Posts Tagged ‘cbs’

By Scott Nyman

Google announced their interactive television platform earlier this year, promising to bridge the gap between content sourced from traditional broadcast and up-and-coming internet streaming services.  Running an adapted version of Google’s Android operating system (which has proven itself to be a magnet to intellectual property litigation, but that is a whole matter altogether…), the Google TV platform has already been integrated into select televisions and set top boxes. Google’s contender promises big things for the living room.

Recently, Google has been struggling to deliver the grand experience that it had been promising. Television networks have began blocking access to their online content through the Big G’s boxes, likely fearing a drop in the large revenues generated through broadcast advertising. So far, Google TV’s list of haters includes FOX, ABC, NBC, CBS and now Viacom. The Viacom family includes networks such as Comedy Central, CMT, BET, Spike, Nickelodeon, VH1 and the MTVs (all 200 of them).

The last entry in that list is particularly interesting, seeing how Viacom just recently lost their $1 billion copyright infringement suit against Google. In that case, Viacom claimed that Google’s slight of hand allowed the large scale infringement of Viacom’s copyrights through user postings on Google’s popular video sharing site, YouTube. In the ruling, U.S. District Court Judge Louis Stranton ruled against Viacom by stating, “mere knowledge of the prevalence of (copyright violations) in general is not enough” to make YouTube and Google liable.

Viacom plans to appeal the ruling as soon a possible. In the mean time, Viacom doesn’t seem hesitant to do everything in their power to make Google’s life difficult, even if they can only do it one MTV at a time.

Dear Television Writers and Producers:

Let me start off by saying that I am a huge fan of television and that I particularly enjoy the pervasive one-hour episodic drama genre.  Cop and lawyer shows are my absolute favorite, despite the fact that they often present embellishments and minor procedural inaccuracies.  One of the only things that a legal education is guaranteed to do is suck all of the enjoyment out of watching courtroom shows that play it fast and loose with the formalities of litigation, but I’ve learned to ignore most of the discomfort that comes from watching a make-believe prosecutor present character evidence in his case-in-chief.  I hardly cringe anymore when I hear scripted dialog about “robbing” a house or “murdering” an animal.  I am writing today, however, to tell you of a related faux pas that I haven’t been able to ignore.

rick-castle

“Are you saying that our show is unoriginal?”

As I’m sure you are aware, a subclass of the traditional police show has been popping up with greater frequency in recent years.  The basic premise for these shows is this:  A civilian “consultant” is brought in by a law enforcement agency, based on some enhanced knowledge or skill possessed by said civilian, thereby magically improving the agency’s crime solving abilities.  Amongst this subclass, I am a religious viewer of Psych, The Mentalist, Castle, White Collar, Fringe, and Bones (I can’t stand this one, to be honest, but it’s my wife’s favorite), to name a few.  With varying degrees of success, each of these programs attempts to present a compelling dynamic between straight-laced cops and one or more outside-the-box thinkers, who presumably aren’t bound by the paradigm that you’re typical “G-man” occupies.  It’s a classic odd couple arrangement – rambunctious corner cutter plays off of an endearing straight man.  My issue lies with one particular outside-the-box solution that is floated again and again on these shows.

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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 05, 2012

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