The Creation of "Fan" Sites 189
jmoore writes "Nothing new that movie makers will do anything to make money from their movies. However, what about making false fan sites to boost a movies image? I couldn't belive it, but sadly it dosen't suprise me much. how depressing." The hype Blair Witch got, as the article points out made the movie industry understand how powerful "grass roots" really is. Reminds me of the Levi jeans pages modeled on the "I kiss you!" guy that people thought were real as well. Ah, marketing.
The make fake ones, take real ones down (Score:1)
Not hardly... (Score:1)
Fake "fan" sites might used to artificially create a Grass Roots campaign because they know a real one will never happen again. Soon, the people will come to realize this, the studios will stop and try something new...and go on suing everybody in site for "Intellectual" property when intelligence wasn't even remotely used to make the crap they shove down our throats in the first place.
My world is shattered! (Score:1)
But seriously, according to the article, it really does help to have Internet hype:
The success of the 1999 horror movie "The Blair Witch Project" is testament to the Internet's hype potential. The film industry was blindsided by the appearance of block-long lines of ticket-holders who had gotten hooked on the film through its Web site. The movie was made for about $1 million and became one of the most successful independent films in history, grossing $128 million in its first five weeks.
And I thought everyone saw that movie for the artistry!
Do you think. (Score:1)
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Re:My favorite fan site: (Score:1)
Deal of the day: e-meters, two for the price of one, while stocks last.
The future of making money online.. (Score:1)
I mean is a movie like the Mexican [aboutfx.com] really going to make money just on marketing hype alone? I mean, this wouldn't work right? People dont like to go see crap..
Oh.. Wait.. Nevermind..
hype yo (Score:2)
Re:Not hardly... (Score:1)
IT ALL MAKES SENSE NOW (Score:1)
Hemos isn't drunk... (Score:2)
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Re:Actually... (Score:1)
I believe the story was referring to stuff like Rubber Burner [rubberburner.com] and Super Greg [supergreg.com].
I don't think these were the Levis spots in particular, but these DID turn out to be fakes to promote something or another. Very subtle, since there are no products mentioned...
-l
its not just them (Score:1)
NEWS: cloning, genome, privacy, surveillance, and more! [silicongod.com]
Ah! (Score:1)
J:P
Uh? What wasn't real? (Score:2)
Damn. And I was hoping to go visit him and stay his house.
Nothing new... (Score:1)
hype up goatse (Score:2)
Then the proprietor could grant free adverizing space on goatse, to the MPAA
Seripusly, though. as cynical as this sounds, it is nothing new. Somewhere, way inside the lesat obsure link on the site, you might find a statement that "this is an ad" But if not, so what?! IT'S A FAN SITE
What artca$heer isn't a fan of his work?
How many dustcovers on how many novels, have high critical praise from critics that you may not have heard of? How many of those are verifiably unsolicited?
I remember.. (Score:1)
~Marshall
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the blair witch (Score:1)
Slashback? (Score:1)
Looks like this is old news [slashdot.org].
It will never stop... (Score:3)
Hmmmm... Anyone else think that we are getting closer and closer to EVERYTHING being about marketing? We aren't allowed to make up our own minds any more. We can't have opinions. If we do, we are obviously not the 'target audience' they're going for. Movies are dumbed down to the lowest common denominator. TV shows are only concerned about their 'share'. Niche markets are a thing of the past. Even on the web. Content sites are going down the tubes... or they are bought/run by huge companies posing as fans.
*sigh*
Doesn't anyone else with a brain in their head find this disappointing?
Jason
Re:Hemos isn't drunk... (Score:1)
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GalaxyQuest.com... (Score:1)
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Assume that there are valid arguments against your position.
"computer whiz" (Score:1)
Actually... (Score:2)
Anyone have links or more info?
OK,
- B
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LEE Jeans, not Levi Jeans (Score:2)
Wired News did an article [wired.com] on this a while back.
-Christian
But for $10,000.00 ???? (Score:1)
I don't care how bad the movie is... It's not like they have to make you watch it!
LR
Re:hype yo (Score:1)
That's your story? (Score:3)
I couldn't belive it, but sadly it dosen't suprise me much.
Fake Fandom (Score:3)
Why's this? Easy. These guys do simple statistics to model situations. If you've a million fan sites, each claiming to have a million hits/day, then that's a million times a million people who should have paid, right?
Since the cinema intake is going to only be slightly more (if there's any change at all), the ratio of ticket sales to potential customers is going to drop faster than Mir on Penguin Mints.
