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Revision as of 13:51, 4 November 2010
Buzz Out Loud | |
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File:Buzz Out Loud logo.png | |
Presentation | |
Hosted by | Molly Wood, Rafe Needleman |
Genre | Technology, News |
Language | English |
Updates | Daily M-F |
Length | 30-60 Minutes |
Production | |
Production | Jason Howell (Left.. he likes it upp the butt) |
Video format | MP4 |
Audio format | MP3 |
Publication | |
Original release | April 25, 2005 |
Provider | CNET |
Buzz Out Loud, "CNET's podcast of indeterminate length," or BOL, as it is affectionately titled by its fans, is a daily (from Monday to Friday) podcast about technology produced by CNET. The show is hosted by Rafe Needleman, Molly Wood, and producer Jason Howell and various rotating guest hosts. Veronica Belmont co-hosted the show until July 20, 2007 when she left to work at Mahalo.com.[1] Molly Wood was a daily co-host until 16 January 2009 when she cut back to once a week.[2] A co-host rotation was instituted until Molly returned as a full time host on February 8, 2010. Tom Merritt was also a co-host, but left on May 14, 2010 to host Tech News Today on TWiT.[3]Buzz Out Loud was named in Apple's iTunes Best of 2008 under 'Classic Audio Podcasts.'[4]
History
During the show's public debut on April 25, 2005, it promised to deliver "5 or so" minutes of Tom & Molly's take on tech news every second day, but it has evolved into 35–45 minutes of daily tech-related banter and commentary. As early as 30 March 2005, Molly and Tom were discussing subjects such as: patent infringement lawsuits, the Apple iPod, and DRM.[5] In 2006, they produced a video episode of Buzz Out Loud at the San Francisco premiere of Snakes on a Plane. At CES 2007, video of the Buzz Out Loud podcast recording sessions were streamed live on CNET TV. On 21 May 2007, Jason Howell joined the podcast as producer.[6] On 3 December 2007, the hosts commented on the controversy over the firing of Gamespot's Jeff Gerstmann.[7]
"Buzztown" is a fictional city in which the listeners of Buzz Out Loud are the residents, and is similar to a real city in that it has a "mayor". Listeners are also referred to as "The Buzz Brigade" or "The Buzz Militia".
The show was used as an example in an O'Reilly article on how to rewrite a podgrabber.[8]
On Thursday, June 18, 2009, Buzz Out Loud celebrated its 1,000th episode with a live video celebration, featuring a brief news segment, then moving to the CNET video studio for an hour-long celebration live streamed for Buzz Out Loud's 1,000th episode. The special was hosted by Tom Merritt, Molly Wood, Natali Del Conte, Jason Howell, Veronica Belmont, Leo Laporte, Brian Tong, Brian Cooley, Rafe Needleman, and other community members.
On Friday, April 16, 2010, Tom Merritt announced that he would be leaving CNET to join the TWiT Network as a daily host.[9]
On Tuesday, September 7, 2010, TWIT's Leo Laporte announced on the TWIT-blog that Jason Howell will leave Buzz Out Loud to join the TWiT Network.[10]
Format
All episodes have live streaming video available on CNET Live. Episodes are usually posted via the BOL blog and RSS feeds by 12 noon Pacific. Listeners to the show are encouraged to submit their comments by email or by telephone, as well as to post to the Buzz Out Loud Forums. Most aired comments are included in the show's e-mail newsletter, which is available from the show's home page.
In November 2005, the show gained Earthlink as a sponsor. This marked the beginning of a period of continuity for the show, as most episodes have featured the trio of commentators. The exceptions usually involve one of the commentators being unavailable to record due to business trips, sick days, or vacations. In late March 2006, Buzz Out Loud switched to a new Earthlink sponsorship, having 11 different ads instead of the previous 1. Earthlink eventually ended their sponsorship at the beginning of 2008, and the program went unsponsored for five months. On May 1, Best Buy became the sponsor of the program, featuring a similar ad pattern as Earthlink.
The show occasionally features interviews; initially, these were integrated as a part of the show, but they have since been spun off into separate episodes due to listener requests. Tech luminaries such as Lawrence Lessig and Steve Wozniak have been interviewed, as well as several hosts of the TWiT.tv and Revision3 networks.
Every so often, the Buzz Out Loud crew records live shows at technology trade shows, such as recordings done from the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), and Macworld. These live shows can include a live audience, made up of fans of the show, and discussions on the different products that the commentators have seen at the shows. Other times, one of the hosts will attend a live event, such as Molly at the former E3, and instead call in to the show before, during or after the event with updated information.
A video edition of the podcast had been experimented on and off with several services, until the Friday-only video edition within a dedicated studio was launched officially on CNET TV with the May 2 episode. As of Episode 797, this version has been abandoned in favor of a recorded version of the USTREAM video. The Buzz Out Loud Podcast now has a video version, and an audio version of the show available everyday at bol.cnet.com
A former running gag in the show is that each day is an official US holiday, though the holidays cited are often whimsical in nature. The holidays are cited from the Bizarre American Holidays calendar.[11]
Guest hosts
Guest hosts originally appeared on the podcast only when either Tom or Molly were unable to be in the studio. These included producer Jason Howell prior to becoming a full time host, Webware.com editor Rafe Needleman, automotive reviewer Brian Cooley, and News.com reporters Caroline McCarthy and Erica Ogg.
After many listener suggestions, they decided to have four hosts for each show, alternating guest hosts each day.[12] Frequent guests included Natali Del Conte, Brian Tong, Brian Cooley, and Rafe Needleman. At the start of 2009, Molly Wood announced that she would become one of the guest hosts while Natali would become a permanent member of the round-table. Natali has decided to step back from being permanent since the 1000th episode making Tom Merritt a permanent member.[2] Wood returned as a permanent host in winter 2009.
On 19 December 2007 and 20 December 2007, two special guest-host editions were produced where listeners were called and asked to participate in the special episodes.[13][14]
References
- ^ Belmont, Veronica (2007-07-10). "Big (early) announcement day!". Retrieved 2007-11-14.
So, this announcement is coming sooner than I expected, but a little birdie was set loose into the blogosphere today, so here we are! It's true, I'm leaving CNET to work full-time for Mahalo, producing a daily video show.
- ^ a b ""Mad Molly Monday"". "Buzz Out Loud". Episode 890. 2009-01-14.
{{cite episode}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Merritt, Tom. "I'm changing some things". Retrieved 2010-05-19.
Starting May 14th I'll be doing a whole lot of different things.
- ^ "iTunes 2008 (direct iTunes link)". Retrieved 2008-02-20.
- ^ "The Buzz Report 3/30/05". 2005-03-30. Retrieved 2008-01-13.
- ^ Howell, Jason (2007-05-22). "Buzz Out Loud Lounge". CNET. Retrieved 2007-11-14.
Jason... more than just your average forum lurker... - In fact, now, I'm officially a lurker-turned-participant.
- ^ Orland, Kyle (2007-12-03). "CNET podcast hosts comment on Gerstmann controversy". Weblogs Inc. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
- ^ Jones, Jeremy (2007-05-24). "Rewriting podgrabber, part 2". O'Reilly. Retrieved 2008-01-13.
- ^ Merritt, Tom (2010-04-16). "I'm changing some things". Tom Merritt. Retrieved 2010-04-19.
Starting May 14th I'll be doing a whole lot of different things. On that day I'll step down as a full-time employee of CNET ... Starting June 1 I'll be joining Leo Laporte's TWiT network as a daily host.
- ^ Laporte, Leo (2010-09-07). "Jason Howell joins TWiT". Leo Laporte. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
The TWiT netcast network has hired Jason Howell to bring his podcast production expertise to the channel.
- ^ Merritt, Tom. "CNET Buzz Out Loud Lounge Forums". CNET. Retrieved 2007-11-14.
Here's the calendar we use - http://library.thinkquest.org/2886/INDEX.HTM
{{cite web}}
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- ^ "Buzz Out Loud 09-08-2008". 2008-09-08.
- ^ "Buzz Out Loud 12-19-2007". 2007-12-19. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
- ^ "Buzz Out Loud 12-20-2007". 2007-12-20. Retrieved 2008-06-14.