Coverage of NYC YouTube Gathering on 7.7.7 (Long Island Pulse)

Toni Munna, YouTuber and author, joined our pre-gathering at my home before the NYC 7.7.07 event and snapped this photo and wrote this nice piece on YouTube’s community. I like it because Toni said my videos are “funny, charming, clever and professionally done.” I paid her $5 per adjective, or $20 in total. But she…

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Product Promotion in Online Video: How Much is TOO Much?

I’ve been struggling with various revenue sources for videos (since the YouTube “partners” revenue hasn’t yet kicked in, and I don’t know yet whether it will be meaningful). There are several models in play… There’s custom work like the videos I’ve done for several sponsors for a flat-fee charge of $2-$5K (which is “found” money,…

‘Creator of God’ Posts Next Film: Harold Buttleman, DareDevil Stuntman

Francis Stokes, creator of “God Inc.,” announced a new film called ‘Harold Buttleman, Daredevil Stuntman.’ Since he’s releasing it free via YouTube (where it will be featured on the homepage tomorrow), Stokes found a sponsor to offset the cost of the film.  Sprout is paying Stokes $1 for each person that registers on the site….

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Revver Launches Video Responses

Revver is now facilitating video responses, a vehicle that helped propel YouTube’s community. The feature allows a  viewer to react to a video via their own and attach it similarly to a comment. HappySlip, a prominent YouTuber who powers her website’s videos via Revver, announced the feature. The company is also now offering pre-roll ads…

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Online-Video Workshop for Marketers

Warning: Blog post contains blatant self promotion. 🙂 I’ve been frustrated by the lack of understanding among marketers and advertising agencies about how to capitalize on online/viral video. Most viral-video marketing campaigns are born to fail — with heavy production costs, overtly promotional content, and view counts that are embarrassing. Rather than stew and rant,…

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Emerging Community for Serious Video Creators

The Daily Reel‘s “REELED IN” seems to be growing as serious video creators post their online videos to gain visibility from the site and its every-so-networked partners. I’m also finding it’s a nice way to connect with other creators, and a few WVFF readers and YouTube buds have jumped in. We’ve all been burned populating…