Author Archives: Jeff Giles

About Jeff Giles

Jeff Giles is the founder and editor-in-chief of Popdose and Dadnabbit, as well as an entertainment writer whose work can be seen at Rotten Tomatoes, Paste Magazine, and a number of other sites.

Jitterbug.tv

Jitterbug.tv and the Dawn of Curated Kindie Content

Jitterbug.tv

Kindie culture is a burgeoning movement, but one of the most refreshing things about the scene — the lack of corporate machinery whirring around it — also works against efforts to raise awareness of the work. Unless you’re a devotee, it’s easy to remain unaware of some really terrific stuff. Hell, I spend a fair amount of time covering it, and I’m constantly finding out about artists I’ve never heard of. The commercially diffuse structure of the genre keeps the suits from taking over and ruining everything, but it’s also sort of a problem.

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One of the things that’s missing is the sort of third-party curation that usