Thursday, August 24, 2006

The Hip Hop Summit Action Network

The National Voter Coalition announced that it will premiere its taping of The Hip-Hop Summit Action Network Town Hall Meeting on Community Empowerment to east coast homes on August 21 at 10:00 pm on CN8, a Comcast network station. The town hall meeting was shot live in Philadelphia on July 12th at the University of Pennsylvania and was hosted by Russell Simmons and television anchor Art Fennell. “We are honored to have CN8, The Comcast Network, broadcast the town hall meeting to its almost 9 million viewers,” said Simmons, the chairman of the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network. “We are convinced this will reinforce our goal of encouraging young people to get involved in the process, register and vote.” Hip-Hop stars like Foxy Brown, Musiq, Jim Jones, Papoose, Jaguar Wright, Queen Pen, and R&B great Kenny Gamble were all present at the town hall meeting and will be featured in the taping.
For the full story log on: http://www.allhiphop.com/hiphopnews/?ID=6045

Friday, August 18, 2006

Entertainment News Headlines

Primetime Special On AIDS In Black America Includes Segment By Peter Jennings [TVNewser]ABC's upcoming primetime special on AIDS in Black America is notable for a couple of reasons. It is, according to ABC, the "first national network television news documentary on the AIDS epidemic among African Americans." And it is one of the last primetime specials that Peter Jennings had a hand in developing.

ESPN Brand to Be Tagged on All ABC Sports Content (Mediaweek)Beginning Sept. 2, ESPN will become the overarching brand for all sports programming on ABC, a move that coincides with the debut of ABC's NCAA football coverage. The new "ESPN on ABC" brand will be applied to all aspects of ABC Sports production, including on-air look, graphics and overlays.

Indie Cinema and Cultural Community Center in NYC

DCTV Secures Nearly $2.4 Million For Indie Cinema and Cultural Community CenterNew York City's DCTV has locked up $2.375 million for its independent film cinema and cultural center. The organization, founded in 1972, is creating a public cinema and media community site at its 110-year old firehouse facility in Lower Manhattan. The organization indicated that it will create for residents from the local areas including Chinatown, Tribeca, the Lower East Side and the Financial District, as well as for New Yorkers at-large. The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation initially committed $800,000 to the project, and $1.4 million is coming from the City of New York, with more money from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and the office of the Manhattan Borough President. In a statement today, DCTV said, "These developments will set in motion the creation of New York’s only full-service Independent Media Center. The goal is to support the growing needs of the independent film community and bring thousands of individuals Downtown for exciting new cultural events, screenings, community forums and workshops..." [Eugene Hernandez]

Monday, August 14, 2006

NARIP Events

NARIP LOS ANGELES THIS WEEK! Aug 15 Getting Ink & Working the ‘Net JUST ADDED Aug 23 The Record Biz in the 21st Century Sep 6 Independent Distribution Solution

NARIP NEW YORK THIS WEEK! Aug 20 Music For The ScreenJUST ADDED Sep 17 Independent Distribution SolutionOct 22 Finding Your Unique Market Niche

NARIP SAN FRANCISCOOct 11Webcasts, Downloads & Ringtones, oh my!

NARIP LAS VEGASComing Soon.

OTHER EVENTS Aug 16 – 22 International Pop Overthrow Festival in San Francisco

JUST ADDED Aug 17 EPPS Program –w- National Magazine Editors & WritersAug 18 – 19 Bandwidth Conference in San Francisco Sep 27 – Oct 1 Summer Music Conference in San FranciscoSep 12 ELLA Awards in Los AngelesOct 5 City of Hope’s Spirit of Life Award GalaOct 31 - Nov 4 CMJ Music Marathon in New YorkFeb 6 – 8 CIC 2007 in Los Angeles

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Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Simon Fuller's Plans

