Mark Burnett Video Available

For those of you who missed iHollywood Forum and NXTcomm’s Q&A with Survivor and Apprentice Producer Mark Burnett about the future of digital content delivery, just click on the image to the left to go a page with links to view the video. (About the middle of the page; Quicktime and Windows Media). NXTcomm is the replacement show for the giant Supercomm show, produced by the Telecommunications Industry Association and the U.S. Telecom Association. Burnett will be keynoting NXTcomm08, which is dedicated to the intersection of voice, data and content.

iHollywood Forum will be co-producing Communications Goes Green with NXTcomm on June 19 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Keynotes include AT&T’s Dorothy Attwood, Senior Vice President for Regulatory Planning & Policy and Chief Privacy Officer; and Verizon’s Kathryn C. Brown, Senior Vice President
Public Policy Development & Corporate Responsibility.

If you’re involved in IPTV, cable or broadcast TV content and infrastructure, and if environmental concerns are important to your business, this is the show for you.

Posted under Uncategorized

Sustainable Hollywood

As we ramp up for our Hollywood Goes Green conference on  Dec. 11, I’ll be reserving growing space in my blog for comments and interviews about the entertainment industry and environmental issues. 

If you’re looking to enhance your company’s green profile, you might start with Business for Social Responsibility, a San Francisco-based non-profit group which helps its 250 member companies integrate sustainability into business strategy and operations through consulting, research and conferences. It also serves many entertainment and media companies, including NBC Universal, Time Warner, Disney and Viacom.

iHollywood Forum President Zahava Stroud recently attended BSR’s annual conference in San Francisco, She interviewed BSR Managing Director Kara Hartness Hurst, who oversees the group’s efforts to get media and entertainment companies to integrate corporate responsibility and environmental principles into their business strategies and operations.


Take products that use licensed content from films and TV shows. Studios can can require vendors to demonstrate ethical environmental  practices — just as they already require vendors to comply with fair 

labor practices and safe working conditions, she said.

They can also develop or refine their supply chain policies policies to address hazardous materials, water use, water quality and other environmental issues. 

Environmental issues fit neatly into existing entertainment industry initiatives such as  MTV’s new Think MTV community, which seek to promote youth acitivism.

MTV encourages members to upload content on the site and organize themselves around specific issues.

“This is an example of how to use new technology to motivate social activism among youth in safe and responsible manner," Hurst said.

See Also

Posted under Uncategorized

This post was written by Michael Stroud on November 6, 2007

Tags: , , , ,