April 25, 2024

Online-Only TV Shows Join Fight for Attention

When Amazon sizes up the television marketplace, it sees opportunity. Internet-delivered TV, which until recently was unready for prime time, is the new front in the war for Americans’ attention spans. Netflix is following up on the $100 million drama “House of Cards” with four more series this year. Microsoft is producing programming for the Xbox video game console with the help of a former CBS president. Other companies, from AOL to Sony to Twitter, are likely to follow.

The companies are, in effect, creating new networks for television through broadband pipes and also giving rise to new rivalries — among one another, as between Amazon and Netflix, and with the big but vulnerable broadcast networks as well.

“These are the very first lab tests in a very grand experiment,” said Jeff Berman, the president of BermanBraun, a media company that makes programming for NBC, HGTV, AOL and YouTube, among others.

As he suggested, the competition has only just begun. Amazon is making pilot episodes for at least six comedies and five children’s shows, with more to be announced soon. Sometime this spring it will put the episodes on its Amazon Prime Instant Video service and ask its customers which ones they like, then order full seasons of some of them.

Netflix has been ordering entire seasons of its shows without seeing pilots first. Reed Hastings, Netflix’s chief executive, said last week that “House of Cards,” the political thriller starring Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright, had been a “great success” for the company. Its next program, a horror series called “Hemlock Grove” from the film director Eli Roth, premieres in April.

Microsoft has said comparatively little about its plans. But all three companies are commissioning TV shows because they have millions of subscribers on monthly or yearly subscription plans. Though the shows may be loss leaders, executives say that having exclusive content — something that cannot be seen anywhere else — increases the likelihood that existing subscribers will keep paying and that new ones will sign up.

The proliferation of shows is generally seen as a good thing for viewers, who have more choices about what to watch and when, and for producers and actors, who have more places to be seen and heard. But the trend may inflame cable companies’ concerns about cord-cutting by subscribers who decide there’s enough to watch online. At the same time, the rise of Internet-only shows may make viewers more dependent on the broadband cord. In many cases, though, both cable and broadband are supplied by the same company.

Unlike the early stabs at Internet television, these shows look and feel like traditional TV. That is partly because more viewers are watching Internet content on big-screen TV sets, but it is mostly because the companies involved are throwing money at the screens: each of the Amazon comedy pilots cost the company upward of $1 million, according to people involved in their production, which is less than the $2 million invested in a broadcast comedy pilot, but more than is typically invested in cable pilots.

Not only are the budgets comparable, so are the perks for actors and creators — like trailers and car-service pickups. The writers are guild members. The actors have what the people involved say are standard television contracts, with options for several seasons if shows succeed.

“There’s absolutely no difference” between TV and these new productions, said Jeffrey Tambor, who starred in HBO’s “Larry Sanders Show,” then Fox’s “Arrested Development.” Now, at 68, he is an online pioneer: earlier this year he reprised his character for Netflix’s new season of “Arrested,” which will make its premiere in May. While taping that show, he read the script for “The Onion Presents: The News,” an Amazon pilot. He signed up, and played the older rival to Cheyenne Jackson.

The “Onion” producers took over half of the newsroom of NY1, a New York news channel, in mid-February and reimagined it as the headquarters of an unscrupulous news corporation. (In the pilot episode, a reporter kidnaps a child to increase ratings.) NY1 had rented out its space to the producers of “Gossip Girl,” “Damages” and “The Good Wife” before — but never to a show being made for the Web. For most of the actors there, like Mr. Jackson, a Broadway star whose TV credits include “30 Rock” and “Glee,” the taping was their one pilot of the season — and thus represented a bet on Amazon over the broadcasters.

Mr. Jackson recalled that his manager called about “The Onion” with a note of apprehension in her voice. “It’s online,” she said. “We have to talk about this.” But when he read the script, he said, he felt confident — the tone of it reminded him of “30 Rock.”

“This is kind of a leap of faith,” he said between tapings. “We’re all taking a leap together.”

Analysts say they expect more TV investment to come, including from companies that do not have monthly subscribers to please. YouTube, for instance, the biggest video Web site of all, makes its money from ads, not from subscriptions. But it has paid dozens of outside producers to start channels so that it has original, professional content. And its owner, Google, can afford to pay many more.

