Striking Hollywood Writers Help Online Video?
November 5, 2007 by Mike Abundo
Filed under Computers, Movies, Television
Duncan Riley has an interesting theory about the ongoing strike by the Writers Guild of America: by damming up Hollywood’s creative juices, the strike will help online video.
The strike poses an interesting challenge for television at a time where internet usage has surpassed TV viewing time in most homes. Users are already choosing online entertainment over TV, how many more will switch off their televisions when their favorite shows stop going to air? These eyeballs present a real opportunity for online content creators at all levels; from the VC funded video startups through to the DIY part timers. The trends in viewer numbers have all been headed online to this point, this strike could well accelerate this trend, particularly if it lasts over the long term.
If Duncan’s right, then I hope boneheaded Hollywood execs harden their hearts against this strike. Maybe then, all those movie and TV writers will become YouTube partners and Revver revenue sharers, diverting their creative juices from Hollywood into online video.
Apparently, they can produce their own videos anyway. Check out their video below promoting the strike.
(Video via Craig Rubens.)















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3 Responses to “Striking Hollywood Writers Help Online Video?”Trackbacks
Check out what others are saying about this post...[...] Last month, Duncan Riley got me thinking that striking Hollywood writers would move to online video. Looks like the exodus has begun. [...]
[...] long suspected that the TV writers’ strike will drive people to online video. Now we have the numbers to [...]
[...] The first three acts of Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, the online tragicomic musical by Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) starring Neil Patrick Harris (Doogie Howser, M.D., Starship Troopers) and Felicia Day (The Guild), are now streaming free on Hulu. Whedon wrote Dr. Horrible during the WGA strike, verifying Duncan Riley’s prediction of WGA talent being diverted from Hollywood to the Web. [...]