Result? The guys with money are going to invest in other companies. They're not going to put money in what they see as a looser.
In the end, the best way to capitalize on the movie market is to make decent movies with scripts that require in excess of double-digit IQs and hormone levels below the toxic threshold.
Re:My world is shattered! (Score:2)
marketing drones (Score:2)
Unless that company paying you pulls its IPO and gets sucked under NASDAQ's nasty grip of things this year. Wonderous how for some instances media is one stop short of saying the Internet is dead.
Last time I did a search on any one particular star, I had to sift through about 1gajillion porn links
This isn't neccessarily news though, maybe since someone actually wrote up an article about it. Fact of the matter is, most advertising agencies have marketers who profile when, where, and how to market to people by ethnicity, social status, etc. When was the last time you saw an ad for Malt Liquor or Birth Control on Rodeo Drive? Theres nothing new to what the studios are doing. Sure its immoral in a sense, but its no better than some marketer chosing one neighborhood because more "bruthas" live there.
Sil the movie [antioffline.com]
Old technique (Score:1)
-CrackElf
The Blair Witch is over, folks (Score:1)
Sega did this, too (Score:2)
Re:hey man how its hanging (Score:1)
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Re:Hemos isn't drunk... (Score:1)
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how do we know......... (Score:1)
Re:But for $10,000.00 ???? (Score:1)
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Too bad it works... (Score:4)
Sounds like a bad investment on the studio's part (Score:3)
Even though my site is dedicated to a show with an extremely high geek quotient, I haven't been able to get my daily hit count above the low double digits. The only way I see this working is if they paid the major search engines and web directories for preferred placement, or if they got links to the site planted in online media with the (also likely paid) cooperation of the media outlet (which we know happens).
Alternatively, they could draw people in (as was aparently the case with American Pie) by using material supposedly obtained surrepticiously from insiders, but that in fact was provided directly by the film's marketing Dept.
Real fan sites live until show takes off. (Score:3)
So in my mind, the "companies" are already playing on this, which I think, sucks.
We have seen it a lot of times where faithful fans were treated as criminals as soon as the "company" don't need their free advertising and trolling.
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Christina Aguilera's success (Score:1)
Seems like it worked pretty well.
You are a liar. (Score:1)
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Re:hype yo (Score:1)
Websites? duh, why not a chats and fora? (Score:1)
old, old tactic - bands did it all the time (Score:2)
A good chunk of promotion is tooting your own horn, whether you like to admit it or not. Why should it be any different in the modern day. It's all grand and ideal to assume every grassroots movement you see is done by selfless volunteers, but it's almost never that way. Deal with it.
Re:Not hardly... (Score:1)
Real or Fake, it doesn't matter. Supergreg rox. (Score:2)
I heard it wasn't Levis but some other company... the name slips my mind, but it was big in the 80s... Lee? Someone like that.
W
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Galaxy Quest? (Score:2)
I'm really surprised everybody missed out on Travis Latke's Galaxy Quest [galaxyquest.com].
I'm not slow, but when I went back and found it'd been co-opted by Amazon for awhile, I started thinking "Saaaaay, Travis musta turned pro!"
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2)
You're not imagining the DiVX site.
BUY GOODS WITH PATRIOTIC SELL! (Score:2)
Re:Uh? What wasn't real? (Score:2)
Guess I'll have to travel many country by myself now. *sigh*
Re:hype yo (Score:2)
"Who keeps down the electric car?
Who makes Steve Gutenberg a star?
We Doooooo! We Doooooooo!"
Decouple from the hype train. (Score:4)
A plea to the fawning fanboys - get a life! Direct your energies to something useful. If your skill is in documenting minutia, apply it to an educational or reference site. If you like writing fan-fiction, try creating your own characters and settings for once. If you're good with image/video editing, or with 3d software, work on an original indie creation (or go pro), instead of reenacting the Phantom Menace with South Park characters.
There's a place for sampling existing works and distorting them, but the final product should be original. Think Negativland instead of Pat Boone or Puff Daddy.
Enough ranting for now,
-Isaac
Hardly new (Heat.net, levi.com) (Score:4)
The funny thing is that one of the sites, "Mothers Against Cyberdiversion" has since been quoted and incorporated into culture [google.com] several years later by people who had no idea that it was nothing more than a reverse-psychology guerilla marketing effort.
A few years later I was the webmaster for levi.com and its associated domains. While at that time we didn't do any direct misdirection, we would create one-off rough-cut promo sites, including one for redline, designed by the folks at superbad [superbad.com]. I left before the age of Mahir, and so didn't have anything to do with those...
