ESPN Is Taking Its ‘First Real Stab’ at a Morning TV Show

ESPN is shaking up its morning schedule beginning April 2, as the sports network launches a three-hour morning show called Get Up in an effort to attract audiences during one of the only times of day when TV viewing is still a regular part of their schedule. The series, which will feature Michelle Beadle, Mike…

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Will Facebook’s Algo Overhaul Slash News Feed Inventory?

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Mark Zuckerberg expects people to spend less time in the news feed once Facebook throttles the organic reach of publisher content. That change will lead to less inventory at higher prices, said James Douglas, SVP and executive director of social media at IPG-owned Society Agency. After Facebook announced plans Thursday to deprioritize public content fromContinue reading »

The post Will Facebook’s Algo Overhaul Slash News Feed Inventory? appeared first on AdExchanger.

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Move to America? Maybe if Trump Leaves, Say Norway’s Top Creatives

President Trump this week sparked a great deal of consternation by reportedly dismissing Haiti and some African nations as “shithole countries” while desiring more immigrants from, specifically, Norway. Trump likely picked Norway because of his positive meeting this week with conservative Prime Minister Erna Solberg, and given the electoral success of the country’s right leaning…

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‘They’re saying, “F publishers”’: Media winners and losers of Facebook’s feed purge

Publishers had plenty of warning the Great Facebook News Feed Purge was coming. That doesn’t make the news any less painful for many. Digiday spoke to several publishers about who wins and who loses in the aftermath.

Winners

Giant publishers
Facebook evened the playing field for publishers. It was what enabled overnight traffic sensations like Upworthy, ViralNova and Elite Daily. But for big publishers, losing Facebook audience will be less traumatic, only because the biggest publishers are by nature big everywhere. Their ubiquity when it come to platforms protects them from changes to one.

Earlier this week, Meredith Artley, editor-in-chief at CNN Digital, recorded an episode of the Digiday Podcast and spoke to this before the news broke about Facebook deprioritizing publisher content.

“We don’t put all of our eggs in the Facebook basket,” she said. “This ubiquity and the focus on your [owned and operated platform] is everything. It is the thing that you control. The media industry collectively freaks out when Facebook makes a change that impacts your business. Well, what were you expecting? It’s their platform, and they’re not in the news business.”

Publishers with well-established brands independent of Facebook will fare less badly because people will keep sharing those publishers’ content organically, and it’ll get surfaced in people’s feeds that way.

“I would be OK from the CNN perspective to have Facebook less involved,” Artley said. “It’s on us if we put all our eggs in that basket. Let’s control the things that we can.”

Entertainment publishers and celebrities
Many news reporters confuse “publishing” with “news.” There’s a broad world outside the latest Trump outrage. Facebook has already been signaling its unease with news publishers in its important media initiative, Facebook Watch. Facebook has emphasized celebrity and entertainment shows in Watch, such as “Ball in the Family” with LaVar Ball.

“They are not going to do any Watch show without a celebrity in it,” said a publishing exec. “I think they’re saying, ‘F publishers, we’re going to go to personalities.’”

Another publishing exec said Facebook has for months been asking them for more “personality-driven” video. Similarly, lifestyle and entertainment publishers are poised to fare better with the engagement Facebook is emphasizing. Users are more likely to share and comment on uplifting, humorous and identity-related posts than a local news story about a kidnapping.

“Who’s going to suffer the most are publishers that put out videos and articles that basically nobody wants to comment on and nobody wants to share,” one publishing executive said.

It isn’t all good news for lighthearted content, though. Clicky content about sex, for example, performed well on Facebook, but people who click on those posts don’t typically wish to telegraph that fact with likes, shares and comments. Publishers that have seen success posting more “personal” content on Facebook could see a hit.

Media brands with loyal audiences
Facebook has long enabled giant audiences, but the connections media brands have to these audiences is flimsy. In the news feed, publisher content sits astride fake news, baby photos, viral memes and all manner of ephemera. It’s hardly the place to build brand loyalty and daily habits. Media companies like Barstool Sports, which have rabidly loyal followings, are positioned well in what comes next in digital media. Facebook could go away tomorrow, and “Stoolies” will still be obsessed with the brand and its cast of personalities.

“Brands who have a point of view and command their own engagement will be OK,” said Erika Nardini, CEO of Barstool. “The closer you are to a friend, the better.”

Twitter as a media platform
Many publishers grouse about the power of Facebook, hoping an alternative will emerge other than Google. Apple News has shown flickers of hope. Snapchat has mostly disappointed. But with Facebook clearly pulling back on news content — let’s face it, Facebook doesn’t need the headaches — there’s suddenly one platform perfectly suited for news: Twitter. In the past year, publishers have seen more signs of hope out of Twitter. Witness Bloomberg’s decision to launch a live video news platform on Twitter, not Facebook.

“Twitter is now on its own as a news and media platform,” said Jason Stein, CEO of Cycle Media. “Nobody else is playing in that space at all.”

Losers

Facebook’s credibility with publishers
This isn’t the first Facebook rodeo for publishers. For years, they’ve followed Facebook’s lead with its ever-changing platform. When Facebook wanted shares, publishers delivered them, often with cringeworthy tactics collectively known as clickbait. When Facebook wanted live video, publishers ginned up live video. The same happened when it wanted in-feed video. The list goes on.

Facebook is trying to calm publisher nerves over this latest, biggest change by reassuring them they will be just fine so long as they emphasize engagement. But many publishers have seen this movie 15 times already. One media CEO spoke with a Facebook rep after the news and received reassurance they’d be fine based on their high engagement. The rep couldn’t then answer questions about why reach had still declined noticeably lately. The Facebook machine is now so big that publishers have lost trust that their point people at Facebook even know what’s truly going on.

