May 6, 2024

A Gossip Site Finds Its Niche

While his wife and 3-year-old triplets sleep soundly, Mr. Mwangaguhunga is at his computer in his spacious TriBeCa loft, scanning photographs taken only hours earlier by paparazzi in the bars and clubs frequented by musicians, sports stars and actors. He is looking for missing wedding rings, emerging baby bumps, fresh bruises or any telling sign that will make a story.

He then sorts through dozens of e-mail tips that have come in during the wee hours, offering information on everyone from Justin Bieber to the Atlanta “Housewives.”

The lanky Mr. Mwangaguhunga (mah-WON-gah-goo-HOON-gah) is neither an obsessed fan nor a celebrity stalker; he owns and runs the Web site Mediatakeout.com, and he bills it as one of the most highly trafficked African-American-centric gossip sites in the world.

His business philosophy is to give his audience what it craves: unvarnished tidbits on celebrities of interest to minorities who are passed over by more mainstream gossip outlets like People and Us.

By 4 a.m. he has sent e-mails to his five employees, dividing the tasks of writing the day’s dozen or so eye-catching and excessively punctuated headlines (almost every one begins along the lines of “Amazing MTO World Exclusive!!!!!”), checking out tips and writing pithy, humorous prose to accompany the headlines. (While Mediatakeout started as an aggregator, it now reports and writes many of its articles, although these are rarely longer than three terse paragraphs and are often simply lengthy captions.)

Most tips won’t pan out, but a handful do. Mr. Mwangaguhunga takes credit for (though it is difficult to verify) being the first to report Kim Kardashian’s pregnancy and Nicki Minaj’s hiring as a judge for “American Idol.” Last month the site reported the engagement of the professional basketball star Kevin Durant (along with picture of his fiancée, Monica Wright). There is also no lack of gossipy speculation. This strategy has built Mediatakeout a loyal and growing audience. According to Google analytics data provided by Mr. Mwangaguhunga, the site gets 16.3 million viewers a month.

Mr. Mwangaguhunga cited another metric, however, that he thinks is more telling: 46 percent of his visitors, about 7.5 million people, are black women, a number that represents broad penetration into that market. His next biggest group, according to Google Analytics and a pop-up survey given to site visitors, is black men, at nearly 30 percent, then white women at 7.5 percent.

“He is more powerful and has more influence than every other urban site,” said Marvet Britto, who runs the Britto Agency, a public affairs and branding company that once represented Mediatakeout and has represented stars like Angela Bassett and Kim Cattrall.

She said that over time she has seen Mediatakeout’s influence grow as its articles have been picked up by television and other mainstream outlets that don’t typically follow such reports. “Often producers from various networks would call me about offering my insights on a segment and their source was Mediatakeout,” she said, “which indicates to me the vast reach” of the site.

At nearly 6-feet-2 and wearing Spike Lee-style glasses, Mr. Mwangaguhunga hardly looks the part of a star maker. He rarely attends parties and prefers to relax at his neighborhood cigar bar or at his house in Southampton, N.Y., on the weekends.

“It is not about making me a celebrity — although I could probably be really good friends with all of them,” Mr. Mwangaguhunga said. Instead he prefers to keep his distance so he can keep his independence. “Folks will offer me cash to place a story,” he said, “but that is absolutely not the way we do it.”

Mr. Mwangaguhunga, 39, was raised in Queens Village by parents who immigrated from Uganda. He attended John Jay College and then Columbia Law School, and after graduating in 2001 he practiced corporate tax law at the firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen Hamilton for three years.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/12/business/media/a-gossip-site-finds-its-niche.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Keith Ratliff, Gun Enthusiast of FPSRussia, Is Shot to Death

“I ♥ Guns and Coffee,” it read.

Mr. Ratliff’s passion for firearms made him something of a celebrity on the Internet, where he helped make scores of videos about high-powered and exotic guns and explosives. His YouTube channel, called FPSRussia, became the site’s ninth largest, with nearly 3.5 million subscribers and more than 500 million views.

But last week, the authorities said, Mr. Ratliff, 32, ended up on the wrong end of a gun. The police in northeast Georgia found him dead at his office on Jan. 3, shot once in the head. He was surrounded by several guns, but not the one that killed him. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is treating it as a homicide.

“We are interviewing people of interest, but we have not named a suspect,” said the Franklin County sheriff, Stevie Thomas. “We are not ruling out any options.”

The news, coming amid a national debate about gun control, rippled across the blogs and social networking sites where his videos were popular. Tributes on Facebook and Twitter came from fans stunned that such a well-armed expert had not been able to defend himself.

“For him not to pull out that gun and try to defend himself, he had to feel comfortable around somebody,” his wife, Amanda, told a television channel in Lexington, Ky., where he used to live. “Either that or he was ambushed.”

Mr. Ratliff’s videos, which starred a friend, Kyle Myers, are popular for their homegrown brand of zaniness — three minutes of Mr. Myers’s casual banter as he rakes targets or blows things up with extreme displays of firepower. Most are made outdoors, where Mr. Myers fires at targets like hay bales or photographs of Justin Bieber, while explaining the merits of various weapons. The videos always end the same way: with a boom.

