FIR Against Makers of Amazon Series ‘Tandav’ for Hurting Religious Sentiments

Hours before the case was filed, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on Sunday sought an explanation from streaming platform Amazon Prime Video on whether Hindu gods had been “ridiculed” in the show.

New Delhi: A case has been filed against makers of Tandav, a new web series released on Amazon Prime, in Uttar Pradesh for allegedly insulting Hindu gods.

The FIR has been filed against Amazon India original content head Aparna Purohit, show director Ali Abbas Zafar, producer Himanshu Krishna Mehra, writer Gaurav Solanki and others. It mentions Indian Penal Code sections 153A (promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language), 295 (injuring or defiling place of worship with intent to insult the religion of any class), 505 (1) (B) (statements conducing to public mischief with intent to cause, or which is likely to cause, fear or alarm to the public, or to any section of the public whereby any person may be induced to commit an offence against the State or against the public tranquility) and 469 (forgery for purpose of harming reputation) along with sections of the IT Act.

Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath’s media adviser Shalabh Mani Tripathi shared a copy of the FIR on Twitter. “There is no tolerance for playing with people’s sentiments in Yogi Adityanath’s Uttar Pradesh. A serious case has been registered against the entire team of Tandav, which is spreading hate in the guise of cheap web series. Prepare for arrest,” he wrote in Hindi.

Hours before the case was filed, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on Sunday sought an explanation from streaming platform Amazon Prime Video on whether Hindu gods had been “ridiculed” in the show, PTI reported.

Also read: Tandav Has Lofty Ambitions but Remains Trite and Lacklustre

BJP MP Manoj Kotak on Sunday said he has written to information and broadcasting minister Prakash Javadekar, seeking a ban on Tandav.

Tandav, starring actors Saif Ali Khan, Dimple Kapadia, Sunil Grover, Tigmanshu Dhulia, Dino Morea, Kumud Mishra, Mohd Zeeshan Ayyub, Gauhar Khan and Kritika Kamra, premiered on the streaming platform on Friday.

Filmmaker Ali Abbas Zafar has created, directed and produced the political drama with Himanshu Kishan Mehra and it is written by Gaurav Solanki, best known for Article 15.

Kotak, the MP from Mumbai North-East, alleged that attempts are often made on streaming platforms to “not show Hindu deities in good light”. “Hence, we have made a demand to Javadekar ji and have written to him to ban the web series immediately. The actors, producers and directors should apologise for hurting sentiments,” he added.

Sharing the picture of his letter to Javadekar on Twitter, Kotak said as there is no law or autonomous body governing digital content and films on such platforms are full of sex, violence, drugs, abuse, hate and vulgarity. “Sometimes, they also hurt religious sentiments,” he added.

Another BJP politician, Ram Kadam, the MLA from Ghatkopar West, also asked the director to remove the portion of the web series in which Lord Shiva is allegedly ridiculed. The legislator said he has filed a complaint in this connection at the suburban Ghatkopar police station.

Taking cognisance of complaints regarding the web series, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting on Sunday sought an explanation from Amazon Prime Video on the issue.

When contacted about the complaints, Amazon Prime Video PR said the platform “won’t be responding” on the matter.

The government recently brought OTT platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Disney+ Hotstar, besides other online news and current affairs content, under the ambit of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, giving it powers to regulate policies and rules for the digital space.

Madhya Pradesh minister, speak want ban

Madhya Pradesh minister Vishvas Sarang and assembly protem speaker Rameshwar Sharma also wrote to Javadekar, asking him to ban Tandav for allegedly “ridiculing Hindu deities”.

“A censor board is needed for the OTT segment as it is increasingly becoming popular,” he said.

“I have written a letter to the information and broadcasting (I&B) minister demanding a ban on this series. I also said there should be a law to control the OTT platforms,” Sarang informed.

The minister said he has also mailed a letter to the CEO of Amazon Prime to immediately withdraw the web series. “If they do not withdraw this web series, we will appeal to the society to boycott such OTT platforms. I request everyone to send mails in this regard to the CEO of the OTT platform,” he said.