Kevin Fox
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Sounds really familiar (Score:2)
Provided by the Simpson's folks to be an actual site that Lisa went to one evening to find out what badgers eat. I think it was episode BABF20, but there's no capsule at snpp.com.
While it's not exactly the same thing, as it's pretty obvious that this one is in cahoots with the Simpson's creators, it is still the same kind of guerrila marketing plan. I found it pretty entertaining.
New Proj for SourceForge (Score:2)
You just enter in some default values:
So will they... (Score:2)
Ain't it cool news... (Score:2)
A freind's web site (Score:2)
One of my freinds once had a personal web site. It had some images copyrighted by Nintendo. Nintendo's lawyers sent him a bark letter. He was allowed to continue, but only if he put up a bunch of stuff promoting Pokemon. What else could he do but comply?
Nintendo basicly got advertising for the cost of a bark letter.
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Re:marketing drones (Score:3)
It works better if you don't look for porn stars...
World Wide Hype (Score:2)
A collection of marketing tools and world wide hype sites, with spam filling the spaces in between.
If we are not careful, that is all that will be left.
Re:Real or Fake, it doesn't matter. Supergreg rox. (Score:2)
The Beatles did it (Score:2)
Re:Decouple from the hype train. (Score:2)
So, even though it took a lot of time and is now in the bit bucket, I learned a lot from the time spent and it definately made me into a better web site designer
- Kallahat
Re:Decouple from the hype train. (Score:2)
What you say!! (Score:3)
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Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
Sounds like a bad investment on the studio's part (Score:2)
Re: What you say!! (Score:2)
Of course I have. I just don't think that writing a fan site or fan fiction makes me involved in the creative process for the original work, or that it makes me a creator or artist at all. At best, it would make me an imitator, and an unpaid marketroid. I demand pounds for my shilling, if you know what I mean.
-Isaac
Blair Witch expose (Score:4)
In part it reads:
"The "Blair Witch Project" fan sites deploy similarly suspicious language. The creators of The Blair Witch Project Fanatic's Guide, for example, tell site visitors, "We're just very dedicated fans," and until recently offered suggestions on how other fans might help promote the movie: "Buy TBWP Stock at the Hollywood Stock Exchange! Rank TBWP at the Internet Movie Database! Rank TBWP at Ain't It Cool News!"
But the creators of the site, Abigail Marceluk and Eric Alan Ivins, seem to be more than average fans. They appeared in the Sci-Fi Channel special "Curse of the Blair Witch," and the Rough Cut site links them to the film's back story: "A bit of trivia: Abigail and Eric are the two anthropology students who discover the three film students' 'lost' footage."
Re:hype yo (Score:2)
It's that whole meme [memepool.com] thing. Gutenberg is a meme. Kinda like Judge Reinhold.
Re:Not hardly... (Score:3)
That doesn't make any sense because BW2 wasn't grass roots at all. Rather, it was exactly what we've come to expect from Hollywood. Maybe it's impossible for a sequel to be grass roots by it's very nature, but in any case BW2 certainly wasn't. It discarded every single element that made the first film special. All BW2 shows is that Artisan didn't know how to properly cash in on grass roots support.
An amusing variation.... (Score:3)
__________________
Re:BUY GOODS WITH PATRIOTIC SELL! (Score:2)
(see the cover of Absolutely Free... funny how we're ignoring modern media and bantering madly away with 30 and 40 year old references...)
Re:The make fake ones, take real ones down (Score:2)
The Warner Bros. studio has tried to get Harry Potter fan sites taken down [theregister.co.uk]. Warner Bros. is currently backing off on this.
Fake fan sites are eerily reminiscent of Bruce Schneier's Semantic Attacks [counterpane.com], except that the movie industry is doing it so damn clumsily, and in public.
I agree that fake fan sites are dopey, and won't work. I mean, what attracted Joe Sixpack to The Internet in 1996 and 1997? Was it slick, pre-digested Corporate Ad Collateral? No just "No", but "Hell, NO". What attracts people to The Internet is what other individuals have put out there, whether it be Harry Potter fan sites, Hollywood Bitchslap movie reviews, or AmIHotOrNot. The current upper leadership of mass media outlets just doesn't get it.
Content (Score:2)
In conclusion: Who cares? How could anyone feel ripped off about a fake fan site? The home page for Galaxy Quest was done in the style of a fan site and was truly hilarious.
