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Deca Builds Out Premium Network for Moms

The women’s lifestyle Web video firm Deca is building out a video hub aimed at moms while pushing further into the syndication business. On May 13, the Santa Monica, Calif.-based company relaunched Momversation, a site originally built around a single Web series aimed at—you guessed it—moms. Now, Momversation.com will serve as a destination for all videos related to parenting, like a clip of President Obama’s visit to The View as well as shows from Deca’s recently launched YouTube channel Kin Community. The popular Momversation series will continue to live on Momversation.com and across the Web. In fact, Target has signed as a category exclusive Momversation sponsor for the fourth year in a row. However, two other stand-alone Deca brands, Parentsask.com and GoodBite.com, will soon be folded into the new Momversation.com. Read More ›

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Ad execs say jury still out on Facebook as medium

General Motors Inc’s decision to stop advertising on Facebook may be a wake-up call for the No. 1 social network, but Top advertising executives say it’s far too early to know if the site will take off as an advertising platform. “There’s a lot of potential but it’s not a slam-dunk,” said Martin Sorrell, chief executive of WPP Plc, the world’s largest advertising agency. “Showing the impact of branding on Facebook is going to take a long time,” he added. Facebook is due to begin trading on Nasdaq on Friday in an initial public offering that will raise about $15.2 billion, the biggest ever from Silicon Valley. With almost a billion users, Facebook generated nearly $4 billion in revenue last year, mostly from advertising. News on Tuesday that GM, the third largest advertiser in the United States, was pulling back from Facebook raised questions about whether ads on the social network are really more effective than on traditional media. Read More ›

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Social TV Twice As Popular For Live Vs. Time-Shifted Viewing: Study

Social TV features are twice as likely to be used during live broadcasts than time-shifted viewing, according to a study by Viacom Media Networks — highlighting the opportunity for TV networks to use social media drive live tune-in. In the study, “Social TV: Viewers C’s The Moment,” Viacom explored how people are using social media to engage with their favorite TV shows. The study found that viewers engage in an average of seven different types of social TV activities — both online and offline — on at least a weekly basis. Social TV fans reported feeling “left out” of the conversation if they missed a live airing. “One of the main goals of this research was to understand how to inspire social TV activity among our audiences,” said Colleen Fahey Rush, executive vice president and chief research officer for Viacom Media Networks. “At VMN, we’re focused on leveraging our fans’ attachment to their favorite shows by developing compelling social TV services and apps that deepen those connections and unlock the value of social chatter.” Read More ›

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Comcast Skypes Onto TV In 10 Markets

Comcast this week is launching Skype on Xfinity, a new HD video calling service priced at $9.95 per month, in 10 markets including Boston, Seattle, Chicago and Atlanta. By the end of the week, the MSO said, the service will also be available in Augusta, Ga., Detroit, Harrisburg, Pa., Indianapolis, Miami and Pittsburgh. Additional markets will launch through the summer. Skype on Xfinity, which Comcast announced at last year’s Cable Show, is available to qualifying Xfinity Triple Play customers who have an HDMI-capable set-top box. The service lets customers make and receive video calls from their TV in 720p HD quality, as well as send and receive instant messages via Skype while watching TV at the same time. Comcast is delivering the service using a Technicolor-manufactured adapter box — which provides an Internet connection the TV, as well as the Skype client software — as well as an HD-quality video camera from Quanta. Read More ›

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NBC Sports Network Lines Up Cable-Record 292.5 Hours of Olympic Coverage

NBC Sports Network will kick off its cable-record coverage from the London Olympics with the U.S. women’s soccer team taking on France. Coming two days before the opening ceremony, the July 25 telecast of the match at 11:30 a.m. (ET) from Hampden Park in Glasgow, Scotland will mark the first piece of NBC Sports Network’s 292.5 hours of coverage, the most ever for an Olympic cable network. All told, the national sports service, which was rebranded from Versus on Jan. 2, will proffer 257.5 hours of original programming, an average of 14 hours per day. As first reported by Multichannel News, NBC Sports Network will serve as the home to U.S. team sports. In addition to the U.S. women’s national soccer side, NBC Sports Network will put its cameras on the 2012 version of the men’s basketball Dream Team and women’s field hockey squad, among other competitions. Originating from Olympic Park in London, the network will air up to 20 medal rounds and 22 sports, according to NBC Sports Group official. Read More ›

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Discovery CEO David Zaslav on Oprah’s OWN Struggle: ‘Everybody Should Relax’ (Q&A)

David Zaslav shouldn’t be on the defensive. After all, the Discovery Communications chief’s 14 cable networks, including red-hot Discovery, ID and TLC, collectively have grown their primetime market share 8 percent this year; his company has a $19 billion market cap and reported revenue up 16 percent to $1.1 billion for the first quarter; and his 2011 compensation hit a cool $52.4 million. But because of his high-profile partnership with Oprah Winfrey, the Brooklyn-born former lawyer — who splits his time among New York, Maryland and overseas travel — has spent most of the past year defending his $300 million-plus investment in the low-rated OWN network. Zaslav, 52, who was intricately involved in the launch of CNBC and MSNBC during his nearly two-decade tenure at NBCUniversal, is assuring investors that the fledgling net will be cash-flow-positive by the end of 2013. Read More ›

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Apple readies iPhone with bigger screen: sources

Apple Inc plans to use a larger screen on the next-generation iPhone and has begun to place orders for the new displays from suppliers in South Korea and Japan, people familiar with the situation said on Wednesday. The new iPhone screens will measure 4 inches from corner to corner, one source said. That would represent a roughly 30 percent increase in viewing area, assuming Apple keeps other dimensions proportional. Apple has used a 3.5-inch screen since introducing the iPhone in 2007. Early production of the new screens has begun at three suppliers: Korea’s LG Display Co Ltd, Sharp Corp and Japan Display Inc, a Japanese government-brokered merger combining the screen production of three companies. Read More ›

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CBS’ Leslie Moonves blasts Dish’s Auto Hop ad-skipping feature

CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves blasted satellite broadcaster Dish Network’s new Auto Hop feature that allows consumers to more easily block commercials from recorded programming. “They can’t just take our signal and change it and put on a black spot where our commercials were,” Moonves said during a Wednesday morning news conference to unveil the network’s new fall schedule. Moonves joined executives from Comcast Corp.’s NBC and News Corp.’s Fox in criticizing the Dish feature, which lets customers block commercials from recorded shows that have aired on broadcast networks ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox during the previous day. Although consumers with digital video recorders can already fast-forward through commercials of recorded shows, Auto Hop takes it a step further. The screen goes black when a commercial break appears. A few seconds later, the program returns. The Auto Hop feature can’t be used on a show during the same day that it’s being broadcast, or on live event programming, such as a sporting event, that has been recorded. Read More ›

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Netflix Turning Up the Heat on AT&T, Comcast and TWC Over Data Caps

Netflix is turning up the heat on Comcast, Time Warner and AT&T over data caps that the cable companies place on unaffiliated streaming-video companies. In its latest attempt to end what it considers discrimination on the parts of the three cable companies, the rental and streaming giant is “shopping questions related to data caps to the Senate Commerce Committee members in anticipation of tomorrow’s oversight hearing with all five FCC commissioners,” a person close to the situation told TheWrap on Tuesday. Comcast, AT&T and TWC promote their own services by exempting them from the monthly broadband usage caps they apply to Netflix and other unaffiliated companies. Companies that exceed the usage caps — which Comcast, for example, has set at 250 gigabytes a month — can have their services cut off, slowed down or assessed with additional charges. Read More ›

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Lack of trust in Facebook may hold back ad sales

Facebook’s reach is wide but not deep. Few users surveyed in an Associated Press-CNBC poll say they click on the site’s ads or buy the virtual goods that make money for it. More than 40% of American adults log in to the site — to share news, personal observations, photos and more — at least once a week. In all, some 900 million people around the world are users. But many of them don’t have a very high opinion of Facebook or trust it to keep their information private. If Facebook the company were a Facebook user, it would have a lot of virtual friends but not many real ones, the poll suggested. Users’ distrust limits the value of the site’s ads. Advertisers want to target their messages to the people most likely to respond to them. And the more Facebook knows about us, the better it will be at tailoring those ads to our interests. Read More ›

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