Sharma also urged Javadekar to ban Tandav.

(With PTI inputs)

Note: This article was updated at 5:52 pm on January 18, 2021 to include details about Vishvas Sarang and Rameshwar Sharma wanting the web series to be banned. 

Podcast | Censoring OTT Platforms Will Handicap Film Makers, Audiences: Zoya Akhtar

Akhtar talks about her sensibilities as a film maker and reveals her own favourite genre of films.

Zoya Akhtar is now counted as one of the leading directors in Hindi cinema. Her films have appealed to critics and audiences alike, for their story telling and high-quality production values. Her last film, Gully Boy, was a huge commercial hit.

In this wide-ranging podcast interview with Sidharth Bhatia, Akhtar talks about her sensibilities as a film maker, passionately defending herself against the allegations made about her films such as Dil Dhakadne Do. She also reveals her own favourite genre of films and says that no matter what, cinema theatres are not going to disappear any time soon.

Disney’s Pivot to Streaming Is a Sign of Severe COVID-19 Economic Crisis Still to Come

In a major restructuring bid, the media conglomerate aims to reduce its focus on theme parks, cruises, cinema releases and cable television, thanks to the pandemic.

Disney has announced a significant restructuring of its media and entertainment business, boldly placing most of its growth ambitions and investments into its recently launched streaming service, Disney+. The 97-year-old media conglomerate is now more like Netflix than ever before.

What this means is that Disney will be reducing its focus from (and potentially the investments routed to) theme parks, cruises, cinema releases and cable TV. As CEO Bob Chapek said:

“Given the incredible success of Disney+ and our plans to accelerate our direct-to-consumer business, we are strategically positioning our company to more effectively support our growth strategy and increase shareholder value.”

This change has not come easily as the company’s fortunes have gone through a rollercoaster ride in 2020. Amongst its portfolio of businesses, Disney+ is the only clear winner, with the service gaining over 60.5 million members in just ten months since launch. The COVID-19 pandemic, on the other hand, crushed Disney’s cruise, theme park, cable TV, live sports, cinema and retail businesses, resulting in losses over $4.7 billion in the financial quarter ended June 27.

Disney’s strategic pivot also comes about as activist investor Daniel Loeb called on the company to reinvest its planned dividend payments back into its streaming service. He did so because it’s likely to produce a higher return for shareholders than just returning cash to them. The stock market appreciated this change in strategy and resource allocation, causing the Disney stock to jump up by 6% upon the announcement.

A quick change

From a corporate strategy perspective, the move is remarkable on two fronts. Firstly, the sheer velocity of this pivot for a company the size and age of Disney is, for lack of a better word, unprecedented.

Let’s not forget that it was just last year that Disney held a near 40% revenue share of the US box office, thanks to Marvel films becoming a cultural phenomenon in the past decade. The company’s theme park and cruise line business was equally successful, with a year on year growth rate at a respectable 6% and revenues of $26.2 billion in the same period.

These are significant enterprises by any measure, with Disney enjoying deep competitive advantages in each of the sectors it participates in. In fact, before this announcement, most stock market analysts had made peace with the fact that Disney was likely to hunker down and wait for the pandemic to pass instead of changing gears. After all, why should the company leave money on the table if the pandemic was going to be over soon?

The fact that in just seven months of the pandemic breaking out, Disney decided to reinvent itself primarily around streaming speaks volumes about its expectations regarding the pandemic length. Clearly the group decided that waiting it out was no longer an option.

Spillover effects

The second reason why this pivot is remarkable is that it is likely to be far-reaching and not limited to just the streaming industry. Disney’s transformation does not bode well for its less diversified competitors, such as Universal Studios, themes park group Six Flags and cruise group Royal Caribbean.

A better funded Disney+ that is willing to stream highly anticipated theatrical releases on day one will also sharply impact the ability of cinema chains to bounce back whenever the pandemic subsides. Disney has already chosen to release not only the live action Mulan but its newest Pixar animation, Soul, through the streaming site.