“We couldn’t make a video about such a high-powered rifle without blowing up a truck,” Mr. Myers says in one video before opening fire on an empty pickup truck. “So let’s get a nice, big explosion and maybe a little shrapnel.”

F.P.S. is slang among video game players for “first-person shooter.” “Russia” refers to the thick accent used by Mr. Myers’s online persona.

Mr. Ratliff recently moved from Kentucky to Carnesville, a city of 540 people that is 80 miles from Atlanta. He opened a business that made and repaired firearms, and was licensed by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the authorities said.

He was last seen alive at 7 p.m. on Jan. 2, the police said. The next night, the police found him dead inside the business, FPS Industries.

Neighbors in this small community said Mr. Ratliff kept to himself. His wife and 2-year-old son lived in Kentucky. Until last week, Sheriff Thomas said he was called to the property only once, after neighbors heard gunfire.

“As many of you already know I lost a close friend this week,” Mr. Myers wrote to his 1.1 million Facebook followers. “I ask only that you show respect to the situation for the family’s sake.”

Dan Barry contributed reporting from New York.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/11/us/keith-ratliff-gun-enthusiast-of-fpsrussia-is-shot-to-death.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: On Vevo, ‘Gangnam Style’ Is the Viral Video That Never Was

What was the year’s most popular music video online?

The answer would seem obvious: “Gangnam Style” by the South Korean rapper-clown Psy, which in just a few months has racked up 942 million views, the most of any clip in YouTube’s history, redefining the scale of a viral hit.

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But the song is conspicuously absent from one year-end Top 10 list — the one produced by Vevo, a site that uses YouTube as its primary streaming platform and has tried to establish itself as the home of music videos online. Vevo’s list is topped by Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe,” which has 358 million views and, at least until “Gangnam Style” came along, seemed about as viral as a video could be.

The reason has to do with Vevo’s ownership, and how it gets the videos it plays. It is mostly owned by Sony and Universal, the two biggest record companies, and it does not have video licensing deals with every label. The biggest gap is the Warner Music Group, which includes superstars like Green Day and Bruno Mars. But there are also thousands of small labels and production companies that post videos on YouTube but lack deals with Vevo. The South Korean company that originally released “Gangnam Style” is one of them.

Once Psy got an American record deal through Universal Republic — and found an American manager in Scooter Braun, the social media mastermind behind Ms. Jepsen and Justin Bieber — “Gangnam Style” made it onto Vevo. But that did not help its year-end ranking on the site, where on Thursday afternoon its official play counter read, “0 views.” A spokeswoman for the company attributed that number to a technical error.

Vevo — which, in addition to Sony’s and Universal’s majority shares, is partly owned by Abu Dhabi Media — is in negotiations with YouTube over the licensing deals that will allow the service’s videos to keep streaming through YouTube, which is owned by Google.

Digital Sales Up at Warner Music: At the Warner Music Group, sales of digital music were up over the last year, and “more than offset” the continuing decline in sales of CDs and other physical formats, the company reported on Thursday.

Warner had revenue just below $2.3 billion from its recorded music division for its fiscal year ended in September, down 3 percent from the year before. Within that total, income from digital music — from download stores like iTunes and streaming services like Spotify — was $864 million, up 13 percent for the year.

That digital music revenue made up for losses from CDs, the company said: in the United States, digital sales represented 53.8 percent of the company’s revenue in recorded music, the first time it was more than half for a full year. But other businesses, like licensing and income from so-called 360 contracts (which let the company earn money from artists’ tours, merchandise and other deals), dragged the recorded music unit down.

Warner’s music publishing division had a 4 percent decline in revenue for the year, to $524 million. Over all, the group’s revenue was $2.8 billion, down 3 percent for the year. Its operating income was up 241 percent, to $109 million, and the company reported a net loss of $112 million, an improvement from its $205 million net loss the year before.

Warner was a publicly traded company from 2005 to 2011, when it was bought for $3.3 billion by Access Industries, a holding company controlled by the Russian-born investor Len Blavatnik. It continues to report its accounts, however, because of its public debt obligations.

Last.fm Scales Back: Last.fm, a music streaming service owned by CBS, is cutting back some of its features around the world “due to licensing restrictions,” the service announced.

In the United States, Britain and Germany, users can still listen to free music (with ads) through Last.fm’s Web site. But its desktop application version, introduced this year, will now only be available by subscription, as the service has already done in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Brazil. The service will be discontinued in all other countries, with the changes taking effect next month, the company announced on Thursday.

Last.fm, founded in Britain in 2002, was a pioneer in social listening online, by keeping track of what songs users listened to (“scrobbling”) and making those lists available to other users. That feature is integrated with many other streaming services, like Spotify and Rdio, and Last.fm was bought by CBS in 2007 for $280 million.

But in the United States, at least, the cost of music licenses has become a hotly debated issue, with Pandora Media, the leading Internet radio service, pushing for lower royalty rates.


Ben Sisario writes about the music industry. Follow @sisario on Twitter.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/on-vevo-gangnam-style-is-the-viral-video-that-never-was/?partner=rss&emc=rss