The War for the Stream:  Can Marvel, DC, or Disney win?

Bigger is not always better but tell that to Marvel when they continue to make billions of dollars on their big budget superhero style of production! Tell Disney that the giant theme parks and movies that directly tie into merchandising and after marketing and make them ridiculously rich to stop.  DC dreams of producing movies as popular as Marvel and Disney.  All of them believe bigger is better.  I disagree. Not only do I disagree with what they all are doing, I believe that the quality and future profitability of all their products are vastly decreasing. They dream of a world pre-Covid 19, that is a dream that even Disney World can’t have, we all must live with the new norm.

Smaller is better.  I never enjoyed going to the US Open in the 2000’s because the crowd was everywhere.  There were few places you could get a breath of fresh air or a second to breathe.  The tennis was amazing, but the watching live part stopped being fun.  The USTA wanted to make more money, so it got bigger, and it is now the biggest in the world.  It is also the least fun to attend, I now watch the matches at home and switch between matches with a push of a button.  I still miss being there, but I will never miss waiting on line for a half hour to go to the bathroom.  The old tournaments had more charm and less fans.  Smaller was better.

Smaller can be better, but that doesn’t stop people from growing.  Jones Beach Theater was my favorite place to see a concert.  There wasn’t a bad seat in the house, even the upper back row was fun.  Then the remodel - bigger, with obstructed view seats.  The parking lot, no public transportation to JBT, was a nightmare.  A savage rush for two lanes by two giant lots.  A mass of tired, stoned, or drunk fans, rushing to go home and getting nowhere!  The perfect place to see a concert became a hassle and if you wanted to go to concert you needed to be early and leave late.  Smaller was more fun.

Marvel made several great shows on Netflix.  They were gritty noirs, great detective stories with a superhero element.  Daredevil was excellent, as was Luke Cage and Jessica Jones.  My favorite, Iron Fist, was a comic I read during my childhood that I absolutely loved.  Together they were “The Defenders,” a team-up of all the Netflix Marvel heroes.  I really enjoyed that series.  Then Marvel, in their infinite wisdom, felt the need to join forces with Disney and pull all of their Netflix shows.  They have yet to recreate that level of quality and imagination.  The Disney shows are bigger, not better!

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The idea of Television, radio, internet, and more have been blended into a vehicle called streaming.  Content has broken free from where it was born, and it now swims in the streaming ecosystem.  YouTube offers everything. Spotify does podcasts and music. Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, Disney, and many more offer streaming content of both shows and movies.  The entertainment pie is being cut up before our very eyes with one idea, get bigger!  But content must be made and there is the biggest problem: who will make this content and where do the ideas come from?

Netflix and Amazon have made entertaining content in the past, but it was done at a huge expense.  Disney has entered the field dropping boatloads of cash.  In the 1990’s and 2000’s many ideas came from San Diego Comic Con.  There, both large and small comic book creators would promote their titles and attempt to get the most publicity possible.  Then Hollywood came calling!  These comics were so successful as movies, comic companies became the most fertile ground for new movie products.  Comic companies became entertainment empires and with it they lost what made them great, the small creators writing and drawing the comics.  Bigger will be their downfall, with the best path to prolonged profitability is to sustain the environment that created the ideas in the first place.  Smaller is not only higher quality, but it’s sustainable!

Hail, Hail, Rock and Roll!

I absolutely love rock music.  Not a day goes by that I don’t listen to a old favorite or some mix of music on YouTube.  I attended my first concert at Jones Beach and saw David Gilmore.  The Pink Floyd guitarist lit up the night with soulful licks and perfect pitch.  Funny thing is that my knowledge of music was limited at 16, so I didn’t fully appreciate who he was and why he was one of the best.  The Stray Cats was my next concert and this one was really fun because I knew the music and my friends and I danced around all night.  MTV’s coverage of the Stray Cats’ videos and live performances added to my total enjoyment of a live show.

A lifetime later, I have attended a shit ton of concerts, seeing my favorite musicians and bands multiple times.  I believe I have developed a more refined taste for live music.  YouTube keeps adding amazing live shows and I believe there are just too many for any one person to view in a lifetime.  I will gladly share with everyone my favorite live bands and festivals that rock-n-rollers need to be on the lookout for.  There is no particular order, but I say without hesitation that my favorite musician is Jeff Beck.

