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March 31, 2004

Why Al Gore's TV Venture Matters

As has been in the news since Sofia Sideshow's January 2003 scoop, Al Gore has indeed bought a cable TV network, as reported in today's New York Observer. With the launch of Air America, it's easy to confuse Gore's move as liberal reaction to the popularity and solidarity of conservative media voices. The truth is, VTV (as is the rumored name of the new network, once referred to as the Indie Channel and Link TV) is simply the first well-funded venture to attempt decentralized TV production: arming kids with cameras and laptop edits. Just the other day, Jeff Jarvis brought up his version of this, called Reality News.

Take a bunch of citizen reporters -- moms, grandpas, students, poor people, immigrants, ugly people, webloggers... people who would never otherwise get on TV except on American Idol or Survivor -- and send them out on the stories they want to cover to get the answers to the questions they want to ask with camera crews and trucks with big network letters on the side -- and dare the powerful to turn them away.

Good thing we're developing the tools that make decentralized TV production possible! Otherwise Gore and Jarvis would have 1000s of so-so tapes to fast-forward through...


Posted by Eli Chapman at 03:09 PM