N'Sync Will Never Be Defeated!
Chris Anderson of Wired continues his fascinating analysis of the new media/information world of the "long tail"--as the subtitle of his forthcoming book on the topic sums it up, "the future of business is selling less of more." In the July Wired he offers another great feature story (inexplicably not hyped on the cover) on the topic, called "The Rise and Fall of the Hit," about how various aspects of late 20th century cultural production and consumption created a brief heyday for the huge-item-that-sold-real-well-and-everyone-cared-about--and about why that age is over. Interesting facts and observations contained therein:
Twenty-one of the all-time top 100 albums were released in the five-year period between 1996 and 2000. The next five years produced only two--Norah Jones' Come Away With Me and OutKast's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below-- ranking 79 and 91, respectively.
…………..
Network TV ratings continue to fall as viewers scatter to cable channels; since 1985, the networks' share of the TV audience has dropped from three-quarters to less than half. Ratings of the top TV shows have fallen dramatically since the 1960s. Today's top-rated show, American Idol, is watched by just 18 percent of households. During the '70s, American Idol wouldn't even have made it to the top 10 with that kind of market share.
………….
….now the audience is turning to a distribution medium that doesn't favor the hits alone. We are abandoning the tyranny of the top and becoming a niche nation again, defined not by our geography but by our interests. Instead of the weak connections of the office water cooler, we're increasingly forming our own tribes, groups bound together more by affinity and shared interests than by broadcast schedules. These days our water coolers are increasingly virtual--there are many different ones, and the people who gather around them are self-selected.The mass market is yielding to a million minimarkets. Hits will always be with us, but they have lost their monopoly. Blockbusters must now compete with an infinite number of niche offerings, which can be distributed just as easily.
The bad news in all this is that N'Sync's record for selling the most copies of any CD in one week may well never be matched. (It was 2.4 million in the first week for No Strings Attached.)
Nick Gillespie's 1999 Reason classic cover feature on our ongoing golden age of cultural production here.
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I'm a huge fan of the long tail, and all it implies, but, as the New Yorker points out, 7 out of the top 10 all time highest grossing films were released after 2000.
The whole thing is really worth a read
http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/articles/060710crbo_books1
Are those numbers adjusted for inflation? Seems to me a better parallel for the "# of copies sold" in music would be a # of theater tickets sold.
That's not surprising, as they don't adjust those grossing numbers for inflation. I'd be more interested to see inflation-adjusted number, and ticket sales numbers, as well as tickets per theatre.
I think the last number is probably the most telling as movie theatres have become completely ubiquitous over the past half-century and population has increased a ton. Top-grossing sure sounds nice, but it's like saying oil prices are at a "record high" without noting that the purchasing power of a dollar has decreased since 1980. Makes a good sound byte, isn't that meaningful. I also think tickets-per-theatre is probably the nearest proxy for number of albums sold.
The latest record-breaking over-inflated movie numbers is Pirates of The Caribbean, breaking Spiderman's record. I blog about it on the link in my name in Pirates of The Caribbean Vs. The Long Tail, Part II.
The bad news in all this is that N'Sync's record for selling the most copies of any CD in one week may well never be matched.