Traditional cable and linear TV companies will likely feel more pressure from a faster-growing Disney+. This is because more streaming subscriptions can drive an increased number of cancelled cable TV packages as well as disinterested advertisers, who will continue to reduce their advertising spend on linear TV thanks to lower viewership and engagement.

For pure-play cruise and travel companies such as Royal Caribbean, Disney’s move hints at a longer and deeper downturn for the sector. And unlike Disney, most of these players are simply too specialised and invested in their industries to be able to make bold and timely pivots of their own. It would not be surprising to see at least some of them going on aggressive acquisition and divesture sprees to buy their way out of the current situation.

Taking a step back, Disney’s urgency to change itself is a wake-up call for business leaders everywhere who are waiting for the effects of COVID-19 to go away and, in the process, bring their businesses back to their former glory. Even for seemingly unrelated industries, such as construction or even energy, the writing on the wall is clear: boldly transform yourself into digital-first businesses or go obsolete. This includes investing in robotics and AI for core operations and shifting business models that allow for more affordability and access for customers during a global recession.

Chef Gusteau in the Disney movie Ratatouille once said: “if you focus on what you left behind, you will never be able to see what lies ahead”.  This seminal line seems more relevant now than ever before.The Conversation

Hamza Mudassir is a Visiting Fellow in Strategy at Cambridge Judge Business School. 

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

COVID-19: Netflix Tops Streaming Charts As The Demand Increases

The financial figures show that Netflix could thrive in a time of global lockdown and widen its lead in the streaming wars.


With stock markets in free fall, investors are looking for safer havens and ways to hedge losses with eyes on companies with the potential to emerge from the present crisis in better shape than their rivals.

Toilet paper and bike makers and Netflix come to mind. Trading at $320 a share, Netflix is down ‘only’ 17% over the last month, compared with its main competitors — Comcast (24%), Disney (38%), and ViacomCBS (66%) in the same period.

And this despite EU Internal Market and Services Commissioner Thierry Breton asking Netflix CEO Reed Hastings to limit streaming to standard definition instead of high definition, which needs more bandwidth, to avoid online congestion.

Cash burn

Netflix’s business model is driven mainly by renewal rates and its famous cash burn approach should lessen as the company halts production. Production in the US and Canada has been stopped after The Witcher became the first major UK project to suspend filming. The company’s primary goal is to add new subscribers, a difficult goal in financially strained times.

Netflix’s large library size and recommendation algorithm are proving its key competitive advantage. Most of Netflix’s second-quarter output is ready to premiere on schedule, with new series online to debut such as #blackAF, NAILED IT!, Middleditch & Schwartz, Ryan Murphy’s Hollywood, Octavia Spencer’s Self Made, Unorthodox as well as the third season of Ozark.

Credit Suisse found that first-time app downloads (new subscribers) are shifting to Netflix in affected regions such as Hong Kong, South Korea, Italy, and Spain. Needham & Co expect streaming revenue to decline 6% in the US and 28% in international markets. Some even believe that COVID-19 will move customers elsewhere in a crowded streaming market.

Also read: Netflix Naija: Creative Freedom in Nigeria’s Emerging Digital Space?

Driven by debt

In April 2019, Netflix borrowed an extra $2 billion (€1.8 billion) to fund content spending and doubled this in October. This has been its strategy for some time as the company has racked up more than $12 billion in long-term debt, helped by the Federal Reserve’s slashing of interest rates to historical lows.

Despite generating more annual revenue ($20 billion-plus) than its rivals, Netflix rarely runs a yearly profit due to its huge expenditure.

“This is a dream scenario for them,” Lynnwood Bibbens, CEO of Reach TV, an entertainment network, told Observer. “The worse thing for them is high-interest rates as they plan to keep increasing their spending on original content. Debt lenders, in particular Morgan Stanley, will have no problem securing debt funding,” he said.

Not all so positive

But not every analyst is as confident. Analysis from Needham & Co. shows that Netflix may stand to lose revenue as employment uncertainty leads to fiscal restraint among consumers.

Netflix relies on subscription revenue set at fixed monthly increments. Increased viewership is good for the brand and may mitigate long-term churn rates, but doesn’t give any immediate financial benefit. Subscribers can in effect double their consumption in self-quarantine without adding to Netflix’s coffers.