Similar logic is spurring cable channels, which each receive a small piece of cable subscribers’ monthly payments, to come up with more dramas and sitcoms that they can call their own. This brings up a conundrum, of course: too much great TV to watch, and not enough time.

“Viewers find organizing and managing all of their beloved TV options to be a bit stressful,” said Christy Tanner, the chief executive of TVGuide.com, which conducted research that found respondents who said “it feels like work” and “I’m afraid of missing something.”

Nonetheless, the number of companies trying to elbow into the TV space is only going up — further proving the nearly 20-year-old adage that “content is king.” Witness DirecTV, the biggest satellite distributor in the country, which is planning to introduce its first homegrown show, a thriller called “Rogue,” next month. Christopher Long, who runs DirecTV’s original programming, said he wanted to buy several more shows: “Our opinion is, if we build good enough television, people will find it.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/05/business/media/online-only-tv-shows-join-fight-for-attention.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Markets Mixed in Early Trading

The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index rose for a seventh consecutive day, its longest streak of advances since October 2006.

The index traded briefly above the 1,500 level for the first time since Dec. 12, 2007, but retreated before the close. It ended the day with a gain of 0.01 point, or zero percent, at 1,494.82.

Apple slid $63.51, or 12.35 percent, to $450.50, a day after it posted revenue and iPhone sales that were below expectations.

The decline wiped out nearly $60 billion in Apple’s market capitalization, to $423 billion, leaving the company vulnerable to losing its status as the most valuable company in the nation. In second place is Exxon Mobil with $416.5 billion in market capitalization.

“The market has sent the message it is no longer driven by the whims of Apple,” said Ken Polcari, director of the N.Y.S.E. floor division at O’Neil Securities in New York.

Economic data helped buoy equities as factory activity grew the most in nearly two years in January and new claims for jobless benefits dropped to a five-year low last week, giving surprisingly strong signals on the economy’s pulse.

At the same time, Chinese manufacturing grew this month at the fastest rate in about two years, while data suggesting German growth picked up raised hopes for a euro zone recovery.

The manufacturing index “in Asia, Europe, and obviously, here in the United States, is moving in the right direction, and that’s stuff people should be excited about,” Mr. Polcari said.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 46 points, or 0.33 percent, to 13,825.33.

The Nasdaq composite index dropped 23.29 points, or 0.74 percent, to 3,130.38, with most of that loss on Apple’s slide.

The video streaming service Netflix surprised Wall Street on Wednesday with a quarterly profit after it added nearly four million customers in the United States and abroad. Netflix shares surged $43.60, or 42.22 percent, to $146.86, its biggest percentage jump ever.

Earnings have helped drive the stock market’s recent rally. Thomson Reuters data through early Thursday showed that of the 133 S. P. 500 companies that had reported earnings so far, 66.9 percent had exceeded expectations, which was above the 65 percent average over the last four quarters.

Interest rates were also steady. The Treasury’s benchmark 10-year note fell 7/32, to 97 31/32, and the yield rose to 1.85 percent from 1.83 percent late Wednesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/25/business/daily-stock-market-activity.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

‘House of Cards’ Arrives as a Netflix Series

Underwood is speaking at a presidential inauguration, just outside the Capitol in Washington. As viewers observe the swearing-in he asks in a delicious Southern drawl, “Centuries from now, when people watch this footage, who will they see smiling just at the edge of the frame?” Then Underwood comes into frame again. He’s just a few rows away from the president. He gives the camera a casual wave.

Underwood, having been spurned in his bid to become secretary of state, is on a quest for power that’s just as suspenseful as anything on television. But his story will unspool not on TV but on Netflix, the streaming video service that is investing hundreds of millions of dollars in original programming. Its plan for showing “House of Cards,” an adaptation of a 1990 BBC mini-series set in Parliament, will itself be a departure from the usual broadcast approach. On Feb. 1 all 13 episodes will be available at once, an acknowledgment that many of its subscribers like to watch shows in marathon sessions.

Another 13 episodes are already in production. Odds are, then, that viewers are going to spend quite a while inside Underwood’s head as he tricks, coerces and sometimes intimidates his opponents. “He makes you complicit in an odd way,” said David Fincher, the acclaimed filmmaker who directed the first episode of the new series.

