As a financial professional working for large media
companies over the past two decades, I’ve witnessed first-hand one of the most
gut-wrenching transformations of any business sector. At the core of this has been the emergence of
transformative technologies that have changed the way we live. While the transformation continues to accelerate, we can carefully take
a step back and attempt to comprehend this media evolution utilizing the frameworks
of media theorists such as Marshall Mcluhan.
Mcluhan studied media evolution from the invention of the alphabet in
ancient times, to the age of the printing press about 2,500 years later, to the
emergence of industrial media technologies in the early part of the 20th
century and culminating with the dominance of television driving the “Global
Village” at the time of his death in 1980. In suggesting an approach
to understanding the effects of media, McLuhan referred to Edgar Alan Poe’s A Descent into the
Maelstrom, a short story in which a
sailor survives the forces of a catastrophic whirlpool by studying the objects
floating around him and understanding the nature of the currents. As much as Mcluhan dissected the
acceleration of these changes over several centuries, I’m sure he would still
have been stunned by recent history.
Let’s consider that few of us had internet connections 20 years ago and
Google and Facebook are less than 15 years in the making. While traditional media companies and global
ad agencies struggle, the lower half of Manhattan is now flourishing with hundreds of media startups that promise
transformative communication experiences including gaming, precision marketing,
advertising immersion and instant product development. How can we create models and metaphors that
can get us ahead of the curve?
THE FRAMEWORK
Let’s explore what drives media evolution under
these conditions, incorporating the insights of McLuhan and other media
theorists. First, a challenge to a traditional medium by a new medium will
create competition. This is harmless while the emerging medium is in its early
stage, and the traditional medium modestly gains by simply leveraging its
content on the new medium or using it as a tool within its larger framework.
Eventually, the upstart gains momentum and creates innovations on a large scale
that become more threatening. The traditional medium will need to evolve into
something more engaging in order to retain its old audience or grow new ones.
The most successful survivors often transform themselves by utilizing the most
relevant features of their new media challengers or the new media environment,
finding within them new opportunities. They will create a more powerful “ratio
of the senses,” a unique synesthesia, that engage audiences
through the extension, repression and rebalancing of sight, sound, touch,
and/or intellectual insight (those that simply recycle the content of another
medium will rarely succeed). And the new mediums can’t simply destroy the old out
of hand; they often need their content to develop and expand. If the
environment can retain a healthy level of symbiosis with new media driving traditional
media to innovate while new media finds powerful ways to leverage traditional media
content, major advances can be achieved in human experience and profitability.
But the ability to create and retain symbiosis is influenced by the
acceleration introduced by new media. If change occurs too drastically,
disequilibrium occurs where new media gains at a phenomenal rate as traditional
media collapses. Seeking to find remnants of its lost audience, traditional
media may revert to satisfy base and even dark forces. Or it may shrink to
satisfy a more specialized audience, remaining true to its nature at a much
smaller scale. Let’s apply this
framework to the development of an early 20th century media transformation. Then we’ll attempt to bring this learning into
the modern whirlpool.
1890s TO
1950s - VAUDEVILLE TO THE INTEGRATED
MUSICAL
Vaudeville, a variety-oriented mix of music and
comedy, became the main form of mass entertainment as the 19th Century turned
into the 20th. One of its great impresarios, Florenz Ziegfield, would rise from
his success at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition in Chicago to transform the
medium. As Stefan Kanfer states in the City
Journal, vaudeville “was the most democratic popular art in American
history.” While one might consider these purely visual experiences, these were
more in line with the tactile, audio tradition involving audience interaction.
Like all forms of media, vaudeville evolved from raw, rough-edged beginnings.
The audience would be encouraged to dance, laugh, boo and throw their groceries
at intentionally bad acts, often while imbibing alcohol.
Vaudeville dominated until the emergence of new
media form, cinema. In its nascent
stage, cinema was shown on small machines in nickelodeon parlors and took the
form of one brief act in a list of features in a vaudeville show. Vaudeville initially
swallowed cinema into its framework but in a matter of years cinema would
devour vaudeville. Its temperature as a medium heated up quickly as it evolved
from the novelty of “actualities” to the fascination of story-telling, assisted
by the techniques of close-ups, irises, and associative editing. It was also more economical for consumers and
entrepreneurs to engage in the exchange of film rather than the higher cost of
live entertainment. So what happened to vaudeville? The force of new media
pressured it to evolve into something more engaging – spectacular shows with
more elegant staging, costumes, and more polished talent that commanded higher
prices. Ziegfeld created his famous “Follies” revue in 1907, named after
a newspaper column called “Follies of the Day.” This was a variety show with a
magic ratio of music, comedy, dance and beauty that lasted for over two
decades.
