Hulu adds Sony, MGM, launches Test
Posted on Mon, 29 Oct 2007 01:18:41 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Kenneth Li
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hulu, an online video service formed by two U.S. media
conglomerates, will begin a private test on Monday with two new partners in one
of big media's most ambitious attempts to court viewers wherever they spend
time.
The joint venture of General Electric's NBC Universal and Rupert Murdoch's News
Corp , which earlier had trouble persuading other big content producers such as
Viacom Inc and Walt Disney Co to join, now adds shows from Sony Pictures
Television and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., Hulu executives said.
The long-awaited free, advertising-supported service makes its debut as consumer
interest over watching video clips and television shows on the Internet.
Despite Hulu's high powered backers, the service has drawn skepticism among
media and Internet executives, who have struck out on their own by offering
shows on its own sites and are either selling shows on Apple's iTunes or
offering it for free on other.
But these companies have yet to garner the hundreds of millions of viewers on
such services as Google Inc's top online video sharing service YouTube.
"We are still in inning No. 2 in the whole game of online video," Forrester
Research analyst James McQuivey said, employing a baseball metaphor.
Ahead of Hulu's anticipated public launch early next year, NBC Universal has
stopped offering its shows for sales on iTunes and pulled its channel off of
YouTube.
On Monday, Hulu will offer about 90 TV shows from the four companies and smaller
partners ranging from current prime-time hits such as "Heroes" and "The Simpsons"
to vintage shows "Miami Vice" and "The A-Team."
It will also make about 10 feature films available including "The Breakfast
Club" and "The Blues Brothers."
Shortly after the test begins, these shows will also be made available on a
handful of the biggest online distributors Time Warner Inc's AOL, Comcast Corp ,
Microsoft's MSN and Yahoo .
"Given that they're late, I have to admit that they've actually delivered more
than I expected," said McQuivey.
McQuivey pointed to the site's ability to let users share and embed entire shows
or movies everywhere on the Web as surprising features to be offered by a
service controlled by media companies who have spent its entire history
directing where and when its shows can be accessed.
NOT YOUTUBE KILLER
Although framed in the press as big media's "YouTube-killer," Hulu Chief
Executive Jason Kilar, a former Amazon.com executive, said the site aims to make
it the premier destination for full length shows and movies.
"We want to stand for a high quality approach to the content," Kilar said in a
phone interview on Friday, who drew a distinction from YouTube's offering of
video clips.
Viewers could easily mistake the site for another dot-com start-up: one would be
hard pressed to figure out who its corporate sponsors are as Hulu's minimalist
design is stripped of network logos and largely consists of a white background
with thumbnails of the shows adorning the screen.
Videos are played in wide-screen format on the top of the screen, with an
options to dim the entire screen, view it full screen, or as a separate smaller
box separate from the site.
One distinguishing features created by a team that consists almost entirely of
executives from the Internet and technology industries, addresses an issue that
is unique to its service -- the ability to find a spot within a show that a
viewer wants to share.
The ability to share video or embed video clips of a funny or interesting moment
on a show have existed legally and not for years on services like YouTube that
restrict the uploading of videos to ten minutes.
But access to full length shows presents a new problem -- finding the right
moment.
Viewers can adjust a slider at the bottom of the video window to clip the exact
spot within a show -- a particularly funny skit on "Saturday Night Live" for
instance -- to send or embed on another Web page.
Hulu also confirmed Providence Equity Partners has invested $100 million for an
undisclosed stake in the company. Earlier, media reports said the stake valued
the company at $1 billion.
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Photo:
Hulu logo taken from the Hulu beta site.
Posted on Mon, 29 Oct 2007 01:18:41 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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