This is accomplished by having Mr. Spacey break the fourth wall, or address the audience directly. The original “House of Cards” did it too.

“I loved the idea of being intimately part of the thought process of this lead character, because he could take you aside and explain to you what he was doing and why he was doing it and where it was headed,” Mr. Fincher said.

He and the other producers won’t reveal exactly where their modern-day “Macbeth” ends up, though a shot at the presidency isn’t a bad guess. The characters introduced in the first two episodes include Representative Peter Russo, a pawn for Underwood, played by Corey Stoll (Hemingway in “Midnight in Paris”); Linda Vasquez, the president’s chief of staff, played by Sakina Jaffrey; and Underwood’s conniving wife, Claire, played by Robin Wright. “In politics there’s ambition, desire, lust, betrayal — all the same kinds of things we exhibit and experience in our own everyday lives,” said Beau Willimon, the show runner. Mr. Fincher, Mr. Willimon and many of the other players — all basically television novices — were brought together by Media Rights Capital, an independent studio that had optioned the rights to “House of Cards” thanks to an intern who recommended it to Mordecai Wiczyk, the studio’s co-founder.

Mr. Fincher was finishing “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” when he was introduced to the BBC mini-series by an agent. “David said, ‘I’d love to executive-produce this, and I’d like to bring Eric Roth with me,’ ” Mr. Wiczyk recalled. “Generally speaking, when you get that phone call, you just say yes. Which I did.”

Mr. Roth had written the screenplay for “Benjamin Button.” Next, Mr. Fincher said, they had to “find a writer who would do the due diligence to transplant parliamentary politics to Washington.” Enter Mr. Willimon, who had written the play “Farragut North” and turned it into the film “The Ides of March.” After watching the BBC mini-series, he said, “I saw tons of great opportunities to make it our own, to make it contemporary, to broaden its scope and deepen its story.” It’s a “reinvention,” he added, not a mere remake.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/20/arts/television/house-of-cards-arrives-as-a-netflix-series.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: The Breakfast Meeting: Tribune Looking for Buyers, and Imus Stays Put

The Tribune Company, owner of The Los Angeles Times and The Chicago Tribune, is looking for bankers to help sell some of its papers after it emerges from bankruptcy on Dec. 31, according to a Bloomberg News report. Rupert Murdoch has been reported to be interested at least in the Chicago and Los Angeles papers for his new publishing-focused News Corporation.

An aide to Britain’s culture secretary attempted to ward off reporters investigating the minister’s expense reports by warning them about her role in implementing press regulations outlined in the Leveson Report, according to The Daily Telegraph. The paper, which had reported that the secretary, Maria Miller, was submitting expenses for her parents’ house in London, said that her aide told reporters: “Maria has obviously been having quite a lot of editors’ meetings around Leveson at the moment. So I am just going to kind of flag up that connection for you to think about.”

Don Imus, the 72-year-old host of “Imus in the Morning” has signed on to do his radio show for three more years. Mr. Imus has much lower numbers than hosts like Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity but his popularity in New York means that the show can charge higher advertising rates.

The authors of “Game Change” have signed a deal with Penguin Press to release their coming book about the recent presidential campaign, “Double Down: Game Change 2012.” HBO, which based a film on the 2008 book, by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann, has already optioned the rights to the new film.

The Securities and Exchange Commission’s investigation of Reed Hastings, the chief executive for Netflix, for possible violations of disclosures laws after he wrote about a company milestone on Facebook, says more about the flawed rules surrounding public information than it does about bad acts by Mr. Hastings, writes Steven M. Davidoff, the Deal Professor columnist for DealBook. Announcing that Netflix had streamed a billion hours of programming in one month doesn’t seem to divulge information that is either private or material, he writes.

Finally, Rupert Murdoch added some of his own reporting to a Times article on Monday that outlined Michael Bloomberg’s interest in buying possibly buying The Financial Times. In a tweet this morning, Mr. Murdoch wrote: “Bloomberg may buy FT but likes New York Times too. Both small change for him and new challenge after 12 years great public service.”

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/12/the-breakfast-meeting-tribune-looking-for-buyers-and-imus-stays-put/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bits Blog: Amazon Web Services Knocked Offline by Storms

Trees littered the east lawn of the Capitol in WashingtonJonathan Ernst/ReutersTrees littered the east lawn of the Capitol in Washington.