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-simon7aug07,1,4481023,full.story?coll=la-headlines-entnewsAugust 7, 2006 The Los Angeles Times TELEVISION & RADIOHe's not sitting idle`American Idol' is big, but Simon Fuller's plans are bigger.By Greg BraxtonTimes Staff WriterTHE Mogul Who Swallowed Pop Culture is perched in his office high above bustling Sunset Boulevard, scheming. His groundbreaking project is the behemoth that has come to rule not only television, but also much of the entertainment landscape.But if you thought Simon Fuller, the British creator of "American Idol," would be sitting back by now celebrating his success, think again."I'm hungry," he says, and he's not talking about his next meal.Next item on his agenda: taking the unscripted talent show to, yes, even higher heights, this time with a songwriting competition that will be incorporated into the show and produce a song that will be sung by the next "American Idol." After that, he plans to revolutionize the entertainment arena further through his production company, 19 Entertainment, and other partnerships. He wants to start using unique strategies that, in his view, will change the way talent is developed and exposed.Even by the lofty standards of the unassuming, soft-spoken Fuller, 46, who first came to prominence as the marketing and creative force behind the Spice Girls, it has been a heady year for him and his production company.Fox's "American Idol," already a cultural phenomenon, has seen its domino effect begin to be felt in theater ("American Idol" alumni are now regularly appearing on Broadway), summer concerts (the 2006 "American Idols Live" tour is the most successful edition in the show's history) and even politics (the "Idols" were invited last week to the White House to meet President Bush). The series finale scored a record 36.3 million viewers, and the show received eight Emmy nominations, the most for any unscripted series. Former "Idols" such as Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood have been transformed into bona-fide hit-makers. And Lifetime will soon air a movie based on "Idol" winner and single mom Fantasia Barrino.Auditions for the sixth season start Tuesday — this year, there's one at the Rose Bowl — and predictions are for yet another massive crowd of wannabes. Then there's "So You Think You Can Dance," which Fuller co-created with 19 executive Nigel Lythgoe. It is the top-rated summer show among the coveted 18-to-49 demographic, and Fox renewed the series for a third season weeks before the season finale, which airs Aug. 16. Tickets for a national tour of the top dancers from the show go on sale Saturday. Nothing has dulled his infectious optimism — not the plethora of "Idol" knockoffs (many of them, like ABC's "The One," almost instant failures), not the good-natured competition with friend and "American Idol" judge Simon Cowell's summer hit, "America's Got Talent," not even the failure by Clarkson to include Fuller in her Grammy thank-yous.*Creative offshootsFULLER is now looking toward the future, his days consumed by an arsenal of projects including TV, films and music. He is no longer knocking on studio and network doors — those executives are now knocking on his door. Among his plans is a fashion channel. He has project deals with HBO and NBC. And, in partnership with CKX Investors, he has embarked on new creative endeavors."We want to define a new approach to entertainment," Fuller said last month, sounding more like a neophyte bursting with ideas than a multimillionaire who counts singer Annie Lennox and soccer icon David Beckham among his clients and is on Bono's call list. He says he wants to develop blossoming artists who might meet obstacles financially, stylistically or otherwise in trying to break through mainstream standards. Just as "Idol" does with novice singers, the goal is to empower all kinds of performers and "push the boundaries.""What drives me is moving forward. That is what my brain is focused on," he said. "What really excites me is fulfilling my vision. I now have the resources to do everything I want to do."But first things first. He's ecstatic over a new "American Idol" twist that not only will add an intriguing