MMmmm hot, fresh music and videos!
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How about some Glee to get this Friday started off right? Here’s a video on demand version of the recent episode “Mash Off”. Enjoy it!
Happy happy Friday! Enjoy Big Live’s Pop Music Channel while you get ready to go out tonight. Or if you’re staying in, invite your Facebook friends to watch with you!
Hey All,
The Occupy movement has not slowed down, despite repeat attempts by local government and police to disrupt it. Check out what’s happening live at the Occupy movements here:
http://www.biglive.com/bl/stage/index/stage/1064
Also, feel free to embed this widget anywhere and invite your Facebook friends to watch and chat with you (we share!)
Today seems like a Latin Music kind of Monday. So tonight Big Live is bringing you Buena Vista Social Club (1999), the story of a group of legendary Cuban musicians brought together again for a series of incredible concerts. You can watch it right here:
http://www.biglive.com/bl/show/ondemand/show/2003
Enjoy!
Hi Everyone,
We just want to celebrate the fact that as of today we have 51 followers! Thank you, world! Now that we have some followers, what videos would you like to see on www.biglive.com and chat about? We’ll post a question, and whoever makes a suggestion might—just might—get their wish (as long as it’s decent).
If you have an idea, tell us what it is—it could be a favorite tv show, or a youtube playlist you like (we can embed most videos from Hulu, YouTube, and Livestream).
So keep an eye out for the question we’ll be posting, or leave your idea in the comments section.
Enjoy!
It’s social media reblog Wednesday again, when we take our favorite social media post from tumblr and reblog it.
This week we chose this article posted by thebuzzbuilders about how the fashion industry can interact with fashion fans on a personal basis using social media:
By: Torre Taylor
Social media is affecting all areas of our lives and transforming industries all around us, including the fashion industry. Any designer, clothing company, or fashion enthusiast will be at a disadvantage if they do not begin voicing themselves via social media sites such as Twitter. Even top designers like the great Marc Jacobs are not only using Twitter, but using it effectively. Last year an astounding number of women were tweeting at Marc Jacobs to create a plus size line. Plus size has always been ignored by the world’s successful high fashion clothing lines, but at what cost? Marc Jacobs is a businessman as well as a fashion designer and any business person knows when there’s a demand, fill it. When the announcement reached Facebook it received more “likes” than ever before.
It’s true, real-time chat with your favorite designer or company pr person can turn wish-lists into packages headed for your door.
Sites like Big Live, which offers video, typed-chat, and host commentary are ideal for this kind of real-time surprise sale, whether you’re Gucci or an indie artist. Talking to your fans and instantaneously rewarding them for their fanship is a spectacular way to engage users.
Check out how DKNY collaborated with us! http://fashionrollcall.com/dkny-pr-girls-big-live-event/
For today’s Video of the Day we’d like to bring you Big Live’s U.S. of Anderson channel, where you can watch the show about David “Dave” Anderson and Nikolai from Russia and their journey across the United States.
It’s a pretty great show if you’ve never seen it, so enjoy, and bring your Facebook friends on to chat with you (just use the “invite Facebook friends” button).
If you feel like making a little journey of your own, watch it here: http://www.biglive.com/bl/stage/index/stage/1046
Of course, the website is not dead. But websites, especially those that are focused on video experiences, need to engage their users with more than just an embedded video and a blurb. How do you do this? Simple. Let the viewers talk to each other about the content they’re there to see, Big Live-style.
Is the Website Dead?
By Katharine Relth
We return to the experts from our Amplify the Message panel for more sage advice on social media.
This panel was moderated by Marc Schiller of Electric Artists and included Lina Srivastava of Lina Srivastava Consulting, Tribeca Flashpoint’s Howard A Tullman, and writer/director Rider Strong.
In this 8 1/2 minute video selection, they discuss why filmmakers need to understand that the web has evolved and websites no longer exist as stand-alone experiences.
So what does this mean for filmmakers and their marketing efforts?
The construction of websites for a film or a visual narrative project traditionally has a transparent and familiar formula: Put up the trailer. Have some production stills. Include plot synopsis and cast. Tell your audience about it through traditional advertising techniques. And then, your audience will…what? Visit the site once, watch the trailer, and leave, never to return again.
However, if you think about your website as social and fluid—never static—your audience will stick around the website for a lot longer. They will have conversations with you about your project within your engaging platform. And they will share this experience with others—because you have created a worthy value exchange.
Check out their lively exchange in the video below and let us know if you agree!To continue the conversation, read Part 1: Is Context the New King?
You can also watch the video in its entirety at the Tribeca (Online) Streaming Room.
Watch this space for more from the Amplify the Message: Social Media panel and other great Tribeca Talks discussions!________________________________________________________________________
Katharine Relth is the Web Producer at the International Documentary Association and the former Digital Content Editor at TribecaFilm.com. When she isn’t writing about or watching movies, she can be found discussing popular culture, riding her bike, or making jewelry. Follow her on Twitter @katharinejoann
Every Thursday we present to you one of Big Live’s cool features, so you can use it and tell us how cool it is (or uncool, if that’s how you feel). This week, we want to show you how Video On Demand can combine with Pay Per View on our site to make content providers some actual money.
There are millions of awesome, creative Indie artists out there on the Internet, trying to find ways to maximize the distribution of their content without losing all possibility of getting paid for it.
On Big Live, these artists have flexible options for special shows that will actually make them money. Here are two ways to do that:
1. Paywall on Video Experience
Content Providers can choose an amount that they think is appropriate to ask viewers to pay before they can watch the provider’s content. In this example, the band The RAH RAHs is asking viewers to pay 99 cents to watch the video of their latest concert.

Viewers use Paypal to pay the amount requested, and then they can start their video. While they are chatting in real time with the other viewers in the crowd about the content, the video only begins after the viewer has paid the amount, and it starts from the beginning so they don’t miss any of the awesome content they just paid to see.
2. Paywall on Host Experience
One of the coolest things that Big Live offers audiences is the chance to interact with Content Providers in real time (if providers want to interact). Providers can act as hosts, which means they log on at the same time as their audience and talk to everyone, but their comments appear in the box above the chatbox so that their audience can see everything they have to say.
In the example picture above, Amy Martino and Dana Slokos are the hosts of the event.
Content Providers can then offer fans the option of viewing the video for free, or viewing the video with their commentary for an appropriate price. Then the paywall covers only the host area of the chat, but not the video.
And there you have it! How all the fabulous artists out there can get a little something back from their audiences, and how fans can help buy their artists dinner with just a click, and get something back, too.
If you want to see this system in action, we’ll be working with a very big site and a hosted showing of one of their films on October 27th. Stay tuned for more info!
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Oscar afterthought..
I really really really hope Jason Segel performs “Man or Muppet” from The Muppets! 2011 has been a big year for Jason and I...
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I know my calculus, it says U + Me= Us.
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Tomorrow I will be posting my opinion on tonight's Gossip Girl. Let's hope it's positive, yeah?
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i've never actually watched a tv series all the way through. 100th episode of Gossip Girl tonight. Everyone better watch
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I am not much of a fashion girl but I LOVE the choices they use on Gossip Girl. And in honor of 100 episodes here are my favorite dresses!
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“C’mon Guys, let’s tweet “We love Dan and Blair”! We need to show them that we, Dair’s fans, are alive!”
