Liam Neeson Is Bad at Transportation 

  • Liam Neeson was on a train: one or more persons died
  • Liam Neeson was on a plane: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a car: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was on a horse: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was on a boat: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a taxi: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson went for a walk: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson went for a run: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a tank: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a helicopter: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a spaceship: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a monorail: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was in a submarine: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was on a naval battleship: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was near an RV: one or more persons died.
  • Liam Neeson was on top of an 18-wheeler: one or more persons died.

Source: Liam Neeson Is Bad at Transportation – The Ringer

MIDiA Research Predictions 2018: Post-Peak Economics 

Music

  • Post-catalogue – pressing reset on the recorded music business model: Revenues from catalogue sales have long underpinned the major record label model, representing the growth fund with which labels invested in future talent, often at a loss. Streaming consumption is changing this and we’ll see the first effects of lower catalogue in 2018. Smaller artist advances from bigger labels will follow.
  • Spotify will need new metrics: Up until now Spotify has been able to choose what metrics to report and pretty much when (annual financial reports aside). Once public, increased investor scrutiny on will see it focus on new metrics (APRU, Life Time Value etc) and concentrate more heavily on its free user numbers. 2018 will be the year that free streaming takes centre stage – watch out radio.
  • Apple will launch an Apple Music bundle for Home Pod: We’ve been burnt before predicting Apple Music hardware bundles, but Amazon has set the precedent and we think a $3.99 Home Pod Apple Music subscription (available annually) is on the cards. (Though we’re prepared to be burnt once again on this prediction!) 

Video

  • Savvy switchers – SVOD’s Achilles’ heel: Churn will become a big deal for leading video subscription services in 2018, with savvy users switching tactically to get access to the new shows they want. Of course, Netflix and co don’t report churn so the indicators will be slowing growth in many markets.
  • Subscriptions lose their stranglehold on streaming: 2018 will see the rise of new streaming offerings from traditional TV companies and new entrants that will deliver free-to-view, often ad-supported, on-demand streaming TV.

Media

  • Beyond the peak: We are nearing peak in the attention economy. 2018 will be the year casualties start to mount, as audience attention becomes a scarce commodity. Smart players will tap into ‘kinetic capital’ – the value users give to experiences that involve their context and location.
  • The rise of the new gate keepers part II: In 2018 Amazon and Facebook will pursue ever more ambitious strategies aimed at making them the leading next generation media companies, the conduits for the digital economy.

Games

  • The rise of the unaffiliated eSports: eSports leagues emulate the structure of traditional sports, but they may have missed the point. In 2018, we’ll see more eSports fans actually seeking games competition elsewhere, driving a surge in unaffiliated eSports.
  • Mobile games are the canary in the coal mine for peak attention: Mobile games will be the first big losers as we approach peak in the attention economy – there simply aren’t enough free hours left in the day. Mobile gaming activity is declining as mainstream consumers, who became mobile gamers to fill dead time, now have plenty of digital options that more closely match their needs. All media companies need to learn from mobile games’ experience.

Technology

  • The fall of tech major ROI: Growth will come less cheaply for the tech majors (Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Facebook) in 2018. They will have to overspend to maintain revenue momentum so margins will be hit.
  • Regulation catches up with the tech majors: Each of the tech majors is a monopoly or monopsony in their respective markets, staying one step ahead of regulation but this will change. The EU’s forced unbundling of Windows Media Player in the early 2000s triggered the end of Microsoft’s digital dominance. 2018 could see the start of a Microsoft moment for at least one of the tech majors. 

Source: MIDiA Research Predictions 2018: Post-Peak Economics | Music Industry Blog

The Top TV Shows Of 2017, And The Inexorable Rise Of Netflix

With the fragmentation of TV audiences and the rise of streaming video services like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video that are notoriously guarded with their data, it is becoming progressively more difficult for TV companies and advertisers to know just how popular individual TV shows actually are. Many are increasingly turning to social media as a guide to popularity, but these are demographically skewed.

Source: The Top TV Shows Of 2017, And The Inexorable Rise Of Netflix | Music Industry Blog

World Health Organization says gaming addiction is a disease

The World Health Organization (WHO) recently released the latest draft of its International Compendium of Diseases. Two of the most eye-catching additions to this update, the first in several years, are “hazardous gaming,” and “gaming disorder.” This would effectively put a gaming addiction on the same level as that of a substance addiction. 

Source: World Health Organization says gaming addiction is a disease

Screen Time Dollar Signs

While much focus will be on the shows themselves as the new TV season starts, we took a look at insights surrounding the advertising inventory—from how much money is spent on advertising over platforms to the commercial ratings lifts of ads beyond seven days to how marketers are leveraging branded integrations.

Source: Screen Time Dollar Signs