element to the series competition, but also help solve a problem that has plagued the competition since its 2002 debut.In previous years, professional producers and songwriters have been commissioned to write an original song for each of the two finalists. But uncertainty over who those finalists would be, as well as their respective singing styles, has meant less-than-perfect matches. "It's a thankless task," Fuller said.But Fuller has devised a way to jump over that hurdle this season by having producers institute a songwriting contest that will run parallel to the singing competition. Anyone can compete to write a tune that will be sung by the two finalists, broadening the choices for possible finale songs and, by the way, bringing in a whole new competition for fans to follow. Some of the top songs may also be performed in a Fox special by former "Idols" and finalists. The strategy fits in with Fuller's knack of taking deceptively simple ideas and turning them into valuable properties. "It's the simplicity that makes it powerful," he said.As he talked, Fuller displayed none of the weariness that might be expected from someone who has just endured a punishing weekend jaunt. He had arrived in New York after a flight from London and gone straight to an "Idols Live" concert. The following day he flew to Boston to watch last year's "Idol" champ, Underwood, perform in concert with Kenny Chesney. He traveled the next day to Los Angeles for the taping of "So You Think You Can Dance."*The talk of TV titansDURING his travels, TV critics from around the country had their annual gathering in Pasadena to discuss the new fall TV season, and talk of "American Idol" popped up regularly as network and studio heads acknowledged its undeniable effect on prime time. Controversies that would have put a cloud over most TV shows (alleged feuds, rumors surrounding judge Paula Abdul, legal skirmishes between Fuller and Cowell) only fueled the "American Idol" fire.Fuller admitted that even he is blown away by the show's momentum: "It's all the things you hope — but dare not wish — for," he said.He also is less than pleased with the "Idol" clones. "This year it's just become a joke," he said, referring to ABC's "The One" and similar shows. "It started being flattering. Now it's annoying." He adds with a wry smile: "No one comes close to us."He perked up even more when explaining what sets "American Idol" apart from its imitators: "It's a combination of several different elements. But it all really comes down to the voting. When the viewer votes, it matters. Someone who is just ordinary one day can become the next superstar. Just look at what Kelly Clarkson and Clay Aiken did, what Carrie is doing. It's that empowering of America."*'The tidal wave'MIKE DARNELL, executive vice president of alternative programming and specials for Fox, called Fuller "a genius" for coming up with a show that other networks call "the tsunami, the tidal wave. It just can't be stopped."And Fuller is jubilant over the commercial prowess of Clarkson, the first "Idol" — despite a mini-controversy involving the singer, whose "Breakaway" album is still producing hit singles after selling more than 10 million copies worldwide. When Clarkson won two Grammys in February for female pop vocal performance and pop vocal album, she thanked nearly everyone she had ever come in contact with — with the notable exception of Fuller and "American Idol," sparking suspicion that she was trying to distance herself from the series. She also hired new managers.But Fuller said he never felt slighted by Clarkson. "That was her huge moment. I didn't even notice that she didn't mention me — other people did. She wants to be recognized for her talents. And her win proved to me that America recognized her as a fantastic talent."And though Clarkson is no longer managed by Fuller, she is still under contract to 19 Entertainment, which was involved heavily with "Breakaway." He still applauds her for seeking management "that she is happy with."Besides, Fuller has too many other projects to keep focusing on the "Idol" past."There's not an hour of the day when I'm not thinking of things that I want to do," he said. "And everything seems possible now."