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Re:Decouple from the hype train. (Score:2)
Sometimes you find that one thing that simply captures your interest and by creating a fanfic, by redoing it with your own character ideas you are opening the doors of your own imagination to create your own masterpiece. I am a part time author, but I cannot write an original mecha sci-fi like GW. It doesn't make me any less of a person because I fell in love with a character from another show and want to make up my own stories about him. That's why doujinshi [professional fanfics, moreorless] is so popular in Japan! We like to take the characters out of their world and discover what they would do and how they would react to the world of our own creation. I am a proponent of using one's own imagination, but, at the same time, I love to share my ideas about known characters. People already know their characteristics then and don't have to get to know brand new ones. Yes, it's like discovering new friends, but sometimes I prefer my old friends thank you very much. ;)
Anyways, I will now stop ranting as well.
Re:Fake Fandom (Score:2)
I think you may be missing the point. The goal of the fake fansites isn't to impress the money-men at all, it's to impress potential fans.
The idea is that because the site appears to belong to someone just like the site's visitors, large numbers of those vistors will say, "hey, I can relate to this person, and they think [foo] is cool - I should think it's cool too, and spend money on it!".
The fake site doesn't generate fake numbers for the money-men, it generates real fans for the product.
How to spot the fakes: (Score:2)
ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US (Score:2)
Hence, they've made All Your Brand Are Belong to Us [allyourbrand.org] which mostly has a repeating theme, but some are still quite interesting...
You always have to wonder why grass roots always turns into cash roots.. *cough*woodstock*cough*
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Gonzo Granzeau
Re:Decouple from the hype train. (Score:2)
Of course, you're right about the common context. I personally don't like it, though. I don't like the fact that today's "common contexts" in much of the world are properties to be owned. It's the very fact that people build obsessive communities around pop entertainment that I find distressing. This tendency is, I feel, one worth cautioning against, insofar as it
Borrowing common themes from the Bible is one thing, adding new "fan-fic" books to the Bible is quite another. (A funny idea, though!)
I'm not a believer in "legitimacy tests" for art, I just call things as I see them. And I see fan-sites as a big fat waste of human intelligence. I'll still defend the rights of their creators to create them - I just won't get too bent out of shape when the corporate owners of the seminal works these sites are built around decide to co-opt them.
-Isaac
Re:It will never stop... (Score:2)
This is all bad, but not nearly as bad as you make it seem.
Re:Sounds really familiar (Score:2)
Except maybe not feeding your badger slurpees.
Re:World Wide Hype (Score:2)
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I bet slashdot does this (Score:2)
Re:ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US (Score:2)
Hrm. How do you know I'm not just a marketing droid, trying to promote something by suggesting the up-mod?
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Re:It will never stop... (Score:5)
But that's what what we have now [cjr.org], and it got that way through compromise after compromise, supposedly in the name of freedom and capitalism. The problem is that the public can't compete with the mechanized efficiency of big business. Microsoft lobbyists are formed up on capitol hill pushing UCITA [slashdot.org] while most Americans are at home watching MicroSoft NBC's latest incitefull coverage of some tear-jerking tale of loss and eventual triumph over something or other.
Enough already. These multinational corporations do business in places where the constitution means nothing, and human rights are non-existent. They're not our friends, they're not human beings with common sense, or even morals. Obviously they've proven my point; a business is operated by individuals, but it has no conscience, it acts as a machine would to achieve maximum efficiency. Anyone who's familiar with the term 'soft money' or 'corporate welfare' should understand what we're dealing with these days. The 'American People' and 'Corporate America' can't exist as equals, when the second of the two is dominant in it's very nature. Corporate America has to take the subserviant role, and not because the bill of rights is subjective -- but because when they don't, the rights of the public and the rights of the same people at the helm of Corporate America, get squelched.
A-yep. (Score:2)
FCC and FTC regulations may cover this. (Score:2)
Penalties for this sort of thing may be severe. Now, IANAL, but it occurs to me that movie producers and studios may have deeper than average pockets, and that if you could set some law students to tracking these things down, gathering evidence, and then present it to a law firm, you might be able to find grounds for damages or a class action lawsuit.
It's the American dream in action. Besides, who believes anything they read on the internet, anyways?
every year is worse! (Score:2)
Nope. I find it empowering. Look at it this way: if you didn't matter, why would companies spend so much time and money trying to sucker you into buying their stuff?
zo.
Re:Not hardly... (Score:3)
nothing new. (Score:2)
perhaps one of the more interesting cases in recent history is Microsofts' infamous attempt (this was circa 1998 or so) at astroturfing...they sent out documents to partners across the usa urging that they (and their employees) send letters of support to their congressmen for "freedom, the american way and microsoft" and that "all care should be taken such that the letters appear to be spontaneous messages of support from disinterested parties".
naturally, word leaked out and the "great innovator" had egg on their face again.