The next major threat arrived about a decade later
in the form of sound. Radio at first was considered a novelty as well and
recording devices were primitive and expensive. The musicians writing and
playing for vaudeville served a subservient role within the vaudeville/revue
framework, merely supporting the stars of the medium that sang and danced to
their melodies. Live vaudeville and revues modestly gained at first from radio
and records by featuring its stars within the new mediums. But once sound
technologies in the form of radio and phonographs enable mass consumption,
music in its own right became an elevated art form, creating another rebalancing of the
ratios. Let’s take the case of George
Gershwin, Jerome Kern and the team of Rodgers and Hart. Writing
for vaudeville shows, Gershwin generated songs that grew virally into hits with
the assistance of radio and records. He was a pioneer in the mashing together
of several musical forms; ragtime, jazz, classical, dance, aided by the proliferation of sound made
available be recorded music. Jerome Kern was a trailblazer who believed that
the “book” could drive the musical revue into a coherent form rather than be
subservient to melody and dance. Richard Rodgers and his lyricist partner
Lorenz Hart, a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism, aspired to create
more witty, satirical shows known as intimate revues.
Now that the more immediate aspects of live music and comedy were supplanted by radio, intensifying the pressure already exerted by cinema, vaudeville-driven live entertainment again needed to become more engaging. As composers like Gershwin, Kern, Rodgers and Cole Porter grew in prestige through the expansion of sound technology, they were empowered to rise from their subservient role within the vaudeville/revue format. Working closely with their lyricists, the written word would assist melody in creating a more powerful cultural force. By the late twenties, the American story-driven musical was born with breakthrough shows like Strike Up the Band composed by George Gershwin and Showboat, composed by Jerome Kern and produced by Florenz Ziegfield. By this time, the visionary Ziegfield had realized that his standard formula of melody, spectacle, beauty and dance could no longer stand out in a world dominated by movies and sound. In 1931, Gershwin’s musical Of Thee I Sing with a book by George S. Kaufman would become the first musical to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Let’s consider that a Pulitzer is usually an honor granted to creators of plays and novels. Its bestowment on Gershwin and Kaufman is a testament to how the integrated musical was driven by a shift in ratio to the written word.
Now that the more immediate aspects of live music and comedy were supplanted by radio, intensifying the pressure already exerted by cinema, vaudeville-driven live entertainment again needed to become more engaging. As composers like Gershwin, Kern, Rodgers and Cole Porter grew in prestige through the expansion of sound technology, they were empowered to rise from their subservient role within the vaudeville/revue format. Working closely with their lyricists, the written word would assist melody in creating a more powerful cultural force. By the late twenties, the American story-driven musical was born with breakthrough shows like Strike Up the Band composed by George Gershwin and Showboat, composed by Jerome Kern and produced by Florenz Ziegfield. By this time, the visionary Ziegfield had realized that his standard formula of melody, spectacle, beauty and dance could no longer stand out in a world dominated by movies and sound. In 1931, Gershwin’s musical Of Thee I Sing with a book by George S. Kaufman would become the first musical to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Let’s consider that a Pulitzer is usually an honor granted to creators of plays and novels. Its bestowment on Gershwin and Kaufman is a testament to how the integrated musical was driven by a shift in ratio to the written word.
And then another breakthrough. Just as the
integrated musical moved forward, movies began to talk and sing. The ratios would rebalance again. Cinema now
served vision and hearing, raising the potential for human experience. And of
course the most endearing form of sound is music. From the beginning, Broadway
was the content of sound cinema. The Jazz Singer starring the vaudevillian Al Jolson and
featuring many of his most renowned songs, was the first major sound film.
Broadway melodramas such as Forty Second Street and Gold Diggers of
1933, as well as the Times Square centered fables of Damon
Runyon were often the story lines of early talking cinema. The Broadway
choreographer Busby Berkeley, a pioneer in the intersection between Broadway
and Hollywood, would powerfully integrate dance, film and music by staging
musical numbers that spilled off the stage into an expanded cinema space. By the early 1930s, the silent film was
essentially dead.