“I don’t think they’ve treated people well,” said the exec. “Publishers are pissed. They do a lot of explaining, but they’re still really opaque. They use words like ‘engagement’ when it was really they’re cutting publishers out of the feed. They just lipstick it all the time. And they don’t give you the best practices.”

News feed addicts
Upstart digital publishers and local news publishers will be disproportionately hurt because they have a higher chance of getting a lot of their referral traffic from Facebook, said Andrew Montalenti, co-founder and CTO of web analytics firm Parsely. “If you went full native, I think you’re losing pretty big right now,” he said.

Big ones could be hurt, too, if they have a main page with a big follower count that used to deliver reliably high reach because Facebook will now prioritize content that people share or comment on. “They used to reliably be able to say, ‘If we put a new post on that page, we’ll get a reliably high engagement,’” he said. Reach of those pages could decline in favor of smaller, topic-specific pages that people feel more invested in.

Feed filler
Repurposed TV commercials and 90-second “how pencils are made” videos aren’t going to cut it in the news feed anymore. Anything that people consume passively as they’re scrolling through their feed is unlikely to see real engagement in terms of comments and shares, and will likely be deprioritized as a result. Publishers that have relied on those tactics to rack up massive “view” counts in recent years could find themselves coming back to earth with a bump.

“I have a hard time feeling too bad for a publisher,” said Stein. “To depend on Facebook for organic reach is not a strategy.”

The post ‘They’re saying, “F publishers”’: Media winners and losers of Facebook’s feed purge appeared first on Digiday.

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The gap between the number of blacks and whites in prison is shrinking

Blacks have long outnumbered whites in U.S. prisons. But a significant decline in the number of black prisoners in recent years has steadily narrowed that gap to the point where it is half as wide as it was in 2009, when America’s prison population peaked, according to new data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

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The 10 Most Anticipated Movies of 2018, and What They Say About Hollywood

Given how superheroes dominate the theatrical marketplace, and that those movies receive a seemingly endless amount of hype and publicity that can start years in advance, it’s not surprising that for the second year in a row, Amoboee’s list of the most-anticipated movies of the year is dominated by them. To create the list, the…

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Google vs. Amazon, Facebook Watch and a blackout: What we learned from CES 2018

This year’s CES featured heavy rain and a two-hour blackout in addition to flashy tech. Here are our takeaways from the event:

Google launches a voice offensive
Google tried to catch up to Amazon in their voice assistant battle. Both met with media companies, technology partners and marketers this week to push for more content for their virtual assistants and expand distribution inside third-party devices like connected cars. But Google was ubiquitous: It had a tent with a slide and ball pit at the Las Vegas Convention Center, “Hey Google” billboards and other Google Home and Google Assistant ads all over the Strip, plus staffers directing people to its events and meetings. Google’s best next move, per one media exec: paying media companies to create original audio content.

OTT gets the spotlight
TV networks touted their over-the-top streaming apps to marketers and tech companies. CBS gave a 20-minute presentation to marketers about its OTT products, which include CBS All Access and CBSN, along with forthcoming services for “Entertainment Tonight” and CBS Sports. Meanwhile, Turner — with two subscription services and plans to launch a sports streaming service in the spring — discussed its OTT ambitions with distribution partners. “OTT is now just another mainstream viewing option, together with cable and satellite, and it is increasingly the first option,” said Peter Csathy, founder of Creatv Media.

Facebook Watch doubts persist
Facebook attempted to demonstrate its commitment to Watch, bringing actress Kerry Washington — who is producing one of the first scripted Watch series — on stage with vp of product Fidji Simo. Despite the effort, media companies remain skeptical of the video initiative. “At some point, Facebook is going to give up on Watch,” said one attendee. “There’s no way that lasts.”

The CES Awards

The real CES impresarios: MediaLink, as usual

Best rumor: Turner originally booked the Aria hotel’s wedding chapel — where it hosted meetings and presentations this week — because CES was supposed to be the official coming-out party for a merged AT&T and Time Warner.

Most notably absent company: Snapchat

Best photo:

Best quote: “CES is good for business but bad for your soul.”

Find out who and what else we felt deserved honors in our complete list of winners.

The CES apocalypse in tweets
Problems befell this year’s expo weeks before it even started. Twitter broke down the unfortunate events:

It began with the announcement of the all-male keynote speakers.

Then, Las Vegas had its wettest January day on record.

The culmination: A Wednesday blackout in the convention center, which was attributed to the rain.

 

Commence cringeworthy real-time marketing.

In case anyone forgot …

Interesting takes elsewhere

The post Google vs. Amazon, Facebook Watch and a blackout: What we learned from CES 2018 appeared first on Digiday.

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KFC Is Now Accepting Bitcoin for Buckets of Fried Chicken

Oh, cryptocurrency. Despite warnings from the Oracle of Omaha (and our own common sense), everyone we know is still trying to cash in on Bitcoin-driven hype with embarrassing earnestness. Brands included. (To be fair, the results enjoyed by Long Island Iced Tea–or shall we say Long Blockchain Corp.?–hasn’t helped matters.) But KFC Canada has found…

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Another CES, Another Year Dominated by Alexa

The Consumer Electronics Show has turned into the Alexa show, with all types of companies investing in bringing the digital assistant to gadgets. At CES, Amazon hosted nine presentations and workshops to talk about Alexa. However, you could also find Alexa in PCs, ovens, fire alarms, headphones and more throughout the show. It’s no wonder…

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Facebook: Here’s How to Find New Groups to Join

Have you ever wanted to join a new Facebook group where you can chat with like-minded individuals, but you didn’t know where to start? Our guide will show you how to discover new groups within the Facebook mobile application. Note: These screenshots were captured in the Facebook app on iOS. Step 1: Tap the three…

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