Re:We've seen this before (Score:2)
Due to this small causal falicy ("fan sites create buzz" vs. "lots of buzz leads to fan sites"), marketers are often fooled into thinking that astroturfing can create the illusion of lots of people excited about their crappy film or software, which will surely lead to lots of people actually excited... In the end, they always learn, the hard way, that lots of sites saying "Wow! $CRAPPYMOVIE is the best film I've ever seent!!!" fool nobody, and make the company look like complete idiots.
Balmer and Gates probably still blush at the occational chuckle years after they launced their astroturfing efforts. They learned their lesson, and now only buy off mainstream media to pimp their software (i.e., ZDnet).
Re:Not hardly... (Score:2)
The fact is that on the net, it's easy for those fucking parasites to "do something" to justify their bloated salaries.
What crosses the line between a legitimate fan site and a commercial enterprise treading on the copyrights of others? If you aren't even trying to answer this question, then you are an unmitigated evil as far as the future is concerned.
But the quest to recrate a fake version of the things they are trying to destroy is like murdering Indians to clear the way for filming Dances with Wolves. It would be pathetic if it werent' the mother of all assgas straight from Satan's sphincter. Having been near the stuff, I can honestly say it's not the execs that are the problem so much as the toadies surrounding them and flattering them with grandoise fantasies of their power and wisdom who are wrecking culture for everyone.
And it's $10 in parts of Manhattan now.
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
Absolutely ... (Score:3)
You hit the nail right on it's head. Everything is going to be about the market. The market and commerce are likely to be officially above everything in a few years.
Ant it's all going to change this summer when WTO will rule on Brazil's ability to manufacture cheap AIDS drugs for it's patients.
That will realy be the turning point, if WTO will rule in favour of the drug companies, then we will have it "officially" that the companies ability to make profit comes first, absolutely first. Even before human lives.
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Why pay for drugs when you can get Linux for free ?
Re:every year is worse! (Score:2)
They are not addressing *you* as an individual. But rather as a part of a group of dumb consumers.
Realy, they couldn't care less if you were hit by a truch at this instance or blown to bits by a carbomb. If it doesn't show on their statistics it doesn't matter.
Getting a *empowering* feeling from this, can not be called anything else than naive.
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Why pay for drugs when you can get Linux for free ?
This Affects Copyright, right? (Score:2)
To me, it seems to underline the Advantage advertisers have that essentially corrupts the free discourse of information between netizens. I argued this with 'loyal opposition' co-workers today. My point: this represents (and you gotta read the article to understand how sleazy this tactic really is) a total rip-off of people's creativity in a deceptful marketing scheme by the big corporations. On Charlie Rose last night, Michael Eisner claimed that the service he provided (he is an ardent hands-on-the-creative-process man) was the aggregate of directors, writers, actors, etc, and that if people on the internet were allowed to trade movies unchecked they would destroy that gathering of talent. "There would be talent, but it would be [dissonant crap]." But if Disney were to imitate Joe Blow's fan website, aren't they denying the creative capacity inherent in all those marketeers?
But the net result of this is a further reduction in the credibility of websites. There is a reason that magazines put the word "Advertisement" on top and bottom of those ads that read like articles. They want to retain credibility. So if this continues, the internet, already a place of dubious ancestry, will suffer a little more as people will have to decide further (just like in their spam mail) whether to believe the source or not.
I think this degrades the value of the entire internet experience. But then again, I don't visit movie fan sites much.
More to the point. Big business wants to have its cake and eat it, too. You can't link to their site, or comment on their 'content', but they can spend big bux and totally copy your fan site and prey on all your potential visitors.
Spurious elitism (Score:2)
pop=popular=whatever most people like.
entertainment=that which is enjoyable.
You don't like the fact that people build communities around what most people enjoy? Just because it's what is enjoyed by most people?
That seems elitist for the sake of it.
_____
Re:Decouple from the hype train. (Score:2)
If you start singing "Mr. Tambourine Man", I'm outta here....
/.
Re:Not hardly... (Score:2)
I heard about the movie, and didn't go see it (as I suspect many people also did not).
I was making the point that the astroturf hype surrounding the first movie was a case of "fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me"
IOW - it's not the kind of thing that's going to work as a long term marketing strategy, and that this phenomenon will likely fade away. It's 15 minutes are already up.