NBC, Versus Sign Long-Term Deal With NHL

Two months ago, ESPN’s top content executive John Skipper told investors the company will be aggressive in acquiring sports rights, but also judicious. “Let me be overt … we will continue to make thoughtful decisions on what rights we can afford,” he said.

Running the numbers appears to have led to circumspection on ESPN’s part, in terms of grabbing rights to the NHL. ESPN apparently dropped out of the bidding — as did TBS and others — as Comcast struck a deal to keep national broadcasts exclusively on NBC and Versus.

It is NBCU’s first sports rights deal since Comcast took over the company.

Comcast sports head Dick Ebersol said on a conference call that Versus would be re-named this summer with NBC in the moniker.

The 10-year deal, reportedly worth $2 billion, promises to expand the number of NHL games on the two networks while bringing the addition of an annual game the Friday after Thanksgiving. That seems straight out of the playbook for the “Winter Classic,” where NBC has carried a popular outdoor game on New Year’s Day, which has served as counter-programming to college football.

Under the deal, the NBC Sports Group gets digital rights across all platforms for games it offers, perhaps leading to the NBC games being simulcast on the Web a la “Sunday Night Football.”

Versus will continue to carry the NHL All-Star game and split Stanley Cup finals games with NBC. NBC will also build a new studio for the NHL Network.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said on the call that the NHL should benefit from the sprawling assets of Comcast. The deal includes promotion on a slew of NBCUniversal properties and could bring some games to the USA network, cable’s top-rated network.

Maytag Is Out To Warm Up Its Image

Maytag is introducing a new brand campaign that it hopes will warm up its old-reliable image, while at the same time building on its never-breaks-down brand equity.

The famed Maytag repairman gets a cameo in the TV spots, but the focus is now on the contents of the machine, themed “What’s Inside Matters.”  

Ads show a family quilt being dragged from picnic to campout to station wagon to laundry room, or a rag doll getting roughed up at a tea party. “We wanted to shift the focus to the mundane urgencies that people connect with dependability,” Jim Paul, VP/creative director for Arc Worldwide, the Leo Burnett agency that created the campaign for Maytag, tells Marketing Daily. “The ads emphasize not only the dependable parts Maytag puts in its machines, but the importance of the things people put inside as well.”

The brand, which is more than 100 years old, built its reputation on that dependability, he says, long characterized by its lonely repairman. “We felt it was time to expand on the parts and pieces story, which is essentially very male, and warm it up — to put a more relevant human spin on that dependability. It’s been a masculine brand in a feminine category. And while we’re not running away from the testosterone that comes from focusing on the reliability of the machine and its parts, we wanted to broaden it.”

Sony PlayStation Network suffering outages – again

This sounds familiar, but it’s true again today. Sony’s PlayStation Network is reportedly down, and many users can’t log in at all.

Earlier this month, the PlayStation Network went down for several hours, reportedly due to work by a hacker group. It’s not clear if that is the same case this time, or if it’s due to maintenance issues. Additionally unfortunate is that Sony hasn’t said anything about when this roadblock might be cleared. On the Official PlayStation blog, it only says:

We’re aware certain functions of PlayStation Network are down. We will report back here as soon as we can with more information.

Until then, users trying to access PSN on a PlayStation 3 and similar devices for the purpose of using online games or apps (i.e. Netflix, Music Unlimited, Hulu Plus, etc.) will be unable to do so.

Have you had trouble accessing the PlayStation Network today?

Amazon rumored to release Samsung-built tablet this summer

Things are certainly about to get more heated between Apple and Samsung (along with Amazon) this summer if this rumor turns out to be true. That rumor is that Amazon will be releasing a Samsung-built tablet in a few months.

According to Peter Rojas, the former editor of Engadget who is now over atGDGT, it’s already an “open secret that Amazon is working on an Android tablet,” and he is “99%” sure that Samsung is responsible for the hardware.

