Posts from August 2005

S'mores


  S’mores 
  Originally uploaded by fredwilson.

We did a beach barbeque last night.

We dug a pit, built a fire, and had a blast.

The highlight, of course, was the s’mores at the end of the night.

Everyone thought this one was a classic although I must say that I prefer golden brown over burnt marshmellows.

But that requires patience and attention to detail that most people don’t want to be bothered with at night on the beach.

The Gotham Gal might post a recipe for s’mores but I’ll just link to this site which has all the details in the off chance you don’t know how to make one.

Here’s the result:

Img_0867

#Blogging On The Road

The Glimmer Twins

Stones_1I sure hope I’ve got this much energy when I am in my 60s.

I took this picture from a great gallery of photos that the Boston Herald has up on their website from last night’s show at Fenway Park.

I’d love to find a complete set list.

Couldn’t find anything on the Internet just now other than the herald article that has a partial set list.

UPDATE: Jason Chervokas pointed the setlist out to me.  Looks great. Here it is:

Start Me Up,

You Got me Rocking,

Shattered,

Tumblin’ Dice,

Rough Justice,

Back Of My Hand,

Beast Of Burden,

She’s So Cold,

Heartbreaker,

Night Time Is The Right Time,

The Worst,

Infamy,

Miss you,

On No Not You Again,

Satisfaction,

Honky Tonk Woman,

Out Of Control,

Sympathy,

JJ Flash,

Brown Sugar,

You Can’t Always Get What You Want,

Its Only Rock And Roll

#My Music

The $54 refill


  The $54 refill 
  Originally uploaded by fredwilson.

I just spent $54.25 to fill our Honda Minivan with 17.9 gallons of gas.

I walk to and from work and take the subway almost everywhere else I go in NYC, so I am probably more immune to the price of gas than anyone I know.

But I realize that this spike in oil prices is giving the average family fits.

Longterm, however, I believe this is the best thing that could happen. We need to reduce our reliance on foriegn oil and the mess in the mideast shows exactly why.

Maybe now we’ll be able to generate a return on investment on alternate energy businesses.

This post from Freakonomics blog (via Jarvis) explains why the mainstream media’s fearmongering over the rise in oil prices is missing the big point.

#Photo of the Day

Impact Media

For the past 50 years, the media equation has most often been solved for the largest audience.

That is changing and its happening pretty quickly, brought on largely by digital media.

I think the media equation is going to get solved for attention, passion, relevance, and meaning going forward.

I need a good word for the combination of all of those metrics, but for now I am going to use impact.

I often come to these realizations by a series of conversations and this one was brought on by three of them.

The first was a lunch with a friend in the music business.

The second was an email exchange with my high school friend and frequent commenter Tony Alva.

And the third was an extended discussion about video blogging with Heather Green of the terrific Business Week blog called Blogspotting.

At lunch with my friend I heard how record labels have for years focused on radio to market their music and the impact that has had on the kind of music that the labels have chosen to market.

FM radio is a mass medium by virtue of the limited space on the dial.  In most major markets, there are maybe 15 FM radio stations.

Each station tries to build the largest possible audience it can for its chosen format.

The way they do that is by doing research on what the listeners like and dislike.

This research, called "call out research" is focused on finding music that will keep the listeners from switching stations.

The result is mainstream, bland music that nobody dislikes enough to switch stations.

The record labels have been so hostage to the radio stations that they have simply given them the bland boring music they want.

And so we have two industries fighting for their lives right now as a result.

Back to my friend in the music business.

He told me that radio is losing its grip on the record labels and music discovery and marketing are moving online.

Kids don’t listent to radio anymore to find new music.

Bands don’t wait for a record deal and radio to market their music.

The action is on MySpace, iTunes, MP3 blogs, Audioscrobbler, MusicMobs, etc, etc.

Smart record label executives know this and are turning away from the radio formula and embracing the Internet.

But there is no call out research on the Internet.

Instead there are link counts, page views, downloads, and a host of other buzz metrics.

And these buzzmetrics measure impact more than audience size.

The music that is working best on the Internet is not bland and boring.  It inspires hate as much as love.  But it has impact.

That’s the future of the record business.

So back to radio.

When I told Tony Alva about the JD Powers report on HD Radio that I posted on yesterday, he said, "too little, too lae".

He thinks radio has lost the young listener and will never get it back.

I am not so sure.  And here’s what I told Tony.

The radio dial of 2010 is not going to look like the radio dial of 2005.

You’ve got 100 channels of XM, 100 channels of Sirius, you’ve got HD FM which will allow as much as 5 channels of programming for each fequency on the dial using multicasting technology, so that makes something like 75 channels of HD FM, and you’ve got HD AM which will allow music programming due to improved sound quality.

So that’s like 300 channels of audio instead of 15.

And the radios will be tri-mode by then and who knows if Satellite will stick to its paid model.

My bet is that we’ll see a hybrid model where some of the satellite channels will be free and ad supported and others will be paid.

I suspect the same will be true of the mulitcasted HD FM stations.

So radio will look like cable television, with a huge amount of choice, most free and ad supported, some paid and advertising free.

In that world, my bet is impact will rule and "call out research" will be history.

And in that world, the record labels may return to radio to supplement what they are doing online.

On to the video blogging discussion.

Heather is working on a piece on video blogging.

She’s done a ton of homework and I think its going to be really good.

I will leave it to her to tell that story.