TV Lab

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0804/p11s03-altv.htmlAugust 04, 2006 The Christian Science Monitor Before TV shows air, they have to survive ... The Lab We spend a morning being the guinea pigs at ASI, the firm that does audience testing of new TV shows. By Gloria GoodaleStaff writer of The Christian Science Monitor NORTH HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. Let's be clear: I like volleyball. But when a TV pilot throws three 20-something, scantily clad, superbuff women into a show about an undercover female volleyball team tracking a nefarious kidnapping mob, well, it's the red button for me. That's the spot on my response pad where I tell ASI Entertainment, Tinseltown's oldest and most widely used audience-testing facility, that I would change the channel if I were watching at home.I'm here taking part in a demonstration of the science behind the art of today's entertainment world. Virtually everything that Hollywood produces - TV shows, movies, commercials, even infomercials - is tested here. Though the industry's creative teams cringe at the idea of subjecting their creation to market research, most admit they have no choice since TV shows can cost $4 million per episode and movie budgets often hit nine figures."Given the kind of money involved," says Jonathan Shapiro, executive producer of "Justice," an upcoming show on Fox, "it would be irresponsible not to do it." Industry veteran Tom Werner ("The Cosby Show," "Roseanne") adds, "I'm not happy about it, but I know the networks rely on it."Often, they must also bow to what Shapiro grudgingly calls the wisdom of the group, acknowledging the usefulness of collective wisdom in everything from TV shows to jury testing and political polling. Testing on Mr. Werner's new show, "Happy Hour," revealed results that he says his team already intuited. "The test audiences really liked the character Amanda," he says, referring to a woman who uses comedy to compensate for her insecurities. "So the networks asked us to give her more to do. So, you'll see her character play a bigger role this fall."The independent ASI has been dialing up audience responses ever since 1966, when there were only three TV networks. The team recruits viewers through random phone calls to households within a 50-mile radius of its site, nestled next door to the Television Academy of Arts and Sciences in North Hollywood. Audiences, who are paid between $50 to $75 per person, can be tailored to client demands. Testing a new drama? Bring in the drama fans. Same for sitcoms. If a client wants a Midwest audience, ASI can take the dog-and-pony show on the road, putting together a perfect test group in Chicago or Detroit.The testing process begins in one of the two 48-seat theaters at ASI. Members of the Television Critics Association, invited to ASI for a demonstration, gather in the black screening room, no food or drinks in hand. "The equipment is very sensitive," says Neal LaVine, the theater director. Two large tinted glass panes stare back at us from the front of the room. In a normal test, clients who have paid some $20,000 for two-hours worth of testing watch the proceedings from plush, black-leather chairs behind those windows. Two average-sized TV screens blink down at us from high on the wall. No high-def or giant screens here, because that's not what the average viewer owns, says CEO David Castler. "We're not going to go with plasma to enhance the program," he adds.The seats have fold-up tabletops. Velcroed to the side is a pencil and the wired dial pad with five degrees of "like" to "dislike" on its face. We also have a phone pad of buttons on which I find the red button telling ASI that if I were home, I'd hit the remote.But that's only two minutes or so into the show, which turns out to be an unaired (gee, really?) UPN pilot called "I Spike," from the 2000 season. The show speeds on, full of silly car chases, scantily clad young women, and lots of serious posing and pouting reminiscent of early Aaron Spelling fare. By the time the show finishes, the room has dissolved into banks of hoots and snickers. A graph with falling stock-market-type spider lines shows up on the screen. Mr. Castler explains that the red line represents the women's responses while the blue line shows the men's. When this graph is superimposed in real time over the show itself, the clients can actually see, second by second, exactly which bits the audience liked/disliked."This is probably one of the worst scores I've seen," Castler says, laughing. "The good news is, you're not going to see this on television."The graph tells the story the clients want to know - who likes what (actors, relationships, dialogue, setting, etc). Within two minutes, more than two-thirds of the women in the group had changed the channel. Most of the men, however, hung in to the bitter end. Not surprisingly, women in bathing suits score higher with men, notes Castler. Women's scores, by contrast, tend to rise when characters develop relationships (because women like to watch that sort of interaction).In an actual test with real clients, we would break to fill out questionnaires and then head into a focus-group room to answer specific questions. A TV team will use the data specifics to retool the show, as they did with "Happy Hour." Often, the networks will bring episodes back for another test. They might bring in subsequent episodes to ensure that the series is delivering on the promise of the pilot."We're here to tell you where the weakness is - what we see as the problems, and what we see as the area for development," says Castler.Testing is not infallible. The creative types who shiver at the mere mention of audience testing tell stories about world-altering hits that bombed in the testing barracks. "'Seinfeld' and 'Roseanne' are two good examples," says TV vet Werner, adding that it was only his clout as the producer of "The Cosby Show" that put "Roseanne" on the air relatively unchanged.ASI freely acknowledges this industry truth. "Norman Lear's 'All in the Family' bombed in testing," Castler reveals. But that's part of the point. The TV producers took some of the tips, warmed up the Archie-Edith Bunker relationship a bit, and went on to become perhaps the biggest sitcom in history.

Tupac Studies

Slain rap icon Tupac Shakur will be the subject of a 13-day educational study geared toward his work in film. The study, titled "Tupac Shakur Reinterpreted," will be presented by the British Film Institute and National Film Theater. The event will feature screenings and discussions which will examine Shakur's impact on rap music and mainstream media culture, as well as his overall influence on fans. The MC's first manager, Leila Steinberg, will appear as well as join coordinator Jacqueline Springer for an on-stage debate titled "Tupac-The First Icon of Hip-Hop." The discussion will focus on the significance of Shakur's legacy. Films that will be screened include Shakur's 1992 feature debut Juice as well as his final performance in the dark comedy Gridlock'd. Tupac Shakur Reinterpreted will run Sept. 15-28.
For the full story log on: http://www.allhiphop.com/hiphopnews/?ID=5984

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

August Film Releases

8/4/06
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (Columbia)
The Descent (Lion’s Gate)
The Night Listener (Miramax)
Barnyard (Paramount/Nick)

