Friday, October 12th, 2007

Webcastr debuts in Times Square.
(Get In magazine) — Honestly, I don’t really need to see episode 47 of “Dudes Tossing Themselves Down Staircases”. Nor am I really interested in the latest “What My Cat Did This Week”. As entertaining as YouTube and other video sharing sites can be, the influx of amateur video featuring whatever people find interesting in their day to day lives has gotten more than a little old (can you feel your IQ dropping?). With all the various digital recorders and web cams designed specifically with YouTube in mind, it’s bound to get worse.
But wait, salvation is in sight! Alright, not salvation, but at least something better. Webcastr.com is a new “worldwide internet portal for video channels”. Webcastr does not intend to be yet another YouTube clone. In fact, founder Tim Devine calls it “The Future of Television”, and it very well may be.
Webcastr is a collection of channels, each featuring its own content. Music, Politics, Fashion, Cars, Entertainment, Babes, Cooking, Sports and Tech represent just a small example of the diverse offerings to be found on Webcster.
Regular television outlets are also hopping on the bandwagon, with CBS News and MTV News featured on the site, with more deals in the works. Pretty much anything you could be interested in can be found on Webcastr. These are not random posts from grimy teens in their mom’s basement. These are professional (or semi-professional) videos, which makes all the difference in the world. Currently Webcastr already has over 200 content providers, and they intend to keep adding to that list.
Webcastr has already made a splash on the international stage. Earlier this month they got their hands on a pre-release version of the Britney Spears video “Gimme More”. The response was so massive, according to Devine “We had traffic from 93 countries in a little over six hours”. Of course, the site crashed – it was still in beta. Now upgraded to compensate for the increased traffic Webcastr is equipped to handle the teeming masses without a hiccup.
To make things even easier Webcastr offers a widget that can be added to your Myspace, Facebook or blog that will automatically update with videos from whatever is most popular at the moment.
Webcastr seems to be trying all manner of things to stay ahead in the popularity game, obviously hoping to capitalize off the success of leaking the Spears video. They recently released another leak, this time of Will.i.am’s Remix of “I Got It From My Mama” - featuring a sample of Daft Punk’s “Around The World” - which was shot before he learned the boys in Daft Punk denied him the right to use the sample. Oops.
The latest leaked video is a cheap and effective to keep attention focused Webcaster. On the Internet, being the first is often the best way to get noticed. If Webcastr can keep it up they may be able to focus that attention into a dedicated following. Like all Web 2.0 prodigies, Webcastr has a drive for World Domination. Or at the very least, Internet domination. Devine has said “We envision a day when you will be able to see all the world’s TV live and online. We plan to be a conduit for that.”Whether Webcastr succeeds or not is yet to be seen but this is definitely a cool new way to get your Internet video fix, so check it out!
Posted in Latest News | No Comments »
Thursday, October 11th, 2007

(Forbes.com) — LOS ANGELES, Oct 11, 2007 - Webcastr.com, a new portal of Internet television programming set to launch next month, was inundated by viewers last Friday morning when it featured the new Britney Spears video, “Gimme More” prior to its official release this week. Word of the video leak quickly spread throughout the blogosphere, eventually landing on popular celebrity gossip sites like “Pop Culture Madness” and “Pink is the New Blog.” From there, interest in the video spread worldwide with people seeking a chance to view the new clip before its official release date, causing the site, which is still in beta testing, to crash before it even had a chance to officially launch. “We were totally caught off guard by the global magnitude of the response,” explains Webcastr founder Tim Devine.
“We had traffic from 93 countries in a little over six hours and had to immediately get more server capacity weeks before we anticipated needing it.”
While the service was being restored, Webcastr locked in additional coverage of the Spears’ video from TMZ.com to satisfy the thousands of fans that were still accessing the site throughout the weekend.
A second test came yesterday, when the site was mentioned in a front page story on the Huffington Post for airing a series of videos from the John Edwards’ campaign that had mysteriously disappeared from the web two years ago. This time the site was able to handle the surge in traffic generated via the popular blog.
Launching next month, Webcastr delivers the best of Internet Television covering the fields of news, sports, music, celebrity, politics and more with over 200 channel providers already on-board.
Founded by former Sony Music Executive, Tim Devine, the company serves as a counter to popular clip sharing sites such as YouTube and Revver. “We are an outlet for the explosive new area of Internet TV as well as presenting the best in clip coverage from professional and pro-am sources,” says Devine. “People are tired of sorting thru amateur clips just to find what they need. We seek to deliver the kind of quality content that viewers find most vital on a daily basis.”
Posted in Latest News, Press | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