The power of sound cinema would now drive a rebalancing
of the sense ratios inherent to the integrated musical through the 1930s and
into the early 1940s. The most
successful team of this era, Rodgers and Hammerstein, were creative forces in
the first integrated musicals of the 1920s. Oscar Hammerstein II, a
contemporary of Lorenz Hart at Columbia, would replace him as the lyricist
partner to Richard Rodgers. This team manifested itself less as a lyricist
matched to a composer and more as an integrated dramatic force. There can be no
doubt that the media around them had an impact. Radio had matured to become a
standard in every home and swallowed live vaudeville music and comedy routines.
Sound cinema had now matured to provide a more powerful ratio of the senses
with more engaging story-telling (written word), cinematography (visual),
character development (visual matched to written word), editing (visual/tactile)
and musical score (sound). Not only were these mediums gaining cohesiveness,
they were churning out content at a breakneck speed. Film historians believe
1939 was the greatest year for the American film (The Wizard of Oz,
Gone with the Wind and Stagecoach to name a few of the
year’s best). Television was on the horizon, growing as another media
competitor in the early forties. And of course Rodgers and Hammerstein were
witnesses to the evolution of light shows in Times Square over their decades of
work within the district.
With Oklahoma in 1943, Rodgers and Hammerstein would achieve a more powerful ratio of the senses in live theater. The role of the written word expanded to become the dominant force; the book in Oklahoma is a fairly literal adaptation of the play Green Grow the Lilacs. Music and lyrics primarily serve the purpose of driving drama and character; the director Rouben Mamoulian articulated this as dialogue to music, or speech becoming song. The show’s score is outstanding, but it could be argued that many of Rodgers’ hits from the two preceding decades are just as endearing. However, because of the drive to create depth in story and character, his earlier work rarely comes close in emotion and mood. As Meryle Secrest stated in her biography of Richard Rodgers, Oklahoma’s power was more than just the continuing integration of song and story that had been ongoing for decades. It created that unique synethesia:
“Oklahoma’s uniqueness stemmed from the extent to which song, dance, story, costumes, scenery, and lighting had coalesced into the kind of total theatre so often extolled in theory and so difficult to achieve in fact. As Mark Steyn wrote, ‘Rodgers and Hammerstein …fused the naturalism of the straight play, the musicality of the operetta, the color and imagery of musical comedy lyrics and the emotional sweep of dance.”
Going forward, musicals would continue to debut in a wide variety and intensity of sense ratios. Many will achieve success merely based on their vaudevillian mix of music and comedy while others will thrive by showcasing dance. But the most memorable achieve a powerful ratio utilizing the diverse elements of drama and music. Let’s explore further the powerful mix of sensory stimulation in the musical West Side Story. Its literary source is Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet set to the gang wars of the city’s Upper West Side. Dance is an empowering motif, used to convey sexual awakening, satire in the way of gestures, and violent emotions. The grit of the streets comes alive through soaring melodies, creating a glorification of dense urban life. But it is the drive of the story, supported by these elements, that creates the depth of emotion.
With Oklahoma in 1943, Rodgers and Hammerstein would achieve a more powerful ratio of the senses in live theater. The role of the written word expanded to become the dominant force; the book in Oklahoma is a fairly literal adaptation of the play Green Grow the Lilacs. Music and lyrics primarily serve the purpose of driving drama and character; the director Rouben Mamoulian articulated this as dialogue to music, or speech becoming song. The show’s score is outstanding, but it could be argued that many of Rodgers’ hits from the two preceding decades are just as endearing. However, because of the drive to create depth in story and character, his earlier work rarely comes close in emotion and mood. As Meryle Secrest stated in her biography of Richard Rodgers, Oklahoma’s power was more than just the continuing integration of song and story that had been ongoing for decades. It created that unique synethesia:
“Oklahoma’s uniqueness stemmed from the extent to which song, dance, story, costumes, scenery, and lighting had coalesced into the kind of total theatre so often extolled in theory and so difficult to achieve in fact. As Mark Steyn wrote, ‘Rodgers and Hammerstein …fused the naturalism of the straight play, the musicality of the operetta, the color and imagery of musical comedy lyrics and the emotional sweep of dance.”
