swiateck Wrote:
It's not all as nefarious as some conspiracy theorists would postulate — a bunch of suits in a smoky room saying, "Let's figure out what ways we can further dumb down the sheeple this week — but every media outlet works hard to figure out what it's customers will most enjoy and keep them coming back.
yes, there is business and then there is content. it requires a level of cooperation on the part of media outlets to further a sales person's goal and, sometimes, that goal overshadows the media's intentions.
a baby band has the potential to really lure in a new audience because they're good looking, have a cool backstory, can dance at their shows, etc. but they don't really have much musical talent. the persons selling that band need for radio, magazines, bloggers, newspapers, mtv, etc. to adopt that band, regardless, because they want business to be good. they have enough money to pitch every outlet three, four, 10 times over so that no one can say they don't know the name. sure, they can plaster city walls with posters or get that artist on the front page of iTunes music store, but even better buzz is to get a major outlet singing their tune. all it takes is money to get a band name out there.
why do media outlets agree to run stuff on said talent-hungry band? for exclusive content, interviews, spin-off programming. to do a favor for a label, to call yourself a frontrunner if everyone else follows suit, to get in good with promoters. if their music sucks, at least theyll bring some other multi-media nuggets to your site/paper/mag/channel/etc.. some of them think its just genuinely great but exaggerate in their accolades. even the smallest nods in the bands' direction will be taken by the band's salespeople and used to sell the band even more. we're all in a machine, much like politics -- some are just much more active or selfish about their participation in said machine.
say j. lo a million times and people will start chanting "j. lo." remind everyone a million times just how many times 50 got shot, and they'll mimick it back to you. bands like the bravery, morningwood and yellowcard seemed to blow up in seconds. ashlee simpson's press people can (try) to spin any story around to make any stupid incident look decent.
there are no maniacs in some room going, "let's make people stupider with.... black eyed peas!" they're just trying to turn out the biggest profit possible with artists who don't necessarily have longevity but can rake in some serious dough. i think this will hurt the record co.'s and their "salemen," but i also personally think such a quick-hit stance could hurt music listeners because of they way they're being "programmed" to enjoy music.
all that is to say i hope radcliffe can realize his dreams of a multi-page thread.