An Open Letter To Comedy Central Executives
Dear Forward-Thinking Suits,
Thanks so much for pulling all of the Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert clips off of YouTube. You’ve now rendered a good number of my posts useless — posts that were marketing your shows for free. That’s right, you had thousands of fans, like me, pointing to and contextualizing clips from their blogs, generating millions of page views and legions of new viewers and you killed it because they weren’t your page views.
So dumb.
Let me ask you people a simple question: How much money do you pump into your marketing department annually? I mean, what’s your budget for marketing executives, their minions and external network marketing? Can’t you recognize that whatever percentage you had set aside for TDS and TCS brand awareness (not specific show promos, just awareness campaigns) was becoming a waste of money with the YouTube fans doing our thing? We were doing your jobs for free and doing it better than you ever could have done it yourself!
Come to think of it, maybe you did understand that angle before acting…
See, the way that I view this is that from an organizational standpoint, this type of viral marketing is a perfect opportunity to cut back on traditional marketing budgets and let the web do what the web does. But then again, organizations are made up of people and people need to provide value in order to get paid by the organization.
V.P. Johnson can’t keep that corner office if he has legions of fans doing his work for him at a price that puts him out on the street. So build that wall! Keep them out of our stuff! Send them back to Mexico… er… hm.
Congratulations, again, Comedy Central executives. You’ve proven yourself to be no more forward-thinking than this administration that your talent rails on each week. Someday, your network bosses will understand what this move did to your fan-base, but probably not until a competitor network — one that won’t collude with the rest of the big boys — embraces the web and the people that put food on your plates.
Colbert and Stewart are still my boys, but my passion for your product has dropped immeasurably.
And that’s The Word.
UPDATE: Mark Glaser (MediaShift) updated his open letter to Stephen Colbert with a report that lawyers from Comedy Central are cherry-picking the clips they want taken down from YouTube, possibly in a hardball negotiating move to tweak Google and their new acquisition.
So not all clips have come down. That’s good news. How Comedy Central decides to proceed from here, though, is key.
If they want to negotiate the creation of a channel on YouTube for CC distributed shows and all discrete segments of shows, that move will serve the desires of many CC fans, especially bloggers. The amount of ad revenue they’ll make on viral replays at this point in time pales in comparison to advertising revenue from the TV broadcast itself, but tacking on an ad to the end of a video (as Revver has done with zeFrank) works well for all parties involved.
This could work out for everyone if CC doesn’t get greedy and:
- attempt to add commercials within segments and shows, which are essentially already commercials (running across YouTube and the decentralized web) for their regularly scheduled programs on TV
- police people who upload their own segment edits, instead of chalking up the “lost revenue” as a marketing expenditure.
If Comedy Central can avoid those old media trappings, they just might come out of this as new media players.
Tags: bad customer experience, business, citizen media, Comedy Central, dumb, Jon Stewart, marketing, media, media 2.0, personal, politics, Revver, Stephen Colbert, The Colbert Report, The Daily Show, TV, viral, YouTube, zefrank.6 Responses to “An Open Letter To Comedy Central Executives”
- 1 Pingback on Oct 29th, 2006 at 1:26 pm
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I completely agree.
pulling the clips from youtube has cost comedycentral many fans.
I could not have put it better than this letter put it.
comedycenral: stop pulling your videos!
… Thankyou.
Thankyou for phrasing the derision and disgust so many of us feel towards Comedy Central right now so eloquently.
I was shocked and suprised when i first heard about this. I guess i shouldn’t have been.
Being only a recent fan (of both the Colbert Report and the Daily Show from a country that ONLY gets the Daily Show on it’s cable networks, YouTube was a haven for me for a short while. On YouTube i was able to go back an entire decade. Watch old clips of classic and wonderful moments from the Daily Show, earliest episodes of the Colbert Report- catch up on everything i’ve missed to date. With in a few short days i became a complete fan, desperate to get cable and any dvds and books put out by either show.
YES, even with YouTube i was still willing to spend money. I even frequented the comedy central site to get the latest clips from both shows, as well as watch any older clips i couldn’t find on you tube or that were of horrible quality.
Comedy Central: Go on your own site and (after you deal with the delay, the constant freezing up and crashing, and the same ad run over and over before each clip until you’ve memorised the freaking script!) access the clip where Stephen appears on Jon’s show to put him On Notice. The slow-clap Stephen gives Jon? Same to you.
Congratulations of alienating thousands of fans, and preventing from new ones like me forming. Trully, well done.
I agree completely with Raven, as I am in a very similar situation. I only found out about these two shows because of YouTube. I live abroad, but travel to the States often, twice or three times a year, for weeks at a time. In my last trip, I did not miss a single airing of the Daily Show or the Colbert Report. I bought the Jon Stewart “America” book on tape. I would have bought DVDs had I found any. I was an instant fan.
Not only that. I served as an unpaid promoter of the show. I talked for hours to my friends about these shows. I mailed clips to people so they could get into it too.
Now, I am so disgusted by Comedy Central that, like Jon the day that Stephen changed his name to “Ted Hitler”, I cannot really look look at them since I found this out. The stupidity of Comedy Central’s executives is so insurmountable that I wonder if they even know or understand what a blog is and the power it has. I wonder if they believe the internet is a series of tubes.
And yes, their website SUCKS. It is slow, annoying, and unsatisfying. It gets me frustrated. And frustrated isn’t funny. And that’s also the Word.