Monday, January 13, 2020

CES 2020 buzzword of the show: Streaming

After every CES, I like to pick the buzzword of the show. The buzzword is usually a marketing term that companies throw around with abandon at CES. Sometimes it’s a hot technology term. Other times, it is a theme that stands out.
For CES 2020, I’m picking “streaming” as the buzzword of the show. The importance of streaming video and music at CES was too big to ignore this year.
If I went just with what wording was used most frequently in press conferences and in exhibitor booths, the buzzword would be either “smart” or “AI.” Both of those terms were tossed around with practically every new product at the show. We had smart toilets, smart showers, smart faucets, smart mirrors, smart toothbrushes, smart bathroom mats, and that’s just in the bathroom.
Frankly those terms could have been used as the buzzwords for the past several CES conferences.
CES 2020 will be remembered as the coming-out party for a host of streaming video services, including Quibi, NBCUniversal’s Peacock and WarnerMedia’s HBO Max. Also at the show were The Trade Desk and other companies involved in placing advertising in streaming video services.
Plus, streaming music services, including Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Music, iHeartMedia and SiriusXM, had a major presence at CES 2020.
If I had to pick a runner-up for buzzword of CES 2020, I’d pick MicroLED. The display technology is gathering steam and could soon be rival OLED as a next-generation display.

CES buzzwords through the years:

2010: Green
2011: Smart
2012: Ultra
2013: Super
2014: Curved
2015: Wearable
2016: HDR (high dynamic range)
2017: Voice
2018: AI (artificial intelligence)
2019: 5G
2020: Streaming

Photos: Quibi Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg introduces his mobile video-on-demand service (top); NBCUniversal executive Linda Yaccarino leads a panel discussion with special guests including Terry Crews, Ester Dean, Kate del Castillo, Mandy Moore and Natalie Morales. (CES)

Related reading:

CES 2020 news in review (Jan. 11, 2020)

Celebrities at CES 2020: Alicia Keys, Shay Mitchell, Terry Crews and more (Jan. 12, 2020)


Sunday, January 12, 2020

Celebrities at CES 2020: Alicia Keys, Shay Mitchell, Terry Crews and more

CES 2020, the giant consumer technology trade show held Jan. 7-10 in Las Vegas, featured many celebrities in addition to the latest tech innovations.
Singer Alicia Keys spoke about streaming music in high definition on a panel at the C Space area of the conference. (See article by Twice.)
Actress Shay Mitchell spoke at a C Space panel on direct-to-consumer engagement.
Actor Terry Crews and actress Mandy Moore were among the stars on hand for a keynote presentation by NBCUniversal executive Linda Yaccarino.
Actress Aisha Tyler hosted the Dell press conference for the second year in a row.
Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps appeared at the Panasonic press conference.
Oscar-winning composer and producer Giorgio Moroder made an appearance at the FPT Industrial booth.
Professional wrestling stars Becky Lynch and the Bella Twins met fans at the WWE booth.
But some of the biggest star power was reserved for private corporate parties.
Rock legends Pat Benatar and Stevie Nicks performed at a concert for Samsung brand JBL.
Singer Mary J. Blige performed at the MediaLink party.
Rapper Ludacris performed at the Spotify party.
Singer Janelle Monae performed at the CNet party.
Rapper LL Cool J performed at the Pandora party.
Rapper Snoop Dogg was the DJ at the Twitter party.
French Montana performed a set at the iHeartRadio party.
I’m sure I missed a few. Let me know.
























Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Top 20 celebrities predicted to die in 2020

Actor Kirk Douglas is one tough SOB. At age 103, Douglas has topped the Stiffs.com annual dead pool for four straight years.
Of the top 20 public figures marked for death in 2019 by players on Stiffs.com, five died last year. They were author Herman Wouk, 103; actress Carol Channing, 97; architect I.M. Pei, 102; actress, singer, and animal welfare activist Doris Day, 97; and actress Valerie Harper, 80.
Who’s likely to bite the dust in 2020?
What follows are the top 20 public figures (with their ages) predicted to die in 2020, according to Stiffs.com.
  1. Kirk Douglas, 103, actor 
  2. Olivia de Havilland, 103, actress 
  3. Jimmy Carter, 95, former U.S. president 
  4. Prince Philip, 98, husband of Queen Elizabeth II 
  5. Alex Trebek, 79, “Jeopardy” game show host 
  6. Roberta McCain, 107, political matriarch 
  7. Bob Dole, 96, retired U.S. senator 
  8. Beverly Cleary, 103, children’s book writer 
  9. Vera Lynn, 102, singer 
  10. Bob Barker, 96, game show host 
  11. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 86, U.S. Supreme Court justice 
  12. Betty White, 97, actress 
  13. Henry Kissinger, 96, former U.S. secretary of state 
  14. Hugh Downs, 98, TV news anchor 
  15. Olivia Newton-John, 71, singer 
  16. Carl Reiner, 97, comedian, actor, writer and director 
  17. Sumner Redstone, 96, media magnate 
  18. Queen Elizabeth II, 93, queen of the United Kingdom 
  19. Ed Asner, 90, actor 
  20. Dick Van Dyke, 94, actor 
Here are some notable younger public figures predicted to die this year by multiple Stiffs.com dead-pool players:

65. Val Kilmer, 60, actor
67. Eddie Van Halen, 64, rocker
105. Michael J. Fox, 58, actor
112. William “The Refrigerator” Perry, 57, football player
123. Charlie Sheen, 54, actor
135. Artie Lange, 52, comedian
142. Kim Jong-un, 36, supreme leader of North Korea
149. Shannen Doherty, 48, actress
168. Julian Assange, 48, WikiLeaks founder
177. Demi Lovato, 27, singer
183. Johnny Depp, 56, actor
184. Lindsay Lohan, 33, actress
230. Lamar Odom, 40, basketball player
236. Matthew Perry, 50, actor
242. R. Kelly, 52, singer

Photo: Movie poster for “Spartacus” (1960), starring Kirk Douglas. 

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Most popular posts of 2019: Lying clickbait exposΓ©s, dead pools and hot LFL players

For the fourth year in a row, the most popular stories on Tech-media-tainment were those exposing online content promoters using lying clickbait to attract readers.
In addition to lying clickbait, other topics of interest to TMT readers included celebrity dead pools, LFL player pictorials and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame commentary.
What follows are the top 10 most visited stories on Tech-media-tainment in 2019:
  1. Bait-and-switch photos in lying clickbait (Jan. 28, 2019)
  2. Top 20 celebrities predicted to die in 2019 (Jan. 1, 2019)
  3. Fake Monica Lewinsky photos, fake Old West photos, fake North Korea photos (Feb. 3, 2019)
  4. The 10 hottest women in the LFL, 2019 edition (Aug. 11, 2019)
  5. 2019 psychic predictions for Donald Trump, Taylor Swift and Apple (Jan. 14, 2019)
  6. Rock Hall proposal: 20 for ’20 (Sept. 2, 2019)
  7. Pat Benatar leads my Rock and Roll Hall of Fame wish list (July 5, 2019)
  8. Post-apocalyptic TV shows ready for comeback (Sept. 8, 2019)
  9. The 10 hottest women in the LFL in 2019, part 2 (Aug. 11, 2019)
  10. 2019 will be big year for plant-based meat, beer-brewing machines and ‘Harry Potter’ mobile game (Jan. 2, 2019)

2020 predictions for media and tech company mergers & acquisitions

Ahead of the new year, analysts and pundits made 2020 predictions for mergers and acquisitions in the media and technology industries. Some are far-fetched “black swans” while others are more rooted in reality.
What follows are a few interesting ones.

MGM hangs ‘for sale’ sign


Staff writers at Variety predicted that movie studio MGM will put itself up for sale in the new year.
“MGM will be on the block as speculation about Apple and Amazon kicking tires on IP assets reaches fever pitch,” Variety said in a Dec. 17 article. “It’s a seller’s market for companies with proven franchises, and MGM controls the rights to no less than James Bond.”

Sony, Lionsgate studios in play


Research firm Strategy Analytics believes Sony Pictures and Lionsgate are likely acquisition targets because they are “now midsized studios in a land of behemoths.”
“Both traditional media companies and undercapitalized and underperforming privately held digital pure plays become logical M&A candidates,” the firm said in its “Media & Entertainment Predictions for 2020.”
The media and entertainment industry has been rocked by major deals in recent years. They include AT&T acquiring Time Warner ($85 billion), Disney acquiring 21st Century Fox ($71.3 billion), Comcast acquiring Sky ($39 billion), CBS re-acquiring Viacom (they split in 2005) ($12 billion), and SiriusXM acquiring the remaining 81% of Pandora it didn’t already own ($3.5 billion).

Smaller streaming video services targeted


Strategy Analytics also believes that many smaller online video services that rely primarily on ad dollars are strong acquisition candidates. They include Tubi, Xumo and Popcornflix. Some of them could be sold at fire sale prices.

