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Video @ SXSWi: Sean Lennon And Making Sure The World Doesn’t Suck

I gave serendipity a chance today at SXSWi, opting to attend a session solely because the title caught my eye—Making Sure The World Doesn’t Suck: How Independent Content Can Save The Media. The payoff: a lively session, although the topic often felt like an umbrella that anything could fit under, and the brief video chat with Sean Lennon embedded below.

Lennon was the outlier on the panel moderated by IFC’s Evan Shapiro, rankling some of the others when he said “you don’t have to be dedicated to be a blogger.” He quickly added that he wasn’t trying to impugn the character of bloggers, just to highlight the low barriers of entry for blogging and many other areas. Yes, agreed game designer Harvey Smith, but “a low barrier to entry doesn’t mean a low barrier to making great content.”

When an audience member shouted out OK Go as an example of viral video, Lennon quickly pointed out that when he was at Capitol EMI, “They had this incredibly viewed video (the treadmill) but the proportion of sales to video was incredibly small. It was shocking.” Not something this audience really wanted to hear.

Lennon now is part of Chimera Music, a music collaborative, and produced his mother Yoko Ono’s last album. For her current tour, they use a video done from 1950s Japanese animation for a budget of close to zero. The video got a great reception from the SXSW crowd, with instant requests for the link. One problem: it’s not online—and not because of rights. Lennon explains why in our conversation.

Mar 16, 2010 10:45 PM ET

Sean Lennon @ SXSWi Photo: Staci D. Kramer

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Posted In: Entertainment, Music, Events, SXSWi, , sean lennon

  • Karl Simonsen

    There have been numerous studies and polls that tell us consumers do not want ads.  The problem is the question itself and you will see a similar response when you ask consumers about advertisibng in ANY media.  Replace Mobile Phone with Television, newspaper, magazine, film or on-line and I guarantee similar results. 

    When conducting a poll or study ine needs to be very careful about how and what questions are asked of the consuer.  If you are soliciting a level of interest in someting new you will not get accurate results.  Go back to earlier innovations and products and you will find that consumers initially had no interest.  (The early sutdies of consumer intereswt in mobile data told us that stock quotes, news and weather were more important than entertainment…. I believe this has been proven false by now).

    To support this one needs to look no further than major network terrestrial broadcast television.  Consumers will tell you (myself included) that they hate the ads but they continue to tune-in.  Because it is free network TV has the broadest reach.

  • Steven James Burks

    And it will be paid for by primarily advetising, and secondarily subscription services.

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