Editor's Notes
The view from here
Jonathan Levi named ITV Studios' head of arts and popular culture
Allan King events celebrate filmmaker at TIFF
Outright announces deals in South Africa, Israel
BBC Four commissions three arts series from Tern TV
ITV and Pulse ink global distribution deal for "Showbusiness"
Armoza Formats' "The Bubble" pops up in Lithuania
Babyfoot signs first look with ITV Studios
Crusty Demons come to TV with new series
"Real Housewives of New Jersey" reunion racks up big numbers for Bravo
Trinny and Susannah makeover The Netherlands and Australia
TV survey reveals Brits prefer docs
BET changes perception of NASCAR with new docu-series
Real-life drama in reality TV
Shearer's "Big Uneasy" hits theaters for one night only
'X-Factor' Auto-tune controversy a sign of how far show has come
Spike Lee talks HBO doc ahead of its premiere
Seven moves to three channels with male network 7mate
Online platforms put power in DIY filmmakers' hands
Hulu pursues an IPO
NPR blogger hypothesizes best DVD releases tend to be docsThe view from here
Random musings on the non-fiction biz
Our take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Jul 27, 2009 |
Just over a year ago, one-time AOL president and chairman Ted Leonsis founded the uniquely titled SnagFilms as a way to give indie docs a new way to distribute online. Created to both address the bottlenecking in distribution and to spawn "Filmanthropy" -each film is paired with a charity - one year later SnagFilms is celebrating its anniversary with a bang, complete with an online SummerFest and partners like Sundance Channel coming on board.
The website has shed its "beta" designation, and CEO Rick Allen asserts that the company is just at the beginning of a quest to make online distribution the most exciting platform for filmmakers. Quite modest for a company with over 840 documentary titles and counting, a billion page views and over 25,000 web affiliates which have embedded SnagFilms' widgets, ranging from AOL channels, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and Politico.
Allen recounts that at the launch of the company, Leonsis predicted that they needed to get in front of a billion people. "I said to Ted, 'You are thinking of your AOL days, this is a new start up business, there's just no way.' He said we'll be able to do it and he was right. It shocked the heck out of me. It's significantly more reach than I ever expected in that first year."
The company is continuing to innovate with a new homepage complete with a 'why didn't anyone think of this earlier' Movie Matcher search mechanism. EVP Stephanie Sharis explains, "We wanted to think of a way to engage and explore in a more innovative way than searching a topic or typing in a key word. Our operating assumption was that for documentaries you may not be driven by a star name or by a blockbuster title, but you're coming because of a passion for a certain topic and that you're interested in engaging based on your mood."
Thus, the Movie Matcher lets the user choose if they're into a political film and from there they can decide if they want something quirky. These two clicks narrow the film selection down from 800+ films to nine.
Another anniversary highlight is SummerFest, which kicked off on July 24. SummerFest will debut one previously unreleased doc a week, and will create a fan base for a film that is about to head into a theatrical release or television in the fall. The first selection is Jonathan Bricklin's The Entrepreneur, which was brought to SnagFilms by Morgan Spurlock, who executive produced the project.
The second film of the series, announced today, is 45365, the Grand Jury Award winner for best documentary feature at this year's SXSW. The film will be available starting July 31 and concludes on August 6, on SnagFilms.com and on SnagFilms' network which includes Hulu.com and new partner Fancast.com.
There's other breaking news involving Spurlock, the director whose Super Size Me is the most popular film on the site. SnagFilms and Spurlock have worked together to create Super Size Me Selects, short excerpts from the Oscar-nominated doc that specialize in eating-related health issues. Individual websites can stream the lessons from Spurlock's film.
SnagFilms also recently announced that the Sundance Channel has become a new content partner, and Allen attributes the creation of the new alliances to being part of the Web 2.0 community, "which means we're inherently a lot more collaborative than a traditional model."
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