Rhino Records HomeStore News And Notes Fun About Rhino Help My Cart
CDs DVD and Video Vinyl Store Collectibles: Rhino HandmadeWireless: Music for your cell phone
Newsletter

Sign up here and we'll let you know what’s up

(optional)
HTML Text
More Lefsetz Articles

[2] comments


The Lefsetz Letter

The YouTube Deal

by Bob Lefsetz

You can't play by the rules.

Now when it comes to speeding and not paying your taxes, you're fucked. You just can't beat the system. Questioning the laws will do you no good. But everybody knows that copyright is the tool of bullies and the present laws are completely outmoded/not in sync with digital reality. If you played by the rules, you'd never have any progress. The only hope is to strike out into the land of infringement and take your chances.

First there's the issue of licenses. Seems reasonable. You ask copyright holders to use their work for a payment in return and a deal is struck. But if you believe this, you've never broken bread with an entertainment executive, whose main goal is to keep things exactly the way they are, they HATE surprises. So, forgo licenses completely. Build your enterprise, gain traction, and deal with the fallout. And, if you're lucky, the copyright holders will realize that you truly are their new best friend and allow you stay in business.

The model for this is Napster. Not the newfangled high burn rate operation, but the original Shawn Fanning sued by Metallica company. The best thing that ever happened to the music industry. That one.

Best thing that ever happened to the music industry?

OF COURSE! Because it exposed people to new acts, it blew up those already known by the public, it made available music that hadn't seen a retail store in years, it got people EXCITED about music. But, the music execs, the first ones to experience this model, shut it down and killed it. And CD sales went from their highest ever to their now deflated rate.

Despite all the chest-thumping by Edgar Bronfman, Jr. and Eric Nicoli, the failure to license Napster was single-handedly the worst decision ever made in the history of the music business. And it will haunt the major labels forever. At best, the iTunes Music Store is a CD replacement business. Copy-protected tracks for the same aliquot price as songs on a CD. Furthermore, with free acquisition opportunities rampant, with new P2P services and IM and hard drive swapping, killing Napster was like killing a fly in a swarm, utterly futile and irrelevant.

Now, a couple of years and a couple of changes behind the music industry, the TV business has been hit. With YouTube.

No self-respecting, law-abiding Fortune 500 company was going to steal copyrights, which is what YouTube did to build itself. The landscape was left to this renegade company, willing to bet its ENTIRE company on the edge of legality.

And what happened with YouTube? The EXACT SAME THING that happened with Napster. Suddenly, digital exposition, FOR FREE, blew up underlying copyrighted material/shows. The classic case being "Lazy Sunday" from SNL. After MILLIONS of viewings on YouTube, ratings for SNL WENT UP! Sure, it was all based on copyright infringement, but if said law-breaking had not taken place, SNL wouldn't have made all that extra MONEY! Because exposure begets revenue. The more people who know about something, the more people who are interested in buying it.

So what did NBC do?

They told YouTube to take the material down.

But now NBC has woken up. Rather than build from scratch their own site, a la Pressplay, a place with fewer eyeballs that no one cares about, they've thrown in with the company with all the action, where all the people are, YouTube. They've made a deal with YouTube, they realize it's to their ADVANTAGE!

This is business. And the music business is run on intimidation. But hell, we now know that paradigm is over, look at the labels' failure to have prices raised at the iTunes Music Store. The labels' business will implode just as IBM's did. Sure, the majors have the catalog, but when it comes to new material everybody doesn't want to play by the old rules, they don't want to be kept down, they want to do it themselves and throw in with tech players THEIR AGE WHO UNDERSTAND THE NEW MODEL!

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115137083424491406.html?mod=todays_us_page_one

Bob Lefsetz, Santa Monica-based industry legend, is the author of the e-mail newsletter, "The Lefsetz Letter". Famous for being beholden to no one, and speaking the truth, Lefsetz addresses the issues that are at the core of the music business: downloading, copy protection, pricing and the music itself. His intense brilliance captivates readers from Steven Tyler to Rick Nielsen to Bryan Adams to Quincy Jones to EVERYBODY who's in the music business. Never boring, always entertaining, Mr. Lefsetz's insights are fueled by his stint as an entertainment business attorney, majordomo of Sanctuary Music's American division and consultancies to major labels.

While Rhino may occasionally disagree with some of Bob's opinions, we certainly agree with his right to state them. At the bottom of each column we give you, the reader, the opportunity to respond and we encourage you to do so. We will post select comments.


LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.

A word about submissions: We post what you give us, so please don't include your email address or any personal info. Your comments reach Rhino, not necessarily the writer, so don't expect a reply from them (or us, see our help section for contact info). We gather and post your submissions in batches, so do expect a short delay. And don't get bent if we edit your comments. We probably won't, but we reserve that right.


Comments:

thank god someone gets it

YES! that's EXACTLY right! Bob hit the nail straight on the head in this one. I commend the guy. No one seems to realize that shutting down one site won't stop things entirely. And about things bein more popular when they're on YouTube and such; I can vouche for that. I give my props to Bob.




Let I Bleed Book

What's Inside the Rhino Magazine

Subscribe to Feed

Subscribe in Bloglines

home :: news & notes :: store :: about rhino :: fun stuff :: help :: my cart :: privacy policy :: terms of service