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St. Louis, MO - September 23, 2022
- I wonder who was the first major recording artist to release an album and not offer it on 8-track tape?
Seriously. There had to be a time when the recording industry made the choice to only provide music on a CD, vinyl and cassette tape. They stopped making 8-track tapes. While I had a bunch of Elvis on 8-track, I had to adapt when we got rid of our last 8-track player. Like others, I had to embrace that change in listening technology.
Media technology and consumer habits are changing rapidly. It is hard to keep up.
I ask that 8-track tape question because of a newspaper column I read online
yesterday that literally made me laugh out loud.Think about that past sentence alone. I read a “newspaper” on a computer screen. Is it really a newspaper then?
Anyway, the columnist who wrote the column is a good guy. I like Dan Caeser, the sports media critic for the lone daily newspaper in my town. Like my friend McGraw Milhaven who is in talk radio at the Big 550 KTRS
, he has a job to do. McGraw is always looking for things to talk about on the radio. He has time to fill every day. It is a grind to keep filling the time.
Same goes for newspaper columnists. For that matter, lump me in that bucket too as a startup founder who has been advised to blog with consistency to drive SEO to our video storytelling website. Hence this post.
I laughed out loud because I remember when Dan Caeser wrote about the local RSN (regional sports network), characterizing it as not being free TV because it was on cable as opposed to broadcast.
Yesterday, Dan's column started this way “ Four times this season, Cardinals games have been shown exclusively on streaming services. There was no traditional television coverage of those contests, on local carrier Bally Sports Midwest or anywhere else.
”
Evidently cable is now traditional TV and streaming is not. Maybe over the air broadcast is the 8-track tape.
Baseball games used to be on over the air broadcast TV like music on 8-track.
When games started going to cable, Dan would write columns about that. His columns had a bit of accusatory slant directed at the Cardinals. How dare you sell the rights to your games to a cable outfit? How dare you deny the rabbit ear crowd of the chance to watch baseball games for free?
The underlying premise is you have a right to watch a baseball game on “free” TV.
I’ll point out that “Free TV” carried ads, which as a now frequent streamer simply annoys me. It is funny when you think about it. I've become a bit bougie about my entertainment in this on demand era. When I watch sports on commercial television, I'm annoyed with all the commercials.
I also have come to expect seeing what I want. It is funny to think about, because I grew up in a world where the games were always on the radio and only occasionally on TV.
I remember listening to Bob Forsch’s no hitter on a handheld transistor radio with an ear piece – hiding it under my pillow so my mom didn’t know I was staying up past my bed time.
Anyway, like most of you, I’ve witnessed the changing media landscape over time.
And then I went to work for the hometown baseball team and learned a lot about the industry dynamics behind the decisions to sell the broadcast rights to carriers. It wasn't that long ago that the Cardinals radio broadcast went from KMOX
to KTRS
and then back to KMOX.
I won’t get into those weeds today with this post. I just want to use it to point out the changing nature of media today and our own hypocrisy with this rapid evolution.
A columnist who works for a paper that used be simply printed and sold, now works for a paper that probably has more readers online. The readers pay the freight with subscriptions and annoying pop ads.
While I prefer to read a printed paper, I only subscribe to the online edition.
As far as TV is concerned, our family cut the cord with cable six or seven years ago.
We cut the cord while I still worked for the St. Louis Cardinals. At that point, I could get Fox Sports Midwest (now Bally’s Sports Midwest
) via the Sling App. Since I worked for the team, I could also stream games through my At Bat app. Nothing was cooler than being at my son's games and streaming the Cardinals on my phone when most couldn't because of black out rules.
I haven't been with the team for a long time now, but still love keeping up with my Cardinals which has been a challenge.
When the pandemic first hit, I'll never forget the time I went to find Fox Sports Midwest
on my Sling app
through my Roku to watch a Blue’s hockey game and realized that it was no longer there. I was pissed. I felt like bad news kept piling on. A fight over money meant I needed to find another alternative if I wanted to get the Blues or Cardinals game.
With all the uncertainty about sports and my bank account at that time, I opted to not pay to get it through YouTube TV or Hulu that had it at the time. I figured there was a good chance there wouldn't even be a baseball season and the Blues had been eliminated from the playoffs.
I really didn’t want to cancel the Sling App
and miss the next season of Yellowstone, so we just maintained the status quo assuming the sports teams would eventually figure out they are losing audience eyeballs and reach agreements with streaming partners.
I’m glad I made that call at that time, because we’ve saved that money and the games are no longer available on those other streaming apps. It is a bummer, but we have made our peace with it.
Sadly, my neighbors are in the same boat. Most don’t get the Cardinals games on the RSN because it isn’t available to them. I think you have to buy the AT&T app or some such thing, but once you live without something long enough you realize you don’t need it.
Postseason games won’t be on the RSN, so we don’t feel like we are missing much with the daily games.
We do get Apple TV+
and a bunch of other streaming channels, so we are one of those households that was able to watch the game. And we do watch when the games are on platforms like Apple TV+.
While Dan Caeser is a good guy who has a column to fill, he is out of touch with reality.
Apple TV+
is very much TV just like Netflix
and Amazon Prime.
Streaming is means of getting a signal. OTT (over the top) is a way of delivering video or audio content on any device. It is no longer the “future,” it is the now.
Consumers want to watch what they want to watch on any device. Nothing annoys me more than not being able to do that.
In interviewing a reporter to join our network yesterday, she shared a story about covering a YouTuber who visited a local mall for a local TV station. Her station was the only one to send a reporter and after she shared her story every other news outlet in their community wanted the footage. How about that?
Celebrities are being born on social media. My 12 year old’s media habits start with his iPhone. YouTube is huge. The largest social media platform on the planet. In my son's world, it is much more relevant than Bally's Sports Midwest.
While the means of distribution have changed, our desire for good entertainment and storytelling hasn’t. The democratization of media has empowered brands and creators to build an audience online in so many different ways and places.
That reality helps a business or non-profit connect with consumers online through video and other means.
The fact that I can write and post this blog for no cost is amazing. Now I have no illusion that more people will read this than a newspaper columnists’ post, but the fact is that it is possible to reach a global audience is amazing.
It may not be “traditional” but that is the new reality.
At some point our digital newspaper ( STLToday.com or the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
) will come to the realization that streaming is TV. Apple TV+
is very much TV. The first clue should be the name.
I’d suggest watching it to see if you agree that it is TV. It is time for our daily newspaper to embrace the reality of our digital world and mothball that 8-track player mindset.
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About Ron Watermon
Ron Watermon is the founder and CEO of STORYSMART, a premium video and motion picture technology startup that empowers anyone to have their stories told professionally while ensuring they retain the intellectual property rights on their productions.
A creative and innovative communications leader with nearly three decades of experience, prior to founding STORYSMART to provide Storytelling for all, Ron Watermon was responsible for modernizing the St. Louis Cardinals communications by leading the team’s investment in video storytelling, brand journalism, fan engagement and social media. Learn more about Ron.
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