Going forward, musicals would continue to debut in a wide variety and intensity of sense ratios. Many will achieve success merely based on their vaudevillian mix of music and comedy while others will thrive by showcasing dance. But the most memorable achieve a powerful ratio utilizing the diverse elements of drama and music. Let’s explore further the powerful mix of sensory stimulation in the musical West Side Story. Its literary source is Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet set to the gang wars of the city’s Upper West Side. Dance is an empowering motif, used to convey sexual awakening, satire in the way of gestures, and violent emotions. The grit of the streets comes alive through soaring melodies, creating a glorification of dense urban life. But it is the drive of the story, supported by these elements, that creates the depth of emotion.
1990s TO TODAY – EVOLUTION OF NEWS AND ENTERTAINMENT ON THE INTERNET
So
what does West Side Story have to do with Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg? Let’s consult the framework and the transformation
of sense ratios from the dawn of the internet to today. The commercial internet emerged in the 1990s
as a novelty, a new platform to read news, exchange messages and view photos,
but the technology was slow and required enormous computing power. At first, traditional publications gained
modestly with new audiences by offering their content on line for free. When the first dotcom boom emerged,
traditional media gained as internet startups paid liberally to promote their products in print
and on television. Impresarios of traditional media such as Sumner Redstone interpreted
the emerging medium as a platform that they could control in their overall
framework, proclaiming that “Content is King.”
With content as the driver, they could control the audience and drive it
across their own integrated platforms (portal model). The late nineties was a
period of hype and profits for traditional media benefiting from the promotion
of the internet and simultaneously creating huge mergers attempting to
integrate content across platforms (AOL/Time Warner, Viacom/CBS).
In the new millennium, the internet bubble burst but the first viable enterprises of the new medium emerged. They were based however upon powerful new functionality rather than content – search engines, shopping crawlers, auction sites, smart phones. Steve Jobs emerged as the Ziegfield of the era, innovating new products on an extraordinary scale. Early on, it could be argued that the migration of media forms to the internet was linear; first text, then sound, then photos, then video. But as the speed of computing accelerated, all forms of media were swallowed rapidly as cinema had once swallowed all forms of live content. This accelerated assimilation created a rather chaotic medley of media hybrids, one we are still coming to terms with, but no doubt has driven a more powerful ratio of the senses for online consumers.
In the new millennium, the internet bubble burst but the first viable enterprises of the new medium emerged. They were based however upon powerful new functionality rather than content – search engines, shopping crawlers, auction sites, smart phones. Steve Jobs emerged as the Ziegfield of the era, innovating new products on an extraordinary scale. Early on, it could be argued that the migration of media forms to the internet was linear; first text, then sound, then photos, then video. But as the speed of computing accelerated, all forms of media were swallowed rapidly as cinema had once swallowed all forms of live content. This accelerated assimilation created a rather chaotic medley of media hybrids, one we are still coming to terms with, but no doubt has driven a more powerful ratio of the senses for online consumers.
Despite billion dollar efforts, traditional media companies failed to work
these new technologies into their own
framework. On the contrary, internet and mobile
technologies worked traditional media into their framework. Newspapers and magazines are disassembled on
the web and consumed more on the unit level rather than the as a cohesive
product (the ITunes model). Even when
kept intact, they often must embed themselves in the framework of a tech company (apps for
example that take a huge cut of the profits).
The disassembly of the product commoditizes news and entertainment
offerings and the playing field is blurred across long-standing publications,
emerging publishers via blogs, news aggregators, and hybrid aggregator/news
sites supplementing content with
inexpensive freelance contributions. Advertising migrates to the web drawn by medium-specific methods
that are less expensive and more
measurable (Key word advertising and ad networks). Like cinema’s influence on live entertainment
a hundred years ago, the exchange mechanism rebalances and traditional media
dollars translate into digital pennies.
Like the composer elevated from its subservient role in vaudeville/revues,
the programmer/engineer is elevated from the subservient role in news and
entertainment organizations. The content of publications is influenced by the
enabling technology and the engineer’s role is nearly as powerful in the creative
process as the journalist.
Add to this now the rapid growth of social media and we witness another rebalancing
of the sense ratios. The integration of
mass audience participation through direct content and commentary changes the
landscape further into a kind of cyber-vaudeville. Despite all the efforts to organize and
control this limitless environment, we have reverted back in many ways to a no holds barred variety show, much like Poe’s whirlpool. We have entered a state where tremendous
amounts of information are available to us and while the content is becoming easier
to navigate, it is greatly varied in quality.
