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  <id>tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2007:/weblog//3/tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2006:/weblog//3.985-</id>
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  <title>Comments for 2006: The Year of User-Generated Content, According to Pareles</title>
  
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    <id>tag:www.convergenceculture.org,2006:/weblog//3.985</id>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://cms.mit.edu/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=3/entry_id=985" title="2006: The Year of User-Generated Content, According to Pareles" />
    <published>2006-12-10T21:40:40Z</published>
    <updated>2006-12-10T21:42:53Z</updated>
    <title>2006: The Year of User-Generated Content, According to Pareles</title>
    <summary>Another interesting piece from today&apos;s New York Times from Jon Pareles. He discusses the business of user-generated content, in which platforms for uploading this content is selling for increasingly large numbers, such as the $580 million for MySpace and the...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Sam Ford</name>
      
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        <category term="Fan Cultures" />
    
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      <![CDATA[<p>Another interesting piece from today's <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/10/arts/music/10pare.html"><i>New York Times</I> from Jon Pareles</a>.  He discusses the business of user-generated content, in which platforms for uploading this content is selling for increasingly large numbers, such as the $580 million for MySpace and the $2 billion for YouTube.</p>

<p>He considers "user-generated content" the "paramount cultural buzz phrase of 2006," although he considers it a more technocratic dressing up of the idea of self-expression.</p>

<p>Pareles writes:</p>

<blockquote>All that free-flowing self-expression presents a grandly promising anarchy, an assault on established notions of professionalism, a legal morass and a technological remix of the processes of folk culture. And simply unleashing it could be the easy part. Now we have to figure out what to do with it: Ignore it? Sort it? Add more of our own? In utopian terms the great abundance of self-expression puts an end to the old, supposedly wrongheaded gatekeeping mechanisms: hit-driven recording companies, hidebound movie studios, timid broadcast radio stations, trend-seeking media coverage. But toss out those old obstacles to creativity and, lo and behold, people begin to crave a new set of filters.</blockquote>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>Certainly, we've highlighted what we saw as some interesting trends in user-generated content over the year as well: the rise of interesting new business models like <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/11/turner_super_deluxe_a_promisin.php">Turner's Super Deluxe</a> and <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/11/comcast_ziddio_platform_launch.php">Comcast Ziddio</a>; journalism's promotion of user-generated content such as with <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/10/channel_one_and_abc_working_to.php">Channel One and ABC</a> and <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/08/cnn_exchange_and_usergenerated.php">CNN Exchange</a>; fan generated content for media as diverse as <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/05/fan_generated_contentthe_skele.php">Skeletor</a>, <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/06/the_ten_commandments_a_teenage.php"><i>The Ten Commandments</i></a>, and <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/06/slater_just_cant_quit_the_prep.php"><i>Saved by the Bell</i></a>; <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/06/fangenerated_promotion_for_sna.php">fan-generated promotion</a>; and that's just scratching the surface of the myriad types of user-generated content covered here this year.</p>

<p>All of this echoes some of the questions raised by <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/12/seeking_common_ground_between.php">Jason Mittell</a> and <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/12/what_is_a_media_educator.php">Ted Hovet</a> here recently, in relation to media educators: fair use.  </p>

<p>Pareles writes, "Folk cultures often work incrementally, adding bits of individuality to a well-established tradition, with time and memory determining what will last. In the user-generated realm, tradition is anything prerecorded, and all existing works seem to be there for the taking, copyrights aside."</p>

<p>And you can definitely see this echoed in the exodus of <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/10/the_fallout_of_the_mass_exodou.php">Japanese content</a> from YouTube and the discussion surrounding the <a href="http://www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2006/11/the_fans_arent_laughing_youtub.php">Comedy Central controversy</a>.</p>

<p>Pareles writes:</p>

<blockquote>The open question is whether those new, quirky, homemade filters will find better art than the old, crassly commercial ones. The most-played songs from unsigned bands on MySpace -- some played two million or three million times -- tend to be as sappy as anything on the radio; the most-viewed videos on YouTube are novelty bits, and proudly dorky. Mouse-clicking individuals can be as tasteless, in the aggregate, as entertainment professionals.

<p>Unlike the old media roadblocks, however, their filtering can easily be ignored. The promise of all the self-expression online is that genius will reach the public with fewer obstacles, bypassing the entrenched media. The reality is that genius has a bigger junk pile to climb out of than ever, one that requires just as much hustle and ingenuity as the old distribution system.</blockquote></p>

<p>Be sure to give his lengthy commentary a look.</p>

<p>Thanks to Lynn Liccardo for bringing this article to my attention.</p>]]>
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