Apple seen buying Disney


Year after year, analysts who don’t understand Apple predict that the iPhone maker will announce some huge transformative acquisition. And year after year, they are wrong, because Apple prefers to do smaller tuck-in acquisitions of technology and engineering talent.
What gets their minds racing is the fact that Apple has a huge war chest – $206 billion in cash and securities as of Sept. 28.
Bilal Hafeez, chief executive officer and head of research at Micro Hive, thinks Apple will buy media conglomerate Walt Disney Co. to supercharge its services aspirations.
“While Apple has famously been reluctant to make large acquisitions, perhaps 2020 could see them lose patience and take that path instead,” Hafeez said in Dec. 23 article. “And what better target than Disney? The financials could work. Apple’s market cap of $1.2 trillion dwarves that of Disney ($265 billion). In fact, Apple has over $200 billion in cash on its balance sheet, which alone could almost fund the purchase. The acquisition would give a large library of high-quality content including the Marvel, Star Wars, and Pixar properties. It would also give Apple another entry point into the Chinese consumer market.”

Arlo, GoPro get snapped up


Fortune magazine staff writers predict that more small consumer electronics companies will be acquired in the new year, following Google’s planned purchase of struggling fitness device maker Fitbit.
“Action-camera maker GoPro and security-cam maker Arlo Technologies both trade 80% below their IPO prices, with the market valuing each at less than a single year’s sales. Expect both to be snapped up in 2020,” Fortune said in a Dec. 2 article.

Related article:

Year-ahead predictions in technology IPOs and robotics (Dec. 28, 2019)

Photo: Movie poster for upcoming James Bond action movie “No Time to Die.” (MGM)

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Year-ahead predictions in technology IPOs and robotics

After sorting through reams of 2020 predictions for the technology industry, I’ve concluded that most are mundane extrapolations of current trends.
For this post, I want to focus on just two subjects: initial public offerings and automation.

Top 5 IPO prospects for 2020


CB Insights reviewed the privately held companies that could go public in 2020. It listed five as its top IPO prospects.
Those likely IPOs include GitLab, a DevOps platform; Snowflake, a cloud data warehousing firm; Credit Karma, a personal finance hub; Unity, maker of a cross-platform video game engine; and Procore, maker of construction management software.

Avoid Airbnb stock, buy Casper stock


Matt McCall, editor of Investment Opportunities, predicted that online lodging marketplace Airbnb will be an IPO to avoid in 2020. He cited “its crazy high valuation and bad customer service” as reasons to stay away.
“On the flip side, mattress company Casper, backed by the likes of Kylie Jenner and Leonardo DiCaprio, should be a big hit,” InvestorPlace reported. “Why does McCall think a mattress company will do so well? For one, he thinks today’s mattress retail environment is filled with scams. Customers often walk out with more expensive mattresses and tons of add-ons they didn’t want. But beyond that, Sleep Number, the last revolutionary mattress company, has been one of the decade’s best-performing stocks.”

Automation will lead to a worker strike in 2020


In its report “Predictions 2020,” Forrester Research forecast a worker strike for at least one Fortune 500 company sparked by concerns about rising automation.
“2020 marks a significant year for the future of employment,” the research firm said. “Automation will change the composition of the job market and raise global economic issues of income distribution and wage stagnation.”
Forrester said automation will replace 1.06 million jobs from cubicle, coordinator, and function-specific knowledge worker personas in 2020. This will be partially offset by an increase of 331,500 jobs that require “require intuition, empathy, and physical and mental agility.”
“Anti-automation backlash will cause a PR nightmare for at least one Fortune 500 company,” Forrester said. “Folding automation into the enterprise will not be without backlash: Unsurprisingly, employees are wary of automation. Very few firms have invested in prepping employees for the future of work — what it means to be working with, alongside, and potentially for automation. We expect a major strike will cause a PR nightmare for at least one Fortune 500 company.”

Photo: ABB robot working in a warehouse. (ABB)

Thursday, December 26, 2019

2019 magazine covers in review

Here is a roundup of my stories on memorable magazine covers and magazine trends in 2019.

Magazines that ended their runs in 2019 (Dec. 14, 2019)

Notable new magazines in 2019: Bumble Mag, Netflix Queue, Staples Worklife (Dec. 15, 2019)

Nude celebrities on magazine covers in 2019 (Dec. 16, 2019)

No shirt, no pants, no problem for 2019 magazine covers (Dec. 18, 2019)

The wackiest Donald Trump magazine covers of 2019 (Dec. 22, 2019)

The most controversial international magazine covers of 2019 (Dec. 23, 2019)

The most controversial U.S. magazine covers of 2019 (Dec. 26, 2019)

Related reading:

2018 magazine covers in review (Dec. 23, 2018)

Photo: Model Claudia Schiffer on the August cover of Vogue Italia (top); and the August cover of Fotografe Melhor from Brazil.