From Frontrunners to Showrunners, @radical.media Still Sets the Pace
Co-Founder and President Frank Scherma talks about where branded content is going and the need to fill all those new iPads with content.
From Frontrunners to Showrunners, @radical.media Still Setting the Pace Branded content work continues to play a major role as the ‘never established’ production company moves into the iPad era. By Anthony Vagnoni
![]() @radical.media President Frank Scherma, photographed by Matthew Rolston. How has the branded content world changed from your perspective? Radical was involved in some of the earliest of these projects, from "Battlegrounds" for MTV to "The Adventures of Seinfeld & Superman" for American Express to "Gamekillers" for Axe all the way up to more recent things like "Summit on the Summit." What's different about the genre? Right now, it's more about how to tell a story and engage the consumer/audience in multiple platforms. Today, brands have multiple choices because consumers and audiences are even more fragmented with their attention span-whether it's from the television screen, smart phones, the web or even live events. How does radical define it? What do you consider to be prerequisites for a really good branded content project? ![]() Indy star Danica Patrick appears in “Dream the Impossible,” a web series for Honda produced by radical for RPA. There's this entire generation out there--my kids, for example--who see advertising as this intrusive thing that they don't want. A lot of that has to do with the internet, and with their belief that everything should be free. Even my 17-year old came in the other day to tell me, 'Dad, I heard they're going to start charging for Hulu.' I've been telling him this for years, that free content on the web can't sustain itself as a business model and that you need advertisers to bring you the stuff-that's how you get that entertainment. So the idea of branded content for us is basically, how do we tell a story that integrates the brand's message into the DNA of the content we create in a transmedia landscape? What it boils down to is that it needs to be an entertaining piece of content, so entertaining that the network it's running on would have run it anyway, aside from the fact that an advertiser is paying for it. And so maybe there is an element of that advertiser's brand in the show, but it's done in a subtle way. It's not like the actors are saying, 'Let's go drink a Coke because we love the taste!' What has radical been up to most recently in the branded content space? ![]() “Summit on the Summit,” produced for MTV, included HP and P&G as sponsors. We're also going into our fifth season of "Iconoclasts," which we produce with Grey Goose Entertainment for the Sundance Channel. This year we have Hugh Jackman, Charlize Theron, and Jean-Georges Vongerichten on the series, along with a few other surprises I can't mention just yet. So that's still thriving. What's your take on some of the major hot button issues facing the commercial production industry right now, things like sequential liability and the influence of corporate procurement officers on the bidding process? Look, every element of the industry is dealing with procurement types these days; we're all dealing with the reality of clients trying to get the best value for the money that they can. We all do that. You buy a car, that's what you're doing. I don't have problems with people trying to negotiate with me to get the best bottom-line price they can. But I don't like people telling me how to do something. We all have to be smart about how we're doing business these days, and about how we're going to get the best for the least. Where I think the problems come in are when people don't fully understand things that we in production have to deal with, such as union contracts. There's a group of people in our industry who understand production, and there are people who need to learn about production. You need to know how this business works, so you can intelligently represent your client or your brand. Sequential liability is a whole other thing. I think its fine if the client is taking responsibility for the payments-if the agency is saying, 'If our client doesn't pay us then we don't pay you and you can go after our client.' Again, that's fine, as long as the client knows about that. But what we find is that agencies are saying, 'Here's our sequential liability policy, and by the way, you can't talk to our client about it.' What's on the horizon? What's your outlook for the future? ![]() radical’s “6 Beers of Separation” TV and web series for Toohey’s was recognized by AICP, the One Show and the DGA. Entertainment is a multi-billion dollar industry. Within that, advertisers are still spending money-they just need to figure out how they're going to get to consumer the way they need to get to them. As a company, we're trying to provide them, and their agencies, with solutions, with everything a brand needs. You want to put something on the web? We can help you. You need to do a TV show? We can do that, too. Jon and I have spent the last ten years turning our company into an established show-runner with the networks. No one else in our business can say that. We can call any network or cable programmer and tell them we have an idea for a show and we'll get a meeting. The networks don't say to us, 'Who's going to produce it?' That's the question most other brands or agencies will get when they meet with programmers, because they're going to want to deal with someone that has produced for broadcast before, knows how to deliver it and how to deliver it on time. And making ads is a great training ground for that-it's not like you can deliver a spot after the air date. It's imperative that the networks and cable channels feel confident with the producers, and we've achieved that. Published July 27, 2010 |