In 2000, Al Gore received a half million more votes than George W. Bush for President, but it was not to be. Talk about Karma - fast forward to today and W. is in his living room with the lowest approval rating in modern times and is still a punching bag for the media and comedians. Meanwhile, Al Gore has added a Nobel Peace Prize, Oscar, Grammy and Emmy to his environmentally correct trophy case. In case you didn’t know, Gore is also one of the founders of Current TV. Description below:
Since its inception in 2005, Current TV has been the world’s leading peer-to-peer news and information network. Current is the only 24/7 cable and satellite television network and Internet site produced and programmed in collaboration with its audience. Current connects young adults with what is going on in their world, from their perspective, in their own voices.
Current pioneered the television industry’s leading model of interactive viewer created content (VC2). Comprising roughly one-third of Current’s on-air broadcast, this content is submitted via short-form, non-fiction video “pods”. Viewer Created Ad Messages (VCAMs) are also open to viewer’s participation.
Current TV is a creature of the new media landscape and takes advantage of the fact many people want to create content, connect with peers and be famous. The technology to live this dream is now in the hands of the masses. You can see this theme throughout media and popular culture. Who received more “buzz” this year? Was it Adam Lambert, Susan Boyle and the Housewives of NY/NJ or the scripted dramas on network television? Clearly it was the reality stars because they feed into the concept of democratized content and aspirations of fame and fortune.
This trend has implications for marketers and advertisers trying to reach an ever more fragmented audience. The 30 second spot and print ads are dying art forms. One of the cool things about Current TV is they allow viewers to create ads for major brands such as HP and T-Mobile based on some creative assets and a brief. Their research shows that viewers prefer user generated ads by a ratio of 9 to 1. This trend does not bode well for traditional ad agencies, and doesn’t big Al know it. Read a few quotes from a keynote he recently gave at marketing event as reported by Adweek:
He described the end of the industrial-revolution-like era of advertising, which produced ads that are “big, blunt expensive and very intrusive. . Audiences have begun to resist that old model.” Going forward, advertising needs to become more nuanced, authentic and peer-to-peer, said Gore. “People want a different kind of feeling toward brands to which they give their money.”
That means being more upfront about ad messaging, rather than attempting to squeeze marketing messages into content through branded entertainment, he said. According to Gore, one of the reasons that Current viewers like VCAM ads is that they are straightforward in their intent. “People are interested in what someone like them is going to do and they’re not going to have something slipped by them,” Gore said. With ads that have been disguised as entertainment, “there is some resistance to those models. . . . We believe that intelligent empowerment of the audience is the key.”
Al Gore will likely never be President but he is now at the forefront of private custom media channels and content marketing. In the parlance of marketing speak, Al Gore “gets it”. Do you?

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