A couple of weeks ago CES wrapped up and with all of the major geek announcements from new 3D TVs to a whole slew of new tablets running Android. There was great fanfare surrounding many of these announcements and many were carried by most of the main stream media. A lot of CES was covered by the podcasters and some would say (me included) did a better job. No podcaster out there could match up to TWiT though.
Leo at 2011 CES – from Flickr Dan_H
For a primer on who TWiT is this is from their Wiki FAQ –
• What does “TWiT” mean? Is it an acronym?
“TWiT” stands for “this WEEK in TECH”, the name of the flagship netcast for TWiT.tv, an operating trademark of TWiT LLC.
• What is TWiT.tv? Is it some sort of network? When did it start?
TWiT.tv is one of the biggest netcast networks around. It started in August 2005 with only 2 netcasts and now it has grown to include over 15 shows. The domain twit.tv gets over 2 million views per week, according to alexa.com.
TWiT is one of the leaders in tech podcasting. They are so big that Leo Laporte their head “Twit” was even written up in the New York Times recently. The amazing stat in this article that shows how new media is changing the distribution model is this:
Advertisers, especially technology companies, appreciate Mr. Laporte’s reach. Mark McCrery, chief executive of Podtrac, which is based in Washington, and measures podcast audiences and sells advertising, said TWIT’s advertising revenue doubled in each of the last two years and was expected to total $4 million to $5 million for 2010.
Now Leo is by no means a new comer to the media scene as his credentials go back to TV including a stint as the host of The Screen Savers on Tech TV from 1998 to 2004 with even further credentials going back to the early 90s. He even recently appeared on Regis and Kelly.
What is exciting about what Leo has done is that the TWiT network was one of the first to be offered on Roku. They believe strongly in delivering their content to the broadest audience possible including the use of live streaming apps on iOS, Android, and now even Windows Phone 7. They netcast, as they call it, an amazing amount of content every week and have a tremendous amount of downloads and live views everyday.
This is why content distribution is dramatically different today and will be changing even more in the next year.