People who tried to watch Netflix on Friday evening saw nothing but red. Instagram users couldn’t upload or view photos. And a number of other Web sites and services were knocked offline. Storms had disrupted Amazon Web Services, which stores vast amounts of data for companies worldwide.

The problems first began around 11 p.m., when a roiling storm caused numerous electrical failures on the East Coast that left two million people without power and at least six people dead.

Late Friday, on the company’s status blog, Amazon said it was “investigating elevated error rates impacting a limited number” of customers. The company noted that the failure had happened at a server facility in Virginia and it was because of the lighting storm in the area.

While Amazon continued to update its status blog, information on the troubles remained relatively sparse throughout the evening.

As of Saturday morning, the company said it had managed to get some services back online, but was still working to resolve a number of remaining shutdowns. ”We are continuing our recovery efforts for the remaining EC2 instances,” the company wrote at 11:38 a.m. on the status blog. EC2 is the name of the server system used for storage.

Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for details about the problems and when it expected all the servers would be back to normal.

Many of the companies that use Amazon Web Services were left waiting for updates, too, passing along snippets of information to their customers.

Instagram, the photo-sharing service, said on Twitter, “Due to severe electrical storms, our host had a power outage, no data is lost – we’ve been working through the night to restore service.” Instagram users reshared the message more than 31,000 times.

Netflix and Pinterest, which were both completely offline for most of the evening, also took to Twitter to tell users the status of the failure. Foursquare was partly affected and updated its own status blog to tell customers.

Most of these public-facing sites were back online by Saturday morning, although some services seemed spotty.

As a number of services, and customers, have come to rely on Amazon for storage, these shutdowns leave companies and analysts questioning the viability of cloud-based storage for businesses — specifically when many companies don’t have a fallback option as a backup.

Amazon has suffered repeated failures in recent months. The company was offline from a major shutdown in June. In April areas of the company’s storage facility went down for several days.

Article source: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/30/amazon-web-services-knocked-offline-by-storms/?partner=rss&emc=rss

TV Prices Fall, Squeezing Most Makers and Sellers

“We are making less money because the company is forcing us to slash prices,” Mr. Lall said, standing amid rows of flickering television sets.

Televisions have become so inexpensive that the profits have largely been squeezed out of them, a result of a huge increase in manufacturing capacity that has led to an oversupply and continued downward pressure on prices from low-cost manufacturers and online retailers.

The near fire-sale prices are great for consumers, who can now buy a television for a fraction of what one cost just a few years ago.

But what is good news for consumers has been a nightmare for manufacturers of TVs and retailers that sell them. The earnings of mainstay television manufacturers like Panasonic, Toshiba and Sony have been hammered. Sony, for instance, is overhauling its television operations because of what one executive said recently was a “grave sense of crisis that we have continued to post losses in TVs.” Even newer and more nimble competitors like Samsung and LG have struggled to make much money on TVs, if any.

Seeking to stanch its losses, Sony on Monday said it would end its flat-panel joint venture with Samsung, which was set up in 2004 to capture the boom in televisions with liquid-crystal displays. Samsung, based in South Korea, will pay about $940 million for Tokyo-based Sony’s 50 percent stake; Sony aims to save on manufacturing costs while still buying panels from Samsung.

For retailers, the picture is not much better. This month, Best Buy reported a 29 percent drop in net income for the third quarter, in part because the retail chain had slashed prices on televisions and other electronics.

Perhaps even more ominously for the long term, the future of televisions appears to be more about what content they can provide, like Netflix and iTunes, than new hardware features like flat screens or 3-D technology. It is an area where television manufacturers have struggled with little success to get an edge, even as Apple and Google vow to upend the industry.

“Everybody is fighting for a limited amount of consumer dollars,” said Gregg Richard, president of PC Richard and Son, which has 66 electronics and appliance stores. “We are selling more TVs, more units, at lower retail prices.”

It does not help that consumers are reluctant to pay much more for the latest features, like 3-D and Internet connectivity. Instead, they are likely to wait patiently for a few months until the price inevitably comes down.

“People used to pay additional to get a Sony Trinitron,” said Riddhi Patel, director of television systems at IHS iSuppli, a market research firm. “But the industry has trained the consumer that any time there is a new technology, if they wait six months the price will come down.”

Paul Gagnon, director of North America TV research for DisplaySearch, which tracks the market, noted that a 60-inch LCD television by Sharp was now selling for as little as $799 — about half of what it was selling just a year ago. “Absolutely amazing,” he said.

The slump is a hangover of sorts for an industry that binged on years of double-digit growth, as consumers rushed to replace old television sets with flashy new models with new features like high definition and flat screens.

There were roughly 32 million television sets sold in North America in 2004, for an average cost of $400, Mr. Gagnon said. The average size of a television was 27 inches. Today, 44 million sets are sold a year in North America, with an average cost of $460 and an average size of 38 inches.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=347c3866d8f101ab05dd2098d7b48911

Xbox Live Challenges the Cable Box

Beginning on Tuesday and continuing through the month, Microsoft will give a face-lift to its Xbox Live online entertainment service that will allow subscribers to watch a wide array of mainstream television programming from the Xbox 360 console.

In addition, rather than fumbling with traditional remote controls and the primitive program guides of cable boxes, Xbox Live users will be able to search for shows using voice commands and hand gestures, if they also have the popular Kinect peripheral for the Xbox.

Later this month, Microsoft will begin adding dozens of other sources of programming to the service, including Verizon FiOS, Comcast’s Xfinity and HBO. On Tuesday, the few online video services that have been on Xbox Live for some time, including Netflix and Hulu Plus, will be able to be retrieved using voice searching and other methods.

Microsoft’s deal with cable and content providers stops short of making it possible for people to ditch their traditional pay-television packages; people will still need to pay the cable providers to get channels through the Xbox. They will also have to pay the roughly $60 a year Microsoft typically charges for a premier membership to Xbox Live.

And the Xbox won’t be a true substitute for everything viewers can get through their cable boxes because content rights will have to be negotiated for some shows before they can be watched through the console.

But the agreement is nonetheless significant because there are more than 35 million worldwide subscribers to Xbox Live, making the Xbox one of the most common Internet-connected boxes in living rooms. And it is part of a growing effort by media companies to bring some 21st-century pizazz to the experience of navigating and watching television, a medium that is largely watched using traditional remote controls and set-top boxes that have changed little in the past 10 years.

Most cable boxes require viewers to navigate through primitive on-screen program guides, pressing buttons on their remotes to scroll through the vast lists of shows. The process is especially jarring for a generation of people who are accustomed to the slick graphics and responsiveness of more modern devices, like the Xbox and the iPad.

“The user experience through traditional cable set-top boxes hasn’t kept pace with the kind of user experience people get from all these other devices they use throughout the day,” Tom Rogers, chief executive of TiVo, said.

With the update coming this week to the Xbox, all of the video available to users over the Xbox Live service from all of Microsoft’s media partners will be indexed, so people can search for programs using their voices and the company’s Bing search engine, instead of awkwardly tapping out search terms through remote controls pointed at cable set-top boxes.

In a demonstration of the technology last week at Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond, Wash., Michael Suraci, director of marketing for Xbox Live, told an Xbox to “Bing Sandra Bullock,” which promptly found “The Blind Side,” “Crash” and several other movies starring the actress that were available through various sources of video on Xbox Live.

Mr. Suraci also used a sequence of voice commands to switch to an app for Verizon’s FiOS TV, within which he could flip among live channels by using more voice commands or a swiping motion with his hands.

“I think it’s a much, much better experience to use voice than typing,” said Marc Whitten, corporate vice president of Xbox Live.

Mark Greenberg, chief executive of Epix, a company that streams films from Paramount, Lionsgate and MGM, raved about the voice search and hand-gesture capabilities of the Xbox. Epix will stream a library of about 3,000 films through the Xbox.

“Maybe it’s the beginning part of the process toward eliminating the set-top box,” Mr. Greenberg said, while adding that he did not expect the traditional box to go away completely.

Cable executives have conflicting attitudes about the set-top boxes. Many acknowledge that they seem outdated compared with other forms of consumer electronics, and realize that consumers have trouble using them, especially as more video becomes available. “It can be frustrating to consumers to be entitled to content and have difficulty finding it,” said Samuel M. Schwartz, an executive vice president of Comcast who oversees emerging Internet businesses.

