Editor's Notes
The view from here
Web TV gains popularity
First Hand offers new fall fare
Michael Moore film will be released as free Internet download
Doc/Fest will host NFB cross media challenge
Deadline entry for Wildlife Vaasa Int'l Nature film fest nears
DCD snags factual exec from Endemol
Fall brings change at Icarus Films
Mexico's TV Azteca picks up Lightworks' fare
ROSCAR call for entries
DRG expands to North America
Paris the manipulative heiress
TIFF shows free docs outside
How VP candidate Sarah Palin compares to reality TV
A close look at NextFilm
TrueTube: Human rights are not for everyone
82-year-old cuts a rug on Dancing with the Stars
American Idol winner is singing the (financial) blues
America fascinated with fat? NY Times
Is Google laying underwater cables?
Is Sony auctioning a walk-on in Spiderman 4?Our take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Jun 1, 2006 |
This issue, we celebrate broadcasting execs who take risks - the mavericks who believe they know what viewers want, and are willing to climb out on a limb to provide it.
To some, risk is a loaded word. There can be a tinge of thoughtlessness to it. But that's not how we define it. General George Patton once advised: "Take calculated risks - that is quite different from being rash." As Patton himself demonstrated on many occasions, audaciousness in the face of adversity is an acceptable and potentially winning tactic. And adversity is what the television industry is facing.
The new millennium brought with it a new media world. It's understandable, however, if broadcasters hesitate before moving away from what has caused them to thrive. One of the greatest burdens of success is the fear of breaking with that same legacy.
But the days of shying away from risk are over. Doing nothing - relying on what is working now or what has worked in the past - has become a guarantee of failure. Eventually I'll get tired of smacking them around, but TLC was the archetype for that sort of failure. That is, until one of our risk takers showed up. (By contrast, the music industry is still waiting for its white knight.)
You might not like how some of our mavericks operate - some execs are kind and gentle, while others arrive axe in hand - but they are now integral to the success of our industry. We require leaders with untested solutions who aren't afraid to take us down paths we have not tread before.
One thing is certain: risks will lead to some spectacular failures, and the bigger the risk, the greater the chance of failure. But, as the great hockey general Wayne Gretzky once said, "You'll always miss 100% of the shots you don't take."
Brendan Christie
Editor
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