Huffingtonpost.com
A set of short documentary film “webisodes” made for former Sen. John Edwards prior to his presidential candidacy continues to weave a curious web, this time involving the filmmaker.
The videos, which cost Edwards’ One America Committee $114,461, were produced in 2006 by an aspiring actress/producer named Rielle Hunter, who proposed the idea to the senator in a bar in New York City. The objective was to give viewers - and presumably voters - an authentic look at the North Carolinian. But shortly after Edwards declared his White House aspirations, the footage all but disappeared from public view. After the Huffington Post wrote about the webisodes, the videos resurfaced, both on YouTube and Webcastr.com, although the anonymous individual who reposted them (user name: “MissingVideos”) has not responded to emails.
Little was known about Hunter as well. Despite working in the movie business, she had virtually no Internet presence save for an article in Newsweek about her filming of Edwards and an uninformative IMDB entry for her work on the short film Billy Bob and Them (2000).
This anonymity, it turns out, wasn’t always the case. The Huffington Post has uncovered a deleted website that formerly belonged to Hunter. Titled “Being Is Free,” the site was last updated on April 22, 2007, roughly twenty days after Edwards’ One America Committee made its final payment to Hunter’s company, Midline Groove Productions.
There is virtually no mention of filmmaking or politics on the site. And there is little indication as to what Hunter did professionally - beyond an involvement in various spiritual quests - before she and her partner, Mimi Hockman, started Midline Groove Production in the spring of 2006. As Colin Weil, a consultant to the Edwards webisodes told the Huffington Post: “Neither of them had done tons and tons of stuff before hand… The whole [Edwards’ taping] was pretty organic.”
On the deleted pages, the 44-year-old Hunter (formerly known as Lisa Druck) discusses her former hard partying days, her search for enlightenment, and her issues with drugs and debt. There is a 2005 interview she did with one-time boyfriend Jay McInerney, in which the celebrated novelist reveals that Hunter was the basis for Alison Poole, the main character of his book, Story of My Life.
“It was narrated in the first person,” McInerney writes in the intro to the interview, “from the point of view of an ostensibly jaded, cocaine-addled, sexually voracious 20-year old who was, shall we say, inspired by Lisa [aka Rielle].”
The two go on to discuss Hunter’s life after the book’s publication. Here’s an excerpt (the full interview is available here):
Hunter: I thought I was going to LA to be an actress and to get away from New York because I was doing so many drugs. We always think we’re going somewhere for some particular reason, and it turns out that that isn’t the reason at all
McInerney: Is LA less druggy than New York?
Hunter: Oh yeah. Actually the reason it was less druggy was because someone referred me to a healer who did a clearing on my energy field. I was in a state of ecstasy for about a week and realized what I was looking for, in terms of medication, was inside of me; it was a higher bliss. With that clearing, all desire for drugs or alcohol vanished. I became sober overnight. And then I became a spiritual seeker, addicted to a higher consciousness, addicted to enlightenment.
So why was Hunter’s website - which had no material related to her work with Edwards or the Edwards’ campaign - taken down? Emails and calls to Midline Groove Productions went unanswered.
Moreover, why did Edwards choose someone with limited film experience to document his behind-the-scenes campaign presence - “the real John Edwards”? The Senator’s campaign, likewise, did not return calls requesting comment.
And was the more than $100,000 spent by Edwards’ One American Committee - itself dedicated to fighting poverty and lifting Americans into the middle class - worth it?
According to several experts on the topic, the project was unique, portraying the senator in a positive informal light that could potentially benefit his presidential campaign. But the cost of the films, they say, was higher than that of traditional political video.
“In terms of politics it’s a lot. In terms of non-political production it is chump change,” said Jeremy Thompson, a Democratic media consultant, who works for the organization Reelpolitik. “The combination of how much was paid, the experience factor and how many pieces [Midline] made, made the whole thing a bit surprising.”
Posted in Latest News, Press | No Comments »