The first time I saw The Who at Shea Stadium, I was given tickets by my sister.  She had purchased them while I was away working for the summer.  At that time, The Who was my favorite band and this was my first opportunity to see them, albeit without Keith Moon.  My mind was blown!  Since then, I have seen The Who 11 times and Pete Townshend another 3, but I will discuss Pete on his own later in this piece.  No band comes close to the power, quality, and sheer rock prowess.  This concert featured the legendary Townshend’s guitar smash and Daltrey’s mike acrobatics, with the thundering Entwistle bass in the background.  Few Who shows compare, mostly because I’m too young to have seen The Who at their peak.

Jeff Beck is my favorite musician and he just keeps getting better, I swear!  Each show seems to top the one before and, each time I’m able to worship at the electric church of this virtuoso, I thank the universe.  Perfect is the only word that describes this former Yardbirds’ guitarist.  Each note from his guitar is beyond tasty and always placed at the point of maximum impact.  I can’t remember a show where I wasn’t visibly sad when it was over.  Amazingly, each new album gives me a chance to see my favorite musician play new material, and each time it has been sublime. 

The Crossroads Guitar Festivals are all brilliant.  Featuring a list of who’s who of the music world, these three festivals showcased the best guitarists in the world.  Both young and old masters shared the stage to create the most memorable festival concert ever witnessed.  Unfortunately, I was only able to view the DVDs, but that did allow me to see artists from all 3 days of each of the shows.  Eric Clapton was the mastermind of these concerts and he was featured prominently in each festival.  I re-watch the DVDs once a year as they are just that good.

I saw David Bowie’s Let’s Dance tour and it was the only time I was lucky enough to see him.  Bowie’s band, his set, and his performance was done at an unbelievable level.  Bowie played 8 different instruments during the concert, each one better than the last.  His vocals were perfect, even with the crappy acoustics of the Carrier Dome in Syracuse.  During “Serious Moonlight” they let out giant glow balls for fans to bounce around the dome, really cool!  Bowie always gave a great show.

I have seen Sheryl Crow many times, starting with her first tour “Tuesday Night Music Club.”  I have seen her a half dozen times since.  Her talent is breathtaking and she performs her songs with skill and passion.  Her band is solid and she has been playing with the same group for over 20 years.  Crow sports different instruments during her shows, demonstrating her wide range of musical talent.  I have not been lucky enough to see her over the last few years, but i hope the Heart reunion tour where she is featured comes close to my home. That’s a show I would love to see!

My greatest concert experience was when my sister, who was working at a local radio station, gave me tickets and backstage passes to Pete Townshend’s “Psychoderelict” show at Jones Beach.  I took the woman I love (now my wife of over 22 years!) to the show.  She had never seen The Who, but had listened to a crapload of it since starting to date me.  She was really excited, but we were both not ready for what happened next!  The concert featured a stage play alongside the live music.  My girlfriend loved Broadway so this made her giddy with excitement.  Townshend played the whole Psychoderelict album and then played a bunch of old Who songs, I was blown away.  And this was not even the best part!

We used our backstage passes.  There, talking to a group of people, was Pete Townshend.  My girlfriend guided me to the line of autograph seekers and well-wishers.  With sweaty palms and a Mount Everest sized lump in my throat, I walked up to Pete and introduced myself and my girlfriend.  As we were walking away my girlfriend was smiling at me, she said I that was great and she was impressed with my interaction with my idol.  I smiled, it would take minutes to review the whole discussion in my mind.  I recalled that he was a kind man and thanked me for my personal connection to his music.  This was my rock-n-roll fantasy!

Live music is a energy shot to your soul and a way to change the mood of your day.  I have been to too many concerts to list them all but, I still feel a thrill every time I see music performed.  I always find myself singing along with the music like my friends from the Stray Cats were there.  To be part of the live music in some small way is a way to touch happiness, the momentary nature of it is what cleanses our souls. 

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