“At least in the US, I think newer providers (e.g. Disney+) are more likely than Netflix to see a run of new subscribers because Netflix’s penetration is already so high,” Jon Giegengack, principal at Hub Entertainment Research, told Observer. “More viewing doesn’t equate to more revenue for Netflix or other ‘all-you-can-eat’ platforms.”

The article was originally published on DW You can read it here

Netflix: Will First African Series Launch a New Chapter in African Filmmaking?

The release of ‘Queen Sono’ is to be the first of several African original series to premiere this year on Netflix.


A secret agent from South Africa is searching for the truth about her mother’s murder while also protecting her country from dark forces. That, in a nutshell, is the plot of “Queen Sono,” Netflix’s first original African series is scheduled for release on February 28.

And if the US streaming service is to be believed “Queen Sono” is just the beginning.

“This is exactly what we’re going for,” Netflix told DW in a written statement. “African thrillers, entertaining and smart political dramas.”

Netflix says it wants to tell local stories with a global appeal.

Will Netflix breathe new life into African films?

Melissa Adeyemo, a Nigerian-American producer who founded Ominira Studios in New York, has been in Africa’s film market for years. Her latest movie just wrapped production in Lagos.

The fact that Netflix has come to discover the potential of the African continent makes sense to her. She says there’s a huge appetite and a huge demand for stories, especially in Nigeria. Point in case: the emergence of the “Nollywood” film industry in Nigeria.

Adeyemo thinks the new series from South Africa will help generate more interest for African stories and could really open the door to the international market for African actors, screen writers and directors.

Nigerian filmmaker Chuku Esiri agrees. Esiri, alongside his twin brother Arie, recently directed the film “Eyimofe” which premiered at the Berlinale in Germany.

“Obviously it’s always great when massive institutions like Netflix are interested in working in Africa and try to get those stories and empower creative individuals,” Esiri told DW.

“I think it’s a great start and I hope it spreads from South Africa to the other countries on the continent.”

Netflix has fewer subscribers in Africa

Netflix does in fact have a few more African productions slated for release. In April it will premiere “Mama K’s Team 4,” an animated film about the lives of four girls from Zambia set in the future. The film marks Netflix’s first ever animated film from Africa.

And while it continues production on a teen drama dubbed Blood & Water, Netflix is also working on getting the rights on top notch Nollywood films like Lionheart and Chief Daddy.

But there’s a catch. According to Netflix’s figures, the streaming provider has over 167 million subscribers worldwide, and while it hasn’t released its figures on the number of African subscribers, analysts from Digital TV Research in London estimate that there are fewer than 1.5 million in sub-Saharan Africa, and most of them are South African.

To put this into context, Netflix wants 5 million subscribers on the African continent by 2025.

Analysts predict that the market for streaming in sub-Saharan Africa will surpass $1 billion by 2024. By way of comparison, that same market – including internet TV and on-demand viewing – was worth some $223 million in 2018.

Streaming challenges in Africa

The main problem streaming providers face on the African continent is rudimentary networks for cable internet and the high cost of mobile data.

German film critic Dorothee Wenner, who has been working in Africa for several decades looking for new talent and stories, says only a small demographic can afford video streaming services.

“Aside from the fact that the connection isn’t strong enough for streaming, streaming itself is unaffordable for most people in the Democratic Republic of Congo,” she told DW.

Only in some countries, like Rwanda, is digitalisation more advanced. But there are alternatives, like the introduction of special mobile subscriptions, which could mean using less data. In India, for example, these types of subscriptions already exist in areas where practically the only infrastructure available for online content is cellular technology.

Netflix faces local competition in Africa

While Netflix’s chances of success in Africa are promising given its role as the world’s leading streaming service, regional providers are making gains with clever offers.

South African provider Showmax, for example, offers its users simple digital payments through local partners and flat rates via satellite. The Nigerian company IrokoTV even has its own kiosks where customers can download movies onto their phones for later viewing. That saves them data and brings in money for local businesses who are offering their customers full customer service.