8/9/06
World Trade Center (Paramount)

8/11/06
Accepted (Universal)
Step Up (Touchstone)
Zoom (Sony)
Pulse (Weinstein Company)

8/18/06
Snakes On A Plane (New Line)
Stormbreaker (MGM)
The Illusionist (Bull’s Eye)
The Salon (C4)
Material Girls (MGM) – Hillary Duff

8/25/06
Beerfest (Warner Bros.)
D.O.A.: Dead or Alive (Dimension)
Idlewild (HBO) – Outkast
Invincible (Walt Disney)
How To Eat Fried Worms (New Line)

August Album Releases

Aug. 1:
Daz Dillinger So So Gangsta (So So Def/Virgin)
DMX Year of the Dog, Again (Sony Urban)
Eamon Love & Pain (First Priority Music/Jive)

Aug. 8:
Breaking Benjamin Phobia (Hollywood Records)
Step Up soundtrack (Jive)
Nina Gordon Bleeding Heart Graffiti (Warner Bros.)
Masta Killa Made in Brooklyn (Nature Sounds)
Ani DiFranco Reprieve (Righteous Babe)
Sigur Ros Saeglopur (Krunk / Filter)

Aug. 15:
Leigh Nash Blue on Blue (One Son Records/Nettwerk)
Christina Aguilera Back to Basics (RCA)
Pete Yorn Nightcrawler (Columbia)
Lyfe Jennings The Phoenix (Columbia)

Aug. 22:
OutKast Idlewild (LaFace)
Starsailor On the Outside (Artists' Addiction Records)
Rogue's Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs & Chanteys (Anti-)
Kelis Kelis Was Here (Jive)
Primal Scream Riot City Blues (Columbia)
The Mars Volta Amputechture (Universal)
Paris Hilton Paris Hilton (Warner Bros )

Aug. 29:
Black Crowes The Lost Crowes (Rhino)
Bob Dylan Modern Times (Columbia)
The Roots Game Theory (Def Jam)
Jessica Simpson A Public Affair (Epic)
Sam Moore Overnight Sensational (Rhino)
Method Man 4:21 ... The Day After (Def Jam)

August Events

Aug. 1: Dixie Chicks @ Madison Square Garden
Aug. 3: World Series Pop
Aug. 3: 2006 Vans Warped Tour @ Camden, N.J. (Tweeter Center) (AFI, Saves The Day, Against Me, Helmet, Less Than Jake, Say Anything, Senses Fail, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, the Academy Is, Underoath)
Aug. 4: Best Week Ever
Aug. 4-6: Lollapalooza in Chicago ((The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Kanye West and Wilco)
Aug. 5-6: Dave Matthews Band @ Randall's Island
Aug. 6: Celebrity Fit Club PREMIERE; Flavor of Love PREMIERE
Aug. 7: All Access: Celeb Weddings
Aug. 11: Toyota Concert Series on Today at Rockefeller Plaza - Chris Brown
Aug. 12: Rock Docs: Tupac Resurrection
Aug. 12-13: Summer Sonic Festival in Tokyo and Osaka (Metallica, Linkin Park, Massive Attack and Daft Punk, Arctic Monkeys, Flaming Lips, Avenged Sevenfold, My Chemical Romance, Stone Sour, Lady Sovereign)
Aug. 13: Celebrity Fit Club; Flavor of Love
Aug. 19: AmsterJam 2006 @ Randall's Island (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Foo Fighters, LL Cool J…)
Aug. 20: Celebrity Fit Club; Flavor of Love
Aug. 20: Teen Choice awards airs live on Fox
Aug. 21: Foo Fighters @ Beacon Theater
Aug. 23: Revenge of the Book Eaters tour at Beacon Theatre (David Byrne, Sufjan Stevens, Death Cab For Cutie's Ben Gibbard, Aimee Mann and Mark Kozelek)
Aug. 23, 29: Mariah Carey @ Madison Square Garden
Aug. 27: Celebrity Fit Club; Flavor of Love
Aug. 27: 58th Annual Emmy Awards airs live on NBC from LA
Aug. 28-Sept.10: US Open Tennis Tournament
Aug. 31: MTV Video Music Awards @ Radio City Music Hall