We can communicate across several platforms with anyone on the globe and
we can access and contribute to content wherever we go. Hundreds of technologies are emerging in the
hope of creating more order within this lumascape, but many may be increasingly
disruptive as well.
WHAT’S NEXT?
As fragmented and chaotic as the landscape now exists, I
believe those who will best succeed will find opportunities to regain a higher level
of symbiosis, benefiting their own interests and society in general. We are already
seeing this in the way content farms, entities creating fairly generic content simply to game search results, have
been conscientiously knocked down in search algorithms for better quality content. While Google, Facebook, Apple and a few other
monoliths dominate the lumascape, their models need healthy startup
technologies and quality content players, amateur and professional,
to sustain growth. Whether a traditional media company, new media startup
or growing technology company, an entity should be looking to see how it can integrate
various emerging technologies, services and content into its framework.
While we will elaborate on specifics in future posts, here are some considerations:
*Weighing the ratio of text, video, photos and other content on the site to create deeper engagement. Great content is key, but establishing a unique synesthesia will be increasingly critical in this fragmented world. Let’s consider that once the ratio shifted to the book (plot/story) in musicals, an intriguing story was needed to drive the song and dance. In an opposite way today, written content needs to acquire qualities akin to song and dance in order to better stand out. And ratios will need to be different based upon the nature of each varying device. For example, an entity may offer a certain mobile experience that drives the audience to the” theatre” of the desktop for the full experience.
*Weighing the ratio of text, video, photos and other content on the site to create deeper engagement. Great content is key, but establishing a unique synesthesia will be increasingly critical in this fragmented world. Let’s consider that once the ratio shifted to the book (plot/story) in musicals, an intriguing story was needed to drive the song and dance. In an opposite way today, written content needs to acquire qualities akin to song and dance in order to better stand out. And ratios will need to be different based upon the nature of each varying device. For example, an entity may offer a certain mobile experience that drives the audience to the” theatre” of the desktop for the full experience.
*Coming to grips with the fact that this is a world of hybrids,
intersections between forms of communication, content and facilitating
technologies. Eventually the most
compelling of hybrids becomes a new standard.
In its day, Gershwin’s music was considered hybrid yet now we consider his masterpieces
to exemplify the “Gershwin touch.” Sound
cinema was considered a hybrid in its early stages and many considered it a
novelty of minor disruption, yet within a few years the silent film was dead. Google at first was a cross between computing
and a catalogue of websites, yet in a short time we became reliant on web
search and googling became a verb. And
the I-phone was a cross between a phone, an I-pod and a computer, yet who among
us can live without a smartphone now?
*Incorporating emerging technologies quickly, preferably earlier and more effectively than competitors. These new technologies can be found by trawling startup news sites, attending meetups, or hanging out at downtown coffee shops. One may stumble upon the next engineer/impresarios heavily caffeinated and engaged on their macs. New technologies will need traditional mediums and their content for their developmental nutrition. The traditional mediums need to successfully integrate these technologies to create their unique synesthesia.
*Incorporating emerging technologies quickly, preferably earlier and more effectively than competitors. These new technologies can be found by trawling startup news sites, attending meetups, or hanging out at downtown coffee shops. One may stumble upon the next engineer/impresarios heavily caffeinated and engaged on their macs. New technologies will need traditional mediums and their content for their developmental nutrition. The traditional mediums need to successfully integrate these technologies to create their unique synesthesia.
*Integrating social media beyond comments, links and add-ons. Take for example the Twitter feeds that have
been increasingly popping up on home pages.
Yes, they yield real-time content, but how can they be better integrated
with the content on the rest of the site?
Let’s envision the audience as a drunken rambunctious group of tomato
pitchers, easily able to interact with us on their terms. We need to treat them as partners, integrating them cohesively into the
framework of our site.
Like Zeigfeld, Gershwin and others, we should indeed look at our content
offerings less as a cyber-vaudeville and more as integrated musicals, creating powerful
ratios of sight, sound, audience participation, and intellectual
stimulation at a level that imbibes them
with a musical quality. In this way, we will bring these fragmented
environments closer to symbiosis and
carry on the traditions of Zeigfeld, Gershwin, Jobs and other impresarios of
transformative media.