The Xbox, Mr. Greenberg said, “is an opportunity for the cable industry to experiment.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c6f6449b5bd82f4293d878cfac3d4d2f

Media Decoder Blog: Deal With Time Warner Brings the CW to Netflix

2:01 p.m. | Updated Once a Netflix skeptic, Time Warner has struck its biggest deal yet to allow the online service to license its television content.

On Thursday, the Warner Brothers Television Group of Time Warner and the CBS Corporation announced a $1 billion deal that will give Netflix the rights to stream shows broadcast on the CW network for at least the next eight years.

Eight dramas currently shown on the youth-oriented CW network, a joint venture between CBS and Warner Bros, will be available for streaming beginning as early as Oct. 15. They include “The Vampire Diaries” and “Gossip Girl.”

The deal results from a yearlong evolution at Time Warner in which the chief executive, Jeffrey L. Bewkes, established a set of guidelines for monetizing content via subscription streaming services like Netflix, Hulu Plus and Amazon Prime.

“Our rules included bypassing the quick and easy money,” Mr. Bewkes said in an interview on Thursday. “We established a strategy to responsibly work with Netflix.”

That strategy included not separating the rights to TV shows so that the same show could be sold into syndication on a traditional TV network and, then, at a diminished rate, to an online subscription service.

Mr. Bewkes came under criticism last year when he argued that Netflix’s potential was overhyped. He compared the Web service to “the Albanian Army” taking over the world.

The Warner Brothers-CBS deal speaks to a continuing evolution, Mr. Bewkes said, adding that the way media companies were cheaply licensing content to online video-on-demand services did not make sense.

He said he envisioned Netflix and other services as a means to make money on shows like those on the CW, which are heavily serialized and would not lead to multimillion-dollar traditional syndication deals like those for CBS’s “Big Bang Theory” or “Mentalist,” both produced by Warner Brothers.

At any point while the Netflix deal is in effect, Warner Brothers and CBS will have the opportunity to shop CW shows around for traditional syndication deals.

The CW’s audience of viewers ages 18 to 34 prompted the companies to explore an online on-demand deal, since younger viewers often prefer to watch TV on laptops or iPads or via streaming. The concept fits what Mr. Bewkes has dubbed “TV Everywhere,” an industrywide push to make money off content while making it available on any device.

In a statement, Leslie Moonves, chief executive at the CBS Corporation, said the deal opened a new revenue stream for CW shows. “It also further illustrates how new distribution systems are providing premium content suppliers with additive revenue streams while still preserving traditional monetization windows.”

But don’t expect CBS or Warner Brothers to make its hit big-tent sitcoms or dramas readily available online. Syndication deals for network shows represent a huge revenue stream for Warner Brothers and bring in big dollars to networks. Last year, Warner Brothers sold “The Big Bang Theory” for a record $2 million per episode to Time Warner’s TBS and Fox.

“We’re talking billions of dollars, so to go and put those shows out essentially on a table in the street is not a good idea,” Mr. Bewkes said.

Between an unpopular price increase, the removal of some popular films and a botched plan to separate the DVD-by-mail arm of its business, Netflix has had an exceptionally hard few months. The price increase, which affected about half of its subscribers, was intended in part to raise more money for content licenses like the one announced on Thursday, a company spokesman said.

“We’re always negotiating with networks and studios,” said the spokesman, Steve Swasey.

He rebuffed a suggestion that the deal with the CW was quickly completed to counter some of the recent bad news headlines. “These deals take a long time to consummate,” he said.

At midday Thursday, Netflix stock had risen about 2.2 percent, to $116.11.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=10e3cad32fcb9b043bc95fc33da501ec

Companies Get Gay-Rights Heat Over Christian Donations

A handful of advocates, armed with nothing more than their keyboards, have put many of the country’s largest retailers, including Apple, Microsoft, Netflix and Wal-Mart, on the spot over their indirect and, until recently, unnoticed roles in funneling money to Christian groups that are vocal in opposing homosexuality.

