You're viewing the un-styled version of this site in which the content is displayed without the design structure. This may be because your browser doesn't support the Web Standards for which this site is designed.
Please consider upgrading to a more modern browser—we support Internet Explorer 6.x and newer, Firefox and Safari; other browsers may or may not work.

PRIMARY NAVIGATION ZONES
INTRO
BLOG
SERVICES
CONTACT
random imagerandom imagerandom image
REPORT subnavigation:
CURRENT
PREVIOUS
PODCASTS
VODCASTS
RSS
Currently viewing:
2006 > October > 10 > MediaSnack-snack-snackers;#4

MediaSnack-snack-snackers;#4

snacked

[SUMMARY—Quotes which illustrate.]

(WORLD) MediaSnackers are being served more and more ways to snack on their chosen media than ever. It's hard to differentiate between companies and start-ups enabling snacking or the snacking trends driving media platform development, but here are a couple of quotes from the 'experts' to sum it all up for any 'MediaSnacker-virgins':

We believe that [young people] can produce compeling content without necessarily having the resume or the film school degree, or having worked for five years getting someone coffee at the appropriate agency.
Joanna Drake Earl, President of Online, Current TV.

We call [kids] 'screen-agers' because they spend so much time with televisions and computers.
Robert Denniston, the director of the White House Office of National Drug Control talking about using YouTube in the latest anti-drug media campaign.

If you really want to know what will happen with the Internet, ask a 13-year-old.
Vinton Cerf, vice president of Google in his keynote speech at the Upper Great Plains Technology Conference.

MediaSnack-snack-snackers #1, 2 & 3.

Filed by DK on October 10 2006

« previous entry  next entry »

Viewing 'MediaSnack-snack-snackers;#4', you may also explore current and other entries, search or get our newsreader feed.

Currently viewing:
REPORT > 2006 > October > 10 > MediaSnack-snack-snackers;#4