When it comes to its US competitors, Netflix has a head start in Africa. Netflix has been available since 2016 in all 54 countries, whereas Amazon Prime and Disney+ remain unavailable there and Apple TV+ is only accessible in 12 countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

Be that as it may, the race for Africa’s film market has officially begun.

This article was published in DW. 

Latest Self-Regulation Code for Streaming Services in India Raises Troubling Questions

Not only does the new draft make the grounds for censorship vaguer, such codified structures essentially provide the government a parallel avenue to apply pressure on businesses to censor people’s views and beliefs.

There is a risk brewing in India’s online video streaming space. And the said risk could see us sleep-walk into a scenario where online content in India mimics its formulaic television counterpart. 

On February 5, 2020, at its annual India Digital Summit, the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI) launched the ‘Code for Self-Regulation of Online Curated Content Providers’. It follows up an earlier ‘Code of Best Practices for Online Curated Content Providers’ the industry body had put out in January 2019.

Unlike the previous code which had nine signatories, the latest iteration has just four signatories: Hotstar, Voot, Jio and SonyLiv. Prior signatories including Netflix, Zee5, AltBalaji, Arre and ErosNow were conspicuously absent at the new code’s launch. Other major players like Amazon (Prime) and Google (YouTube Premium) have stayed away from the process since its inception.

Considering India has more than 35 online video streaming providers, the Code is not really representative of the entire industry’s position. So then why are we concerned if it is only being carried out by such a small number of players? We believe this is a precursor to self-censorship and for online streaming to go down the path of TV.

Simply put, it is the first step towards broad basing self-censorship as an industry practice in India’s online video streaming space. If that is indeed the outcome, it would adversely impact internet users in India, creators, artists, production companies and so on. It is also likely to harm competition, innovation and investment, and will facilitate industry capture by a few firms over the ecosystem.

The framework essentially builds on the original code of best practices through some key changes. First and foremost, it seeks to establish an independent enforcement authority called the Digital Content Complaint Council (DCCC) to oversee a signatory’s content related practices. This DCCC mechanism is eerily similar and largely derivative of the Broadcast Content Complaints Council (BCCC) (under the Indian Broadcasting Foundation) which essentially governs content on non-news and television channels in India.

Also read: Why Hasn’t Hotstar Uploaded John Oliver’s Latest Show Criticising Modi and the CAA?

We all know what that has meant to Indian television and how that has led to a largely homogenous content ecosystem, inundated by typical saas-bahu programming devoid of much creativity or pathos. Moreover, how often do we watch our favourite international content on TV and get bummed out that a large chunk of the programming has been edited out? 

In this context, the online video streaming space was a breadth of fresh air for Indian audiences who were fans of global and local storytelling. Further, it provided opportunities to local storytellers who had until then been rejected by traditional television, theatrical and radio media.

The legal basis and policy need for this effort is questionable at best. In this context, it is disconcerting that even though there is no legal mechanism which empowers the DCCC, its ties with the government are undeniable. The proposed DCCC is meant to be chaired by a retired high court or Supreme Court judge. Also, the DCCC is designed to include three members from national level statutory commissions like the National Commission for Women (NCW), the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR)  or the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).

Its composition would also facilitate incumbent business capture as the DCCC is meant to include three industry representatives and two online curated content providers (likely to be signatories to the Code). Considering the opaque manner (with no public/stakeholder inputs) in which the Code has been developed, and the public facing impact such a privately designed framework can have – the legal validity of this effort remains dubious at best.

Second, such codified structures essentially provide the government a parallel avenue with little to no legal accountability to apply pressure on businesses to censor people’s views and beliefs. It erodes channels for dissent and satire – and is arguably incompatible with the fundamental right to freedom of speech and expression under the Constitution of India.

Also read: Why is Amazon Playing Uncle-Ji in the Indian Rollout of Prime Video?

Third, like the previous code on best practices, the new code for self-regulation talks about “prohibited content”. What is particularly dangerous, as has been widely reported, is that the newest draft has been modified in a manner which makes the grounds for censorship vaguer. 