It’s got to be an Android tablet, but Honeycomb already seems out of the running as Amazon will likely utilize “Android as a base upon which to build a totally customized experience that tightly integrates Amazon services.” There aren’t any other specifics as to processors,

However, we could probably assume this is a 7-inch slate, which could end up looking like another Samsung Galaxy Tab, but also more like Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color. The latter is basically either a tricked-out e-book reader or a very simple tablet. Nevertheless, the Nook Color is still a tablet in some sense, making it the most likely base idea and competitor for Amazon’s new tablet. The name “Kindle Color” might be too obvious, but I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s exactly what it turns out to be.

Universal: Studio Has ‘Closed Doors’ on Content Leaks with CDSA Vendor Program

Universal was first among major studios to work with the Content Delivery and Storage Association (CDSA) on a vendor accreditation program that incorporates the association’s content protection standards. Now, with “just about all” of its international vendors either accredited or “well on their way” to certification with CDSA, Universal’s Paul Chesney reports that the initiative has “closed doors and prevented some opportunities for content theft.”

In an interview with Digital2Disc, Chesney, who serves as Universal’s VP of International Operations, says that working with CDSA was a “no brainer” after the executive “looked at the international landscape” and “realized that there was no common standard of content protection across the entire supply chain.” The CDSA’s independent audit certification system, Chesney says, “appeared to offer the best possibility” of a uniform content protection approach for all vendors that handle the studio’s pre-release assets.

Full story is available for download here.

Stay On the Cutting Edge at ESCA 2011

Now in its 7th year, ESCA EDGE is where home entertainment executives gather to share best practices and learn what’s next. Annually over 300 operations and technology leaders, from the studios and their production partners, consider ESCA EDGE the must-attend conference event. Whether you’re business is physical or digital media, the conference covers the latest technology trends, operational success stories, and cutting-edge innovations.

It’s about more than just supply chain. It’s about leading EDGE ideas, cutting EDGE innovations and knowlEDGE leadership in the home entertainment. ESCA began as the industry’s annual business conference responsible for driving efficiencies in the delivery of physical and digital home entertainment. In these dynamic times, ESCA’s role continues to evolve to enlighten and inspire the industry with the new perspectives, thought leadership and most esteemed collection of keynoters and panelists.

Details at:

http://entertainmentsupplychain.com/esca2011/

I think this Internet thing may be for real.

– $26 billion in U.S. Internet ad revenues in 2010
– 15% growth over 2009
– Bigger than U.S. newspaper advertising revenue for the first time


Social Media – Facebook wants to make daily deals more social – Internet Retailer

Interesting article for Facebook to bring in more revenues.  Check the details at:


Social Media – Facebook wants to make daily deals more social – Internet Retailer.

“Blue Blood” show has most Commercials

It might not be the sexiest of this year’s new U.S. shows, but Blood Bloods has proved the most commercial at home and internationally combined. The Tom Selleck cop show has topped a chart of how this season’s freshman shows have performed. Blue Bloodshas sold around the world, and not just to tiny channels but to big ones like Sky Atlantic in the UK, Australia’s Network Ten and Discovery Latin America. Armando Nunez, president CBS Studios International, has told TV tradeTelevision Business International, “It’s perhaps not as sexy to talk about, but it has proven a success both on the network and in terms of global distribution.” TBI is due to publish its survey of U.S. network pick-ups Monday. Indeed, CBS’ strategy of showing procedurals might hug the shore creatively, but it has paid off globally. Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior, another CBS procedural, is in second place. Says Nunez, “The road is littered with pilots and broken series and high concepts that didn’t work. We are in broadcasting.”

Blue Blood Cast During last year's PR Tour

The Event, NBC Universal’s mystery sci-fi show, would probably have been cancelled by now has it not sold so strongly around the world, TBI deputy editor Peter White tells me. NBC Universal sold The Event to more than 200 territories early on, and it has gone on to have a full U.S. season. Of course, some of this year’s new shows still haven’t aired yet, including Fox’s Terra Nova, due to air in October, and ABC’s Happy Endings. Shows graded “F” for fail in the survey because they have all been canceled include JJ Abrams’ UndercoversLonestarstarring Jon Voight, and the Jimmy Smits legal drama Outlaw. And the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced Chase and NBC’s superhero drama The Cape have both bitten the dust even in the short time since TBI compiled the survey.

 

Obama and the Tax Man Song