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Will YouTubers Prefer Russell Crowe to a Toilet-Trained Cat?

By Catharine P. Taylor | Jan 29, 2009

In case you were sitting around wondering what the future is for the Webisode, you have to look no further than the front page of The New York Times‘ business section, which reports today that the William Morris Agency is about to ink a deal with YouTube to have its talent produce films for the service. In short, there’s going to be more of them.

The story doesn’t go into the specifics of how said video will be monetized, except to mention that professionally-produced videos might garner a larger audience. Presumably, large audiences will lead to large revenues. It’s true that advertisers will probably be much more willing to put their content next to videos from name productions starring the likes of Russell Crowe and Denzel Washington, but as good as those actors are, I wonder if what this deal actually will do is further prove that the same sort of commoditization is coming to video content that has existed for the last few years in regards to text content. Will those larger audiences necessarily show up?

If the online video market becomes as fragmented as online text media has become — with any number of professional journalists, bloggers and tweeters entering the scrum — who makes enough money in this business to make it viable? And are the people who win the race necessarily the same people who’ve dominated traditional media?  Look no further than Matt Drudge to see if the world was waiting for print journalists to shift to online. In fact, we’re already seeing that it doesn’t take an Oscar-winning director, nor well-known actors, to steal eyeballs away from professional content. Of course, YouTube is the best example of that, stuffed as it is with weirdly popular videos showing “a time lapse of a baby playing with his toys” or “Kung Fu Film Shot on a Cell Phone.” You mean now I can watch videos on YouTube that were produced by William Morris? Remind me again when I’m finished watching this hilarious video of a cat going to the bathroom in a toilet.

Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years and is a frequent speaker at conferences about media and advertising. She posts daily to BNET Media, writes the weekly Social Media Insider column for Mediapost and also has her own advertising blog, Adverganza.com. Follow her on Twitter or subscribe to the BNET Media Twitter feed.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Hollywood talent cashes in on YouTube

    FierceMarkets - 299 days 15 hours 13 minutes ago

    The New York Times is reporting that YouTube and the William Morris talent agency are close to a deal that would see William Morris talent featured in online video content produced exclusively for the Internet. William Morris represents many A-list Hollywood players like Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe, so online videos produced through...

  • YouTube close to video deal for pro talent

    International Herald Tribune - 300 days 5 hours 26 minutes ago

    YouTube and the William Morris Agency, the Hollywood talent agency, are close to signing a deal that would place the company's clients in made-for-the-Web productions. The deal, the first of its kind, would underscore the impact that the Internet has had on media companies. Already, some actors and other celebrities are creating their own...

  • Report: YouTube in talks to bring in Hollywood talent

    CNET News - 299 days 18 hours 6 minutes ago

    YouTube reportedly wants the William Morris Agency to make it a star.The online user-generated video site is reportedly close to clinching a deal with the William Morris Agency, in which the talent agency's clients would create videos for YouTube, according to a report Thursday in the New York Times.The talks reportedly revolve around a deal...

  • YouTube Said to Be Near Hollywood Deal

    New York Times - 299 days 17 hours 38 minutes ago

    The deal between YouTube and the William Morris Agency would place the company's clients in made-for-the-Web productions.

  • YouTube Goes Hollywood (GOOG)

    Silicon Alley Insider - 299 days 20 hours 10 minutes ago

    Google (GOOG) video site YouTube is close to signing a deal with Hollywood talent agency William Morris Agency in an effort bring more professionally-produced -- and advertising-friendly -- content to the site. Google bought YouTube for $1.6 billion in 2006, and while the site's traffic rules all, Google's had a hard time selling ads...

 
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  •  
    1

    myson1

    01/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Will YouTubers Prefer Russell Crowe to a Toilet-Trained Cat?

    This frenzy of everyone and their mother trying to get into the "online" game when no one has cracked the "how to make money" code is starting to feel alot like the late 90s...pop goes the bubble...

  •  
    2

    tricky11

    02/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Will YouTubers Prefer Russell Crowe to a Toilet-Trained Cat?

    Well- trained cat, bravo!

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