The advocates are demanding that the retailers end their association with an Internet marketer that gets a commission from the retailers for each online customer it gives them. It is a routine arrangement on hundreds of e-commerce sites, but with a twist here: a share of the commission that retailers pay is donated to a Christian charity of the buyer’s choice, from a list that includes prominent conservative evangelical groups like the Family Research Council and Focus on the Family.

The marketer and the Christian groups are fighting back, saying that the hundred or so companies that have dropped the marketer were misled and that the charities are being slandered for their religious beliefs.

The national battle was ignited in July by Stuart Wilber, a 73-year-old gay man in Seattle. He was astonished, he said, when he learned that people who bought Microsoft products through a Christian-oriented Internet marketer known as Charity Giveback Group, or CGBG, could channel a donation to evangelical organizations that call homosexual behavior a threat to the moral and social fabric.

“I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding, Microsoft,’ ” he recalled, noting that the software giant — like many other corporations accessible through the commerce site, including Apple and Netflix — was known as friendly to gay causes.

In July, Mr. Wilber went to a Web site that helps groups and individuals circulate petitions, called Change.org, and started one, asking Microsoft to end its association with what he called “hate groups.” By that night, 520 people had signed, with their ire copied to Microsoft officials — and Microsoft had quietly dropped out of the donation plan. Much to Mr. Wilber’s surprise, this would be the start of an electronic conflict that has put hundreds of well-known companies in an unwelcome glare.

On one side are angry gay-rights advocates and bloggers, wielding the club of the gay community’s purchasing power.

On the other side are conservative Christian groups that say they are being attacked for their legitimate biblical views of sex and marriage, as well as a Web marketing firm that feels trampled for providing consumers with free choice.

Caught in the middle are companies, including such giants as Macy’s, Expedia and Delta Air Lines, which have the dual aims of avoiding politics but not offending any consumers. In this case, they have been pressured to make a choice that may involve little money either way but that could offend large blocs of consumers.

“This is economic terrorism,” said Mike Huckabee, the former pastor, governor and presidential contender, who is a paid CGBG consultant. “To try to destroy a business because you don’t like some of the customers is, to me, unbelievably un-American,” he said in an interview.

CGBG, a for-profit company formerly called the Christian Values Network, resembles hundreds of so-called affiliate marketers, which retailers use to bring customers to their own Web sites. The affiliate receives a commission on any sales, and CGBG allows buyers to send half that commission to any of the Christian charities on its list.

In July, as word of Mr. Wilber’s victory spread virally, Ben Crowther, a college student in Bellingham, Wash., started a similar Internet appeal to Apple, which would soon succeed after drawing 22,700 signers. Roy Steele, who runs a gay-rights Web site in San Francisco, picked up the crusade, directly contacting about 150 companies listed on the e-commerce site.

AllOut.org, a gay-rights group in New York with hundreds of thousands of e-mail-ready members, focused on the travel industry, helping to push Avis, Westin Hotels Resorts, Expedia and many other hotels and travel agencies to disassociate themselves from CGBG.

Close to 100 companies have left the charity arrangement, though most refuse to discuss the matter. These have become the objects, in turn, of a countercampaign from the Christian groups — “Please Don’t Discriminate Against My Faith” is the heading of a sample letter — and of high-level entreaties from Mr. Huckabee and other Christian leaders.

A few companies that briefly left the network have been persuaded to rejoin, including Delta, PetSmart, Sam’s Club, Target and Wal-Mart.

“People have been misled. The retailers are not donating to anyone; they are simply paying a commission to get traffic,” John Higgins, the president of CGBG, said in an interview.

He said CGBG focused on Christian consumers and marketing through large organizations like Focus on the Family because it saw an untapped commercial opportunity.

“Retailers should keep their doors open to everybody,” Mr. Higgins said. He also complained that some competing e-commerce sites included the same conservative groups on charity lists but had not been subjected to similar attacks.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=29ab8c28f96ce8b29564e7a3d237882a

Bucks Blog: Tuesday Reading: Flu Shots Cut E.R. Visits for Children

September 20

Tuesday Reading: Flu Shots Cut E.R. Visits for Children

Flu shots cut E.R. visits for kids, Google Wallet debuts, Netflix’s latest plan and other consumer-focused news from The New York Times.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=9190a00b5895b7d40e24d8eb62e6f250