production.
I'm still not sure whether the points system makes movies better, like tipping makes service in resturants better, or if it just means that most actors starve. Either way, the actor's guild is just looking for the same types of income stream with shows online that they get from syndication and overseas views.
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Tipping doesn't make service better. Go visit a restaurant in a country where tipping isn't done (i.e. most countries outside the US) and you'll see.
Tips are expected by the staff merely for showing up, so they're not a motivation for better service. Tipping is only insurance against getting deliberately bad service the next time you visit.
Re:Well (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:2)
You're generalising all countries outside the US to be the same. Maybe that was the case from your experience, but I went to Italy for a couple of weeks and went to a few different towns, and had exactly the opposite experience from you. Service was terrible to non-existent in about every restaurant we went to, except for a couple of really nice upscale place
Re:Well (Score:2)
If tipping is required for good service, I guess that means that everybody in the 99% of occupations that don't involve tipping are doing a bad job.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:2)
It doesn't work when the tipping is expected. It should be volunteered for above average service.
Despite common belief - expressed below in one of the comments - the USA is not the only country that gives tips. In Australia the typical tip is 10-15%. However the staff don't get the tip for doing their job. They get the tip if they do the job well. Giving no tip is a polite way of sayin
Re:Well (Score:2)
Huh? 10% tip in Australia? I don't know where you've been eating, but allow me to assure you that most of Australia's restaurants haven't caught onto that particular fad.
I go to restaurants pretty regularly in Perth and Adelaide, and occasionally in Melbourne. In all my years of dining in Australia, I can't say I've ever been in a situation where a tip has been expected, or even automatically itemized on a bill at the end of the night. In fact, its only in the last fe
Jeez... Not this again. (Score:2)
No one buys theatre tickets because of the stage crew.
Ritchie and Thompson may have agreed to work for "x amount" a year, but actors don't. The concept of "residuals" is as basic to them as free coffee, sick days, and Christmas off is to the 9-5 cube-dweller. No one group is better or worse, they just have different and long-entrenched schemes of compensation.
Re:Well (Score:2)
What I want: (Score:4, Interesting)
If you want me to be a customer, you need to offer me several things:
+ I don't want to view it just on my ipod.
+ I don't want to be able to view it only with Quicktime.
+ I don't want to have severe DRM limits that hamper my ability to store and watch the content any time I want on any device I want.
+ I don't want to pay through the nose for the content.
+ If I watch it on a non-iPod device, I want higher quality downloads available.
+ You should have at least the selection that Netflix does. Even if you're just the "Netflix of television".
I'm one of those consumers who is not opposed to paying for information/entertainment/data on any real basis other than I want it to be affordable and flexible. Don't place silly restrictions on me that hamper my enjoyment and don't charge me so much that I have to seriously think if each download is worth it.
Also, isn't most of the content they're talking about already public domain? Hell, some of it can be downloaded from the Internet Archive already.
Public Domain TV (Score:5, Informative)
Not in general. No TV is old enough to enter the public domain naturally. What happened with some programs and movies (even such famous movies as the original "Night of the Living Dead") is that they were never officially copyrighted or were incorrectly copywrited during the time when copyright was not automatically granted.
There is No "Natural" (Score:3, Informative)
Or ever will be. Despite the Consitution's insistence that IP be protected for a "limited time" (Section 8, clause 8) we keep seeing retroactive extensions of copyright. Before 1919, the "natural" expiration of copyright occurred after 28 years, with a possible 14 year extension. Since then, we've seen a series of retroactive extensions of old copyrights. Works for hire (which would cover most TV shows) were extended to 75 years in 1976 and to 95 y
Re:What I want: (Score:2, Insightful)
If you want me to be a customer, you need to offer me several things:
That's great, and good points, but if 240 million boobs in the the US don't care, and 10 million educated people like who who understand the issues with DRM do care, I think the 240 million will rule the market.
Sort of like, If WalMart wants me as a customer they need to offer X Y and Z... WalMart doesn't giv
Re:What I want: (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What I want: (Score:2)
I don't know much about Ham Radio, that doesn't make me "the unwashed masses" but it does mean that I don't require much from a radio, while a Ham would...
The same way an auto tech may have opinions on cars that the average driver doesn't... (Even if the driver is doctor or something)
The same way someone who's main interest in cooking may have differing opinions/m
Re:What I want: (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh, and I doubt the obesity rate is higher at Wal-Mart than it is on Slashdot. Let's be honest, here.
Re:What I want: (Score:3, Interesting)
why Apple doesn't care (Score:2, Insightful)
And as far as viewing the files goes, if you have a computer capable of running iTunes, you have a computer capable of playing these videos.
Love that stuff (Score:2)
Bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
This is true of many technologies that could be deployed if we had the infastructure.
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
I'm not so sure. When I was coverting 10 and 15 year-old film to digital, I discovered that the degredation of the film seemed to significantly increase the encoded filesize. MPEG is good at dealing with surfaces, patterns, gradients, stuff like that. Not so much at dealing with random noise.
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmm... I have a concern about that. Those old B&W shows were also noisy. Noise is the worst thing to encode. (not just video noise, but depending on the period they used film etc...) They may actually have a hard time encoding those shows at a lower data rate because of the added artifacts that the technol
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm not saying this to troll; I wouldn't be surprised if you could teach me something.
Where's Nick at Nite when you need them? (Score:2)
* As long as it doesn't require Windows to do so.
Re:Where's Nick at Nite when you need them? (Score:2)
Here [dvdavenue.tv]
93 episodes for $99. Just a little more than a buck an episode.
I'd buy that for a dollar... (Score:2)
I Hope They Bring Back Johnny Nuance (Score:2)
Re:I Hope They Bring Back Johnny Nuance (Score:3, Funny)
80s TV shows... (Score:2)
At $1 a pop, no chance (Score:4, Insightful)
Naturally, I'd consider paying a half-dollar an episode for one of the good slightly old shows, like The Prisoner or The Six Million Dollar Man.
Re:At $1 a pop, no chance (Score:2)
One problem with that is how do you split the money. Unless everything was done as a work for hire (acting, music, etc.), there's a lot of people who are entitled to a share of the sale. It'd be interseting to se what distribution rights were in teh original contracts.
As a side note, isn't that how the original owners of Caspergotthe rights back - they decided the
Re:At $1 a pop, no chance (Score:2)
Because people really, really like music and most of that music is new and fresh. Also, one good song gives more use than one good video. Owned videos tend to be watched two or three times by a person, maybe a few times a year if they are really good (this is purely anecdotal). Good music will often be listened to two or three times a day for several weeks in a row (also anecdotal). All told, the music is usually
Re:At $1 a pop, no chance (Score:2)
Another example of The Long Tail (Score:4, Interesting)
iTunes is a very effective distribution medium, and has helped the careers of many a smaller label / band, and even moved significant amount of back catalog.
Currently the networks are marketing to the top 20% in terms of demand, and ignoring the remaining 80% because they don't have the broadcast capacity.
Teaming up with iTunes they do. Another example of The Long Tail [wikipedia.org].
I see this working.
Don't Care (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Don't Care (Score:2)
Either you are a Mac user, or a glutton for punishment. I'm guessing Mac user.
I don't care if I can't make a "backup" copy to give to my friends.
So I suppose you don't care about being able to make a backup for yourself? I guess you like re-buying your content every time your media fails?
I don't really even care about the quality all that much because the quality of 50's and 60's tv shows was generally pretty bad over the air anyway.
You don't really even care about the
Re:Don't Care (Score:2)
That's nice for some
Let me know when (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Let me know when (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Let me know when (Score:3, Insightful)
Boy, howdie, you said it. Huckleberry Finn, the Revised Expurgated Edition is so much better than the original. And Harriet Bowdler did such a fantastic job of cleaning up Shakespeare. I also limit my movie-viewing to trans-continental airline flights, because they boil down the movie to the good parts and I don't have to watch the "director's vision" filth.
I'm sorry I d
Re:Let me know when (Score:2)
M*A*S*H (Score:2)
Also, they could offer both the American and forgin versions, in the UK the show is exactly the same just without the laugh track (acording to a friend who lives there)...this would be an amazing thing if I could buy the whole seriese sands canned laugh.
Re:M*A*S*H (Score:4, Interesting)
Having the seasons 1-8 (9 will be released in Dec, IIRC) on DVD behind me on the shelf:
you can have that right now.
I don't know about the RC1 release, but for the RC2s (1 or 2 seasons of mine are the German DVDs, most are from the UK) I can assure you that they all contain a "laughless" audio track.
Each RC2- season box contains 3 discs with 8 episodes each (sadly, no bonus materials) and sell (at amazon) around 25 pounds(UK) or 20-27 Euro (German, also cotaining laughterless English track).
Judging from the comments at amazon.com (20$ a season) you can turn off the laughter on the RC1s too; at least on the early ones (I checked season 1,2 and 7; BUT 7 didn't list two english tracks so you might want to take a closer look).
So you can get them already for 0.85$-2$ per episode,.
the big problem is getting the rights... (Score:2, Interesting)
Even today, to release recent (1970s) TV shows on DVD, the hardest part is getting the rights to the music used in the TV show.
Since every
Re:the big problem is getting the rights... (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
But, what about ... (Score:2)
Heck with that, there's newer stuff I'd buy. (Score:2)
I can't wait to see... (Score:2)
eyeteeth (Score:2)
I would give my eyeteeth for episodes of Mission Impossible, Secret Agent/Danger Man, and the Avengers. And by "eyeteeth" I mean less than the $10/ep that it looks like Amazon wants for those old series.
Well, maybe the Avengers isn't that much at Amazon, but gee, I dunno, it seems like such a commitment. Whereas if I bought one or two, I think I'd wind up spending a lot more by Christmas.
There are a LOT of old shows that have more interest than their contemporaries, yet appear to be almost out of print or
Re:eyeteeth (Score:5, Informative)
Dragnet (Score:2)
I keep hoping it will come back on TV Land or something so I can get it with my Tivo and then record it to DVD or something, but if it were available electronically in a format that I could somehow get to the normal TV that would be great too.
You mean a bootleg OTR revival, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
Fly! Be Free! (Score:2)
Remember (Score:2)
Here's an Older TV show I'd love to see on iTunes: (Score:2, Interesting)
Looney Tunes DVDs (Score:3, Informative)
Funny thing about Looney Tunes, they have been available for years on DVD [amazon.com]. So it was a simple job over the last few years to rip them to a video Archos and enjoy them, Or on a Treo. Or a phone. Or a PSP. I'm sorry for so many people that it's taken the iPod so long to finally get some kind of video playback. Portable cartoons rule. It's nice having complete runs of Simpsons and Futurama ready to go at the click of a button...
IPTV (Score:4, Insightful)
There are many shows that are so voluminous that the only practical way to consume them is with an all-in-one jukebox with a beefy search engine behind it (think google video indexing closed captioning).
Think of these long-running shows:
The Simpsons
Married with Children
Bonanza
Gunsmoke
Doctor Who
Cheers
Imagine also being able to dig into old news shows, like every episode of 60 Minutes, 20/20, or Nightline.
Imagine being able to watch any old airing of the Tonight Show back to the earliest B&W days based on a search for a celebrity guest. For instance, you could line up all of Tom Hanks' appearances and watch his fro shrink and his hairline recede.
DVD is fine, but it is just not practical to reserve the shelfspace to own it all. And DVDs do little to help you get from "gee, I wish I could see the episode where Ricardo Montalban guested on Gunsmoke" to it actually playing on the screen. You have to go figure out the episode number online, then find the right disc, pop it in, wait through the ads, navigate through the menus, and go. The convenience at the macro level is not there, just as maintaining a large audio CD collection is a drag.
So much of our content viewing habits these days is a result of search results. That's the whole idea of web surfing. So the ideal video viewing experience, to me, is to sit down casually and just improvise search terms until you come up with interesting enough results. You won't know what you want to watch until you see what comes up. Or you have the preference engine (ala Amazon) do it for you.
Instead of using the web to index information about media, it could index the media directly and let you jump right into it.
For instance, let's say you typed in a particular line or phrase like "Do'h" and every instance where Homer says "Do'h" pops up with the timecode right in there. You might even be able to set up in/out playlists for custom highlights reels.
Really, this stuff is all doable technically. Google video is a good proof of concept. It's purely a matter of working out the DRM and the business side of things.
Re:I'm down- (Score:2)
Imagine Apple releasing a set-top box iTunes... think of TiVO + iTunes...
This could really be a big hit.... only time will tell
Re:I'm down- (Score:5, Informative)
When you stand back and think about it, we live in amazing times consumer-technologically. 5 years ago I thought burning my own CDs was awesome- now I have my iPod with thousands of songs hooked up to my car....
Re:I'm down- (Score:2)
I do think TV is different from music and I do agree with Steve Jobs that people are used to buying music. The concept of renting your favorite music and paying a monthly fee seems pretty odd. But some of this is because that's the way it's always been. For more than 100 years, from the old wax-cyllinders and player-piano rolls, people have bought music.
Conversely, for most of it's history, people have paid to watch video due to the technology. TVs have
Re:I'm down- (Score:2)
I am sure I will get made fun of for this, but I actually subscribed to the Hallmark channel to get Walker Texas Ranger.
I'd laugh, but I kind of like that show too. Used to be on USA a lot back-to-back with Highlander. Good times.
Re:I wrote about this too... (Score:2)
On the other hand, I betcha Star Trek will be absent from the lineup, because it woul
Re:SPOOOOOOOOOON!!! (Score:2)
*Someone* is showing the animated series now. Maybe Disney channel.