This would afford the DCCC with more discretion to remove certain speech/content which would otherwise be legal under the Constitution of India and also applicable laws like the Information Technology Act, 2000 and the Indian Penal Code, 1860.  This is compounded by the fact that the DCCC does not envision membership of stakeholders from research, academia or free speech backgrounds, to act as a safeguard for people’s right to receive and impart information. 

Therefore, it may be concluded that this Code is merely a liability reduction initiative which is being pushed through at the cost of plurality, diversity and creativity – all cornerstone’s of the right to free speech and expression.

Sidharth Deb is Policy and Parlimentary Counsel for the Internet Freedom Foundation. A different version of this article first appeared on IFF’s website.

How Jazz Reached the Home of Millions

On International Jazz Day, Bert Noglik discusses the role of technology for pioneers of the genre.



DW: Mr. Noglik, the first jazz album was recorded in New York. How did this recording happen?

Bert Noglik: The Original Dixieland Jass Band [Eds.: the name was changed to “Jazz” by mid-1917], from New Orleans, went to Chicago to perform Dixieland jazz, a sound that no one there had heard previously. At the time, ragtime was the dominant style and Dixieland was something completely new.

People in New York also wanted to hear Dixieland music. The band was invited to do a gig at the restaurant Reisenweber, which was a trendy location with a nightclub in Manhattan. The band performed there in January 1917.

Shortly afterwards, the record label Columbia came knocking at their door to record them. But the label found the material too hot, too innovative, so the recordings weren’t released.

Another label, Victor, then jumped in and recorded two tracks, “Dixieland Jass Band One-Step” for the A side and “Livery Stable Blues” for the B side, on February 26, 1917. It was a big hit, pressed as a 78 rpm record single and sold for 75 cents. It was a remarkable event for the music market and the history of jazz – as well as a tremendous commercial success.

 

The B side of the first jazz record from 1917 (public domain)

The B side of the first jazz record.

 

Was 1917 really the year the first jazz album was recorded? Some sources set this event in 1904, when the German operetta king Paul Lincke recorded a jazz-like composition with the choir of the Apollo Theater in Berlin. How do you see this?

This obviously depends on your definition of jazz. Without a doubt, there were earlier recordings of ragtime music and other pre-forms of jazz. However, some essential stylistic elements of jazz, such as swing, appeared much later. The recordings with the Original Dixieland Jass Band at the end of February 1917 already featured many of the characteristics of what we would later define as jazz.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the record business in the US and Europe was still developing – but it probably couldn’t be characterized as an industry yet?

It was in its first steps. It developed over the following years. And radio only became widespread in Germany and in the US in 1923. Jazz developed a wider audience through records and radio by the end of the 1920s.

Who earned money with the new jazz records at the time?

The record labels, of course; they were already determining what could be marketed. Columbia was initially cautious with this new sound, but quickly jumped on the bandwagon, recording the Original Dixieland Jass Band as well. By then, Victor had already sold its first recording of them by the millions.

Record companies made very good deals at the beginning. When did record sales become interesting for musicians as well?

Actually, right from the start, because those records made music available anytime, anywhere – and worldwide. This was a great opportunity for musicians to become known and allowed them to play more concerts and go on international tours.

Also Read: Did Academia Kill Jazz?

In the West, the record industry rapidly developed into a huge business. What happened in divided Germany in the 1960s? How did the market differ in East and West Germany?

You have to start by looking back at the first years of Soviet Occupation, from 1945 to 1949. There was a record label called Amiga, which documented very well the period’s jazz production. We owe this label the most important testimonies of post-war German jazz.

It later became difficult because of East Germany’s strong ideological regulations. In the 1950s, jazz was considered bourgeois entertainment music, which is why authorities imposed restrictions on sales and broadcasting of jazz music.

That changed in the 1960s. From then on, it became more difficult for the then already established East German label Amiga, because licenses had to be paid in a foreign currency, which was scarce in East Germany. This was also the case for the vinyl needed to press the albums.

What was the situation in West Germany?

