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April 30, 2009 10:52 AM PDT

Ross Levinsohn: Hollywood, as you know it, is dead

by Rafe Needleman
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Ross Levinsohn of Velocity Interactive.

(Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

LOS ANGELES--Ross Levinsohn, former president of Fox Interactive Media and now partner at media venture firm Velocity Interactive, spoke to the execs at the OnHollywood conference here Tuesday to deliver a warning to the entertainment industry: "Take action now or be replaced."

The nut of his argument (and hardly news, to be fair) is that media consumption is changing dramatically. The old ways are dying: Newspapers are drying up. Magazine publishing is off. Music revenues are down. Even DVD sales are slowing. And the areas that are growing--content downloading and subscriptions--run at lower margins than the media they're replacing. So it's time for fundamental change.

The good news, he says, is that there are areas of growth: Google searching is up (56 percent year over year), video streams are up (45 percent) and new platforms like Twitter are way up (2,565 percent yearly growth, he said). Three-quarters of Internet users watch online videos every month. Also, three-quarters of the top iPhone apps are games. There is a robust new entertainment economy. It's just not the old entertainment economy.

Levinsohn's favorite numbers: "29 vs. 8," which is the percentage of media consumption time consumers spend online vs. the percentage of ad spending there. Dollars follow eyeballs, he says, and this indicates a huge money-making opportunity for online content. But the old regime in Hollywood will miss the money boat if it doesn't change fast.

He cautions that "If Hollywood chooses not to act now, there will be a whole new set of owners." Those owners: Google, Apple, Cisco, and the like. But do these tech companies want to own Hollywood?

During Levinsohn's talk, I twittered his warning and got a pretty fast @ reply back from Dan Scheinman, SVP of the Media Solutions Group at Cisco. He said, "Cisco does not want to own H'wood! We want to make it $$$." I followed up with him after the conference.

"We're here to build value for Hollywood," Scheinman told me. "We can bring the assets together in a way that helps media companies make money."

Levinsohn likes these numbers.

(Credit: Rafe Needleman/CNET)

"Digitization and broadband are changing forever the consumer usage patterns. The consumer is far more in control," Scheinman said. Some in Hollywood are "trying to preserve existing business models while transitioning to the new world." He said that Cisco, "wants to work with these guys to work them through this," and by "work through this" I think he meant "help them to see the light and change course." But it was clear that Cisco is content to provide infrastructure technology to the entertainment industry. Scheinman doesn't want to see the Silicon Valley switch and router manufacturer in the middle of the content business.

Both Levinsohn and Scheinman quote Jeff Zucker of NBC Universal, who has famously said that in entertainment, analog dollars become digital dimes. Scheinman wants to help turn the tide on the lowering margins of entertainment content, and turn the digital content back into dollars. His prescription to reverse the course of declining margins has three steps:

1. Know the customers--something that's easier with metered and measured online delivery than it is with broadcast.

2. Technology needs to be an enabler, not a burden and not a threat. It's too expensive right now. Running Web sites, paying for bandwidth, and in some cases even paying the utility bills for new media technologies costs too much. Companies need to get aggressive about pushing the cost down.

3. Entertainment companies need to own their own data, which means opening a channel directly to consumers, even if there are middlemen distributors in the value chain.

At the beginning of his OnHollywood keynote, Levinsohn said that it "wouldn't be hard" to chart the correct course for the entertainment industry in the 15 minutes he was allotted to talk. Rather, in 15 minutes he very clearly laid out why the content industries need a financial reinvention. He was very precise about where Hollywood is leaking. Users are consuming content differently. But the important subtext was this: They're still consuming, and they'll still pay, either directly or through vehicles that monetize their attention, for quality entertainment and information.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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by dbargen April 30, 2009 11:14 AM PDT
So the type and quality of content that these outlets put out couldn't possibly play into their downfall.....

Denial is so sad.
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by Orion Blastar April 30, 2009 11:38 AM PDT
We don't want to bail out Hollywood until they have a working business plan that can earn money. If they continue on with a broken business plan, we shouldn't bail them out because they will continue to fail and the bailout money will be wasted.
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by mista77 April 30, 2009 12:50 PM PDT
I would recruit and promote the model McG is using for his current ventures. Besides high quality in-demand content, he could easily shape the next generation of decision makers in HW.
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by kgsbca April 30, 2009 1:37 PM PDT
While Levinsohn does understand the basic threat facing Hollywood's current distribution system, he still parrots the ignorant attitude of the industry: the builders of the Internet want to own Hollywood. It's a common tactic, find a scapegoat for your failures (so people don't notice the blunders you've made), and then attack them.

Cisco, Apple, and google do not want to own hollywood (they're way too smart to want that). All they are trying to do is speed the transition from a time slot-based broadcast over a relatively low speed medium into an on-demand system over high speed broadband. they just want to sell the hardware and software that give consumers more choices and more flexibility at a lower cost. The studios, like any other incompetently run large corporation, just want things to stay the same so they don't have to learn new tricks, and can continue to milk their cash cow.

The work of the Internet companies will not replace Hollywood, but it will eliminate inefficient, parasitic middlemen. If Hollywood decides to focus on what they do best (turn out the video entertainment equivalent of fast food), and let distribution evolve with technology, they can stay in business. But they probably won't.
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by rosslevinsohn April 30, 2009 6:31 PM PDT
Kgsbca -- Appreciate your comment, but would like to clarify something this story doesn't accurately reflect. I actually don't think cisco and the like want to own hollywood, nor did i say that in my speech. They all want to partner or enable elements of hollywood/content. The point i was making specifically was that while News Corp, Disney, CBS et al are retrenching across all categories, Google, Cisco, and Apple were all investing and growing, which will enable them to be further ahead of the incumbants in many areas. This, i believe, is a critical mistake by Studios today.
by Beerfuzz April 30, 2009 7:02 PM PDT
Online content is definately the way of the future. With new products such as Hulu and PlayOn providing content and sites such as thefuzznetwork providing ways to connect using your TV and Xbox 360s or PS3s to view the content on your tv.. who needs cable anymore.
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by aMUSICsite May 1, 2009 1:07 AM PDT
You mean this is the end of Hollywood getting you to pay to watch a movie on the big screen, then buy the video, then pay to watch them on TV. Oh what a shame...

They should go back to mainly making money on cinema then straight to TV/Web/Video for a very knocked down price.
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