We know that celebrities hate the paparazzi. Hell, I hate the paparazzi. In my personal, but not professional opinion, they are one of the lowest forms of scum on the planet. But, they exist because publications like OK!, US Weekly, and TMZ exist. We can safely assume that the public has an interest in celebrities. You need only look at the check out aisles of grocery stores to know that’s a safe bet.
Ok…lately we’ve seen a lot of talk about access to content. From Murdoch cutting off Google’s access to Chris Anderson’s great post and book Free we’re all talking about the value of content. There’s a reason we’re all talking about the value of content. Once you assign a value to the content, we can determine it’s worth and how much we should charge for it. More importantly, once we know how much it’s worth, people, rich people, will start to determine how much they’ll pay to own the source and distribution of the content.
With the recent sale of BusinessWeek to Bloomberg for ONLY $5,000,000.00 I got to thinking…which can be a dangerous proposition mind you. Let’s look at the dots we have:
- Celebs loath the paparazzi
- The paparazzi exist because publications pay them for content
- Consumers by purchasing this content are directly (e.g. magazine purchase/subscription) or indirectly (e.g. visit to a website that is selling ad space) funding the existence of the paparazzi
- Print media usage and the value of print media companies is declining dramatically
- Celebrities are rich and have a common enemy (see #1)
If BusinessWeek sold for $5 million, how much do you think OK!, US Weekly, Star, and the like are worth collectively? Well, for argument’s sake let’s assume they are collectively worth $500 million. I realize it’s an absurd number, but let’s roll with it for now. If the top 10 richest celebrities pooled their money they’d be able to purchase these publications dozens of times over and then shut them down completely. With all the publications gone, who’s going to pay the paparazzi? With no one to pay the paparazzi, they’d have to turn to other meaningful, less scummy ways, of making a living.
I contemplated the concept of simply paying off the paparazzi not to act like leaches; kind of like a reverse IZEA scheme, but I quickly realized there are too many of them to pay off, too many who could pop up and want to be paid off, and more importantly they were a symptom, not the problem. The publishers are the problem. If you cut them out, everything else falls apart.
I ran this concept by my wife to make sure I wasn’t completely nuts. After all, if this was so simple why hasn’t someone else thought about it? She asked, “well, wouldn’t someone just create another site like TMZ or create their own new magazine?” Hmm, well it’s possible. Hell, it’s likely. But, here’s the problem I see with it. In this kind of game it would be too difficult and too expensive to go from start up to success ASAP. Think about it. You’re the editor at OK! Magazine. You get bought out by this celeb conglomerate. They fire you and dissolve the company. So you say to yourself, “I’ve got connections, I know people, I know this business, I’ll create my own publication and stick it to them.” Hmm. Well, sure, you could bootstrap a tiny operation, work out of your basement, and put together a great concept. But, you’d need cash to pay the paparazzi for the content. You’d need cash to advertise your existence. You’d need cash for distribution and printing (assuming you decided to go magazine style). That’s a lot of cash and the reality is they celebs can outspend you left and right. If this were a pay-per-click game, you’d get eaten alive. And guess what, you’re going to need PPC to make a dent, because your company would have ZERO awareness.
Crazy? Sure. Totally possible? You bet. Would it work? I have no idea, but when you consider Nicholas Cage spends $250,000 on dinosaur skulls, it’s not like it’s not worth a shot.
Hmm…maybe all that thinking I was doing, wasn’t so crazy after all.





But what about the gossip rag websites? Even if you bought out all the current ones, a website is pretty cheap and easy to start up, no?
Right, anyone can create a site. But, how do I know it exists if you don't have the cash to promote it?
The idea definitely has merit, and anything that drives society away from the current celeb nonsense is a big positive. The problem I see is that you're creating a collective of unemployed scumbags who are very competent in their field, and you're funding them with, in your example, $500 million.
You also have to contend with “Entertainment Tonight” and “The Insider” type shows on the main tv networks, which will be harder to tackle.
Currently, a large portion of our society believes what's happening with Brand and Angelina is very important – I don't think the name of the publication, the quality of the paper it's printed on, or the design of the web site is critical to that publication's success.
Maybe the root cause is not that the publications exist, but that people believe the content is important. If there were a way to change society's mind on the importance of this content, we could be in business, but we're also looking to make a change that impacts a LOT of income for a LOT of people.
Great thinking, but I have to disagree
… You’re missing a key point. While celebrities may “pretend” to hate the paparazzi, the paparazzi help keep celebrities in business. Just as you see the circle jerk in social media, I guarantee there’s a circle jerk between celebrities (and their managers) and paparazzi.
Yes, $500MM is “cheap,” but celebrities aren’t going to put the paparazzi or mainstream gossip rags out of business. Sure, they can all pimp themselves within their own magazines, twitter, etc. But, aren’t “unbiased” third parties promoting them more impactful? Just as writers/bloggers enjoy seeing their name in print, celebs enjoy seeing themselves in pictures. Not to mention it helps them sell whatever their hawking.
Moreover, when you dissolve the magazines, you put A LOT of people out of a job, not just paparazzi. I don’t see that going over too well with the general population. Besides, if no one had celebs to read and gossip about, we might actually have to talk about “real” things :p
I thought about the TV shows, but then remembered that Comcast was going to by NBC
http://www.thewrap.com/article/exclusive-comcas... The value of traditional media is so low today – it's one of the reasons Oprah left to go to her own network. On her own network she has full control over the shows, the ads, etc. In my approach, the celebs control that
Great thinking, but I have to disagree
… You’re missing a key point. While celebrities may “pretend” to hate the paparazzi, the paparazzi help keep celebrities in business. Just as you see the circle jerk in social media, I guarantee there’s a circle jerk between celebrities (and their managers) and paparazzi.
Yes, $500MM is “cheap,” but celebrities aren’t going to put the paparazzi or mainstream gossip rags out of business. Sure, they can all pimp themselves within their own magazines, twitter, etc. But, aren’t “unbiased” third parties promoting them more impactful? Just as writers/bloggers enjoy seeing their name in print, celebs enjoy seeing themselves in pictures. Not to mention it helps them sell whatever their hawking.
Moreover, when you dissolve the magazines, you put A LOT of people out of a job, not just paparazzi. I don’t see that going over too well with the general population. Besides, if no one had celebs to read and gossip about, we might actually have to talk about “real” things :p
I thought about the TV shows, but then remembered that Comcast was going to by NBC
http://www.thewrap.com/article/exclusive-comcas... The value of traditional media is so low today – it's one of the reasons Oprah left to go to her own network. On her own network she has full control over the shows, the ads, etc. In my approach, the celebs control that