In West Germany, jazz was produced by internationally operating labels such as Columbia, Brunswick, Bertelsmann or Philips. In 1964, an independent German label dedicated to modern jazz was created, called MOD Records. Towards the end of the 1950s, SABA Records was established: That was the label of Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer, which was renamed MPS, for Music Production Schwarzwald, in 1968.

Sound engineering developed very rapidly. How did the new and always improving technical possibilities influence jazz?

They were absolutely essential! Just imagine: At the beginning, there was this big funnel in which musicians had to play. Then the microphone appeared by the mid-1920s. That offered completely new possibilities, for example for vocalists. Crooners such as Frank Sinatra or Bing Crosby found new ways to modulate their voice with the microphone. An exceptional example is also singer Billie Holiday, who essentially developed her whole art through her work with the microphone.

Record producers also became very creative with their sound engineers…

Yes, exactly. Tape started being used in the 1940s. That made it possible to produce sound collages. After that, multi-track recordings appeared. Works like Miles Davis’ In a Silent Way (1969) and Bitches Brew (1970) used studio technology in an extremely creative way. The producer of these albums, Teo Macero, was nicknamed “Paganini of tape cutting.”

Suddenly, technology became a creative tool. This continued right up to digitisation. Editing became an important component of jazz production and creative jazz.

Bert Noglik (Patrick Hinely)

Jazz expert Bert Noglik.

Just like the new recording technologies influenced the music industry 100 years ago, how are today’s downloads and streaming services impacting the business and musicians?

Each storage and distribution media has had a great influence on how people receive music. Concerts used to be a way of promoting record sales. Now it’s the other way around – Through music downloads and streaming, the goal of musicians is to make money through their concerts. It is becoming increasingly difficult to make money for all parties involved.

Bert Noglik is a freelance author specialized in jazz who has directed the festivals Jazztage in Leipzig and Jazzfest in Berlin. 

This article was originally published on Deutsche Welle.

Gold Mine: Will Netflix Eventually Monetise Its User Data?

Something about Netflix’s business model just doesn’t add up – unless you look at the streaming service as a massive data collection company.

Even in the wake of a recent mixed earning report and volatile stock prices, Netflix remains the media success story of the decade. The company, whose user base has grown rapidly, now boasts almost 150 million global subscribers.

But as someone who studies the television industry, I’ve always wondered how Netflix can provide so much unlimited ad-free content for such a low monthly rate, which currently averages around US$14.

After all, didn’t MoviePass just fall apart using a similar model of offering ad-free content for a monthly subscription fee? And Netflix is burning through cash, with negative cash flow of $3 billion in 2018 alone.

What if we’re looking at Netflix through the wrong lens? What if its primary long-term business model is not as a media content or distribution company, but as a data aggregation company?

Seeing Netflix this way might better explain its current strategy and clue us into the company’s future plans, while raising red flags about ethics and privacy.

Spending more and charging less

For a century of screen entertainment, there were only a few ways for Americans to pay for media:

  • You could purchase a book, album or DVD, “lease” a movie theatre seat or rent a tape at a video store;
  • You could pay with your attention by consuming ads alongside “free” radio or television programming;
  • Or you could subscribe to cable TV, and pay a large monthly fee to access an array of scheduled programming.

Netflix doesn’t follow any of these three models. Instead it most resembles HBO’s subscription service, which similarly provides ad-free original programming alongside a library of older content for a monthly fee.

While they may seem analogous, there are key differences. HBO is part of a larger media company, which gives it access to vast content libraries. And even though HBO charges more than Netflix, it spends far less for original content. In 2017, HBO spent $2.5 billion to Netflix’s $8 billion. The latter’s spending grew to $13 billion in 2018.

Relying on subscribers, not ads

Pouring money into content might generate hits, but not direct profits: Netflix’s sole revenue stream is subscriptions, so its primary goal is to gain and retain subscribers. Having popular content generates buzz, and Netflix hypes its brand by using self-reported numbers to claim that its original films and series like Bird Box and Sex Education attract millions of viewers. Yet Netflix only yields the same monthly fee per household, regardless of how much subscribers watch.

This makes Netflix distinct from other media companies that use highly profitable hits to generate revenue. This will then subsidise the production of new films, television shows, albums and video games.

Meanwhile, competing streaming platforms Hulu and Amazon Prime Video have other revenue sources – advertising and retail, respectively – and their larger diversified companies can better leverage hits.

Netflix needs to produce and acquire desirable content to make the service indispensable. But making original content is expensive. Hiring talent and producing movies and television series costs the company more than $15 billion annually. Netflix spends much more cash than it brings in, leading to consistent negative cash flow and a mountain of debt that amounts to more than $10 billion.

Even though it reported a record $1.2 billion in profit in 2018, those profits are based on an accounting model that ignores many costs and debts. This has led some financial analysts, like NYU professor Aswath Damodaran, to believe that Netflix’s business model is unsustainable.

“The more Netflix grows,” he wrote last fall, “the more its costs grow and the more money it burns. I’m not sure how it’s ever going to turn that around.”

So with only one stable, inflexible revenue source, how might Netflix’s business model become more sustainable?

More analogous to Facebook?

One theory is that Netflix is playing the long game, pitting itself against social media companies like Facebook and YouTube, rather than just film studios or TV networks.

Media commentator Matthew Ball argues that Netflix is in a race with the social media giants to occupy “every minute of leisure time available”.

Yet Netflix’s financial model is the inverse of Facebook’s and YouTube’s. The social media giants generate huge advertising revenues from free, user-generated content. Perhaps Netflix could balance content costs with higher subscription fees and its growing global user base. It seems unlikely, however, that this model could lead to anything beyond small profit margins.

But what if the parallel between Netflix and Facebook runs deeper than cost and revenue?

From its inception as a DVD rental service, Netflix has touted its competitive advantage through its algorithm – the predictive engine that claims to deliver the most user-specific content from its vast library. Netflix has always been a technology firm first and foremost, invested in mining its library of vast user data to deliver what viewers want to watch.

In many ways, Netflix is more analogous to the big tech companies than the big media conglomerates. Credit: Reuters

For instance, the Netflix engineering team strives “to have customers click on a show in the first 10 seconds”. Such obsessive interface tweaking helps promote programming – as Ball notes, “the most valuable real estate in the world is the top fold of Netflix home page.” But it doesn’t generate revenue.

This emphasis on viewing optimisation, internal promotion and maximising engagement resonates with another recent Netflix offering: the Black Mirror episode “Bandersnatch“. Netflix’s highest-profile experiment in interactive narrative, “Bandersnatch” allows viewers to choose how the story unfolds from dozens of options.

Netflix collects data from viewers of “Bandersnatch”, charting the narrative choices they made during the episode. Such viewer activity feeds into Netflix’s tracking efforts that it uses to make programming decisions and customise promotion to each subscriber.

A logical next step would be product integration. Based on your choices within the narrative around specific brand names, Netflix could then sell customised micro-targeted product placements within programs – a strategy that could actually lead to increased revenue.

A data gold mine?

Based on all we know about Silicon Valley’s aggressive monetisation of user data, what else could Netflix do, beyond product integration, with this valuable information?

Netflix logs everything you have ever watched and how you watch – every time you pause, what programmes you consider watching but choose not to and when you’re most likely to binge on Friends reruns.

When linked to website trackers, Netflix could, for example, cross-reference that viewing data with your social media accounts, your purchasing habits, your search history and even your emails.

Also read: Netflix Switches On in India, But the Picture is a Bit Fuzzy

In the age of surveillance capitalism, such data could be worth a fortune to marketers, political campaigns and advertisers.

As far as we know, Netflix has not started using its data to track us online, package us to marketers or cross-reference our private messages (even though Facebook has provided Netflix access to this information). And I doubt Netflix will violate its core brand by incorporating ads into its interface. Partnering with or acquiring a marketing firm to suffuse every subscriber’s online experiences with micro-targeted ads seems more likely.

All of these potential uses of viewing data are still speculative. But since profits regularly eclipse tech companies’ ethical standards, it’s important to be asking these questions before, rather than after, the damage is done.

Jason Mittell, Professor of Film & Media Culture, Middlebury

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.