In thinking about the impact of video blogging with Heather, it struck me that the next big move in cable and satellite TV is for the operators to put RSS subscription services into their set-top boxes and recievers, the way that iTunes just did.

Once they do that, TV viewers will be able to schedule and watch way more than what’s in their channel guide.

Among other great stuff, they will be able to subscribe to the delicious funny video feed and be entertained every day by real people.

Talk about reality TV.

And I think the impact of this new form of video entertainment will be huge.

So that’s what’s been spinning around in my head the past week.

I’d love to hear what you all think about it.

#VC & Technology

MP3 of the Week

Readers of this blog know of my current obsession with Bloc Party who, with Silent Alarm, have put out the best record of 2005 so far.

I came across a new Bloc Party song called Two More Years which aired on Steve Lemacq’s Radio 1 show on the BBC last monday. From what I can gather, Two More Years is going to be the first single off of the next record which is due out later this year.

It’s always great when young bands can follow up great debut records with more great music.

So I am making Two More Years by Bloc Party my MP3 of the Week.

#My Music

Positively 10th Street

Our new weekly podcast is up.

The kids are back and made an instant impact on the attitude of the podcast.

Other than the fact that I still can’t figure out how to get the sound right even with two microphones, it’s a great podcast.  We may need to hire Smoke and Mirrors to sound engineer this thing if I can’t get it straight soon.

Topics of conversation this week include  summer camp, some new music, and color war.

Song List:

Emily’s Song – Good Riddance – Green Day
Jessica’s Song – Banana Pancakes – Jack Johnson
Josh’s Song – eBay – Weird Al Yankovic
Fred’s Song – Busting Up A Starbucks – Mike Doughty
Joanne’s Song – Kathleen – Josh Ritter

Listen Live Here.

To listen in iTunes or on your iPod, get iTunes v 4.9, then select Advanced, Subscribe to Podcast, and then enter this into the box:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/Positively10thStreet

#My Music

Digital Radio - Free vs. Paid?

HdradioI’ve blogged so much about HD Radio that most readers have probably tuned me out by now.

Most longtime readers know that I am an investor in and a board member of iBiquity, the developer of the HD Radio standard that the broadcast radio industry is using to convert their industry from analog to digital.

I pay a lot of attention to the comments I get on my blog posts. It’s my way of getting an education from all of you.  And I’ve heard plenty say that broadcast radio is dead and satellite is the future.

But I’ve always felt that paid radio can’t beat free radio and last week we got some data substantiating that.

JD Powers, a leading market research firm in the automotive sector, published their 2005 study on U.S. Automotive Emerging Technologies last week.

They found some interesting things in surveying consumer’s views on HD Radio and satellite radio.

Here is the headline:

Premium surround sound systems and
high-definition (HD) radio are highly attractive features consumers
would like to see in their new vehicles based on their estimated market
prices, and consumers prefer to pay a one-time fee over a monthly
subscription for satellite radio.

Apparently consumers don’t like monthly fees for radio.  Here is another quote:

"Even though satellite radio is at an advantage
over HD radio by offering commercial-free content and coast-to-coast
coverage, interest in HD radio is higher than satellite radio after the
introduction of price," said Wu. "In general, consumers would rather
pay once for a feature and have been reluctant to embrace subscription
fees. This is evident in the trade-off exercise in this year’s study in
which almost twice as many consumers chose lifetime (life of vehicle)
satellite radio with a one-time $499 subscription fee compared to a
one-year option."

Maybe this survey will prompt Detroit to wake up and start offering HD radio as a standard option on new models, like they do with satellite radio.

At least I sure hope so.

#VC & Technology

MY VC Cliche of the Week Posts

It seems people like these weekly posts and I’ve done 29 of them now, every week but one since January 26th of this year.

I intend to keep doing them for as long as I can come up with good stuff each week.

I was asked earlier this week for a RSS feed of these posts.

I haven’t been categorizing them in Typepad under a separate category, so that wasn’t a solution.

So I went back and tagged them all in delicious with the following three tags; fred, vc, and cliche.

I intend to continue to post them in delicious with those tags.

So if you want an RSS feed for all my VC Cliche of the Week posts, use this feed:

http://del.icio.us/rss/tag/fred+vc+cliche

I hope that helps.

#VC & Technology

44 Years Old Today

According to my mom, the summer of 1961 was a hot and humid one in the NY metro area.

Just like the summer of 2005.

#Random Posts

Mike Doughty - Army Brat

You gotta love blogging and podcasting.

We first heard Mike Doughty on Mass Hysteria’s June 30th Podcast.

We dug him so we went to Rhapsody and played Haughty Melodic a bunch and dug him some more.

Then Jackson and D came to the beach and we went to see him at Stephen Talkhouse.

And then I made his song Grey Ghost my MP3 of the Week last Monday.

Maybe it was a subconscious thing, but the lyrics to Grey Ghost talk about two places that I know very well, the Grey Ghost and Stony Lonesome housing areas at the US Military Academy at West Point where I spent my teenage years.

It didn’t click for me until after I posted the song on Monday.

But Tony Alva picked up on the connection in the comments to my MP3 of the Week post.

Well it turns out that Mike Doughty spent his teenage years at West Point too.

Probably hanging out and getting into trouble at all the places I did.

Cool.

I only wish I had known all this when we saw him at the Talkhouse.  There weren’t more than fifty people there that night.  We could have traded war stories.

UPDATE:  My mom just told me that he lived next door to my parents after I left to go to college.  Go figure.

#My Music