Flip the Media
At the crossroads of Media, Culture and Technology

YouTube, Greyson Chance and…chance


Posted by Hanson Hosein on
Monday, May 17th, 2010 at 2:07 pm

A call today from a local TV talk show producer looking to book me as a tech “expert”, alerted me to YouTube’s 5th birthday today (here’s my segment).  I wish I had known about the video streaming site’s public beta test back in May 2005 — at that same time, I was struggling to compress, upload and share clips from my documentary-in-production, Independent America: The Two-Lane Search for Mom & Pop using less user-friendly video solutions.  Today, that struggle to produce multimedia and share with the world is over.  And the easier it gets, the more we all have to fight for attention.

YouTube Preview Image

Oklahoma sixth-grader Greyson Chance didn’t have to fight too hard.  On April 28th, he uploaded a shaky video of his performance of Lady Gaga’s “Paparazzi” to YouTube (embedded above).  Two weeks later, he has 16 million views and counting, an appearance on the Ellen Show, and a rumored record deal (I’m actually intrigued that his amateur video has so many hits, while his more professional produced performance on Ellen has a few hundred thousand).

Blink and you’ll miss the latest digital media phenomenon story.  Wasn’t it Justin Bieber just a few weeks ago?  Susan Boyle last year?  And yet, there is suspicion about certain timeless forces of promotion and Big Media manipulation even in this Cinderella Story of amateur rags to mainstream riches.

The Christian Science Monitor published its voice in the wilderness piece about Grayson a few days ago, suggesting it may all have been a promotional ruse.  That it seemed all too convenient to have those girls nicely framed in the background.  And how did this video reach critical mass so quickly (his choice of cover song doesn’t hurt)?  Conveniently, Grayson had also uploaded a performance of one of his original songs as well.  In other words, he was perfectly positioned to get the world’s attention.

Whether or not it was orchestrated (and I don’t know that it was), there’s no doubt that we now all have the tools to “do it ourselves” when it comes to media distribution.

[T]he entire entertainment landscape is being flipped around, says Fordham University professor and author of “New New Media,” Paul Levinson. “Literally anyone can try their hand on the Internet,” he adds. More and more, he says, the music industry as we know it will be less about talent discovery and more about distribution.

”It is,” he says, “the most revolutionary change in history.”

Here’s what I see:

- A telegenic, talented boy performing an international hit song in an “authentic” way.

- Millions gravitate to his performance, which he was able to share freely, and for free.

- The attention of the “crowd” begets institutional attention (Ellen, news outlets, a record company) — money begins to change hands.

Paul Simon once sang that “every generation throws a hero up the pop charts.”  Those are tortoise years now Mr. Simon.  How we influence, persuade and reach people may be paradoxically getting both easier and harder, but either way, it’s getting much faster.

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8 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. Chauncey

    If you look more closely at how this “broke”, you’ll find that Ellen booked Greyson Chance to appear on her show when the video of him covering Gaga was not widely viewed. Once the campaign began of online touts, then, the numbers went up for the vids. By the time he was in Ellen’s studios it was all something of a self-fulfilling pr job.

    Good point you make about the numbers being much lower for the Ellen vid. If this was a genuine groundswell of teeny or older fans, there’d be more people watching that performance.

    This is just the latest instance of old-school media players working out how to manipulate the public via new media.

  2. Chauncey

    p.s. in short, this is what orchestrated “viral” looks like!

  3. Personally, it’s really hard to believe that YouTube is ONLY 5 years old. It’s so much a part of internet culture and such a household name I can’t believe it was only launched in May of 2005.

    I think Grayson’s video involved all of the right ingredient’s to be a viral hit. It would be unfortunate if it later became known that someone had orchestrated the whole thing. But then, PR firms and Ad agencies would pay top dollar for that secret recipe!

  4. Good article from Ad Age today on the play-by-play of Chance’s rise to fame: http://adage.com/u/2QcpUb [including some back pedaling from the Christian Science Monitor]

    This talented boy paid his dues in 3 weeks!

  5. hey ur so cute and i love ur songes they r awesome

  6. I put a bio on my blog : http://blog.mirwolfor.com/?p=121 and I think he sings better than Justin Bieber but he has plenty success too.

  7. Macarena

    helloo…EL VERDADERO MAIL DE GREYSON CHANCE ES GREYSONC16@HOTMAIL.COM…mi prima conocio a uno de sus sonidistas y todos sus empleados tienen su e-mail

  8. SEAMUS

    Putting all the speculative ‘gobble de gook,’ aside. This kid has a powerful and very melodic voice. The reason he was promoted is quite obvious.
    He has a ton of talent and it has been very quickly picked up on.
    Greyson is not a made up kid, listen to his voice and he was only 12 years old. Go to your local school and ask a 12year old boy to sing GaGa’s Paparazzi and pay the piano simultaniously. I think he would prefer his skate-board and your departure in a very caring way.

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