![]() ![]() |
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
12.146.151.254
In Reply to: RE: You might be taking this a little toooooooo personally (nt) posted by townsend on March 27, 2008 at 13:17:07
A studio exec forces that studio to make the wrong business decision in a format war, screwing both that studio and its customers and your conclusion is...I'm taking it too personally? I think the entire installed base of blu-ray adopters would be interested in BD titles from universal, and I don't think the brass at the studio is too pleased they were invested in the losing side of a format battle. You gotta admit it's not about me.
-------------Call it, friendo.
Follow Ups:
.
""YEAH, 49ers!!!! YEAHHHH!!!! GIANTSS!!! WHOOOO!!! GO!!!!""""
Who gives a flying fuck, and get a life of your own, and you won't care.
-------------Call it, friendo.
at life. Having personal animosity towards a human to where you are glad he lost his job based on your loving a format is pathological. Like it or don't. He probably has a family to support, who are now scared their father has lost his job. But you want vengeance due to hi-rez formats.
Time for the doctor. Not meant as a slam, serious as can be.
That's all this is about. I don't know how it works in ambulance chaser offices like yours, but in the corporate sector, if you make bad decisions and cost your company valuable money and time, you deserve to be fired. As a result of Graffeo's love affair with HD DVD, Universal got off on the wrong foot. As Disney/Miramax, Tristar/Columbia, Fox and Warner are increasing their visibility among the rapidly growing Blu-ray market, Universal is a no-show. They should have axed Graffeo a long time ago.
-------------Call it, friendo.
GE should not have allowed Universal to be format exclusive. At minimum, they should have said "Support both: you're running our business, not a fan club, Ken.". Of course, that's assuming GE knew better (the studio support for Blu-ray should have made it obvious).
As a side note, none of their VC-1 encodes can be ported to Blu-ray (unlike Warner Bros' encodes, but they're bit-starved as it is, so that's not necessarily a good thing), though that may be a blessing in disguise -- maybe they'll opt for AVC when encoding for Blu-ray.
I have come to the same conclusion; that it may be for the best that Universal needs to start from scratch to produce Blu-ray. At least we'll get product of higher quality, albeit a year later than we should have.
On your other point, I have to disagree. It's the responsibility of the HD home video VP to decide where to take the company in any new HD format. GE isn't plugged into these issues. I'm sure the GE board expects the eletronics/appliances execs to know their markets, the pharmaceutical executives to be the experts in their markets and the Universal studios execs to be the experts in their markets, respectively. Graffeo was willfully ignoring Blu-ray's advantages and hyping HD DVD's selling points to the consumer. I'm sure he was peddling the same lies to the board. It was his responsibility and not GE's to know the market and make the right choices.
-------------Call it, friendo.
FAQ |
Post a Message! |
Forgot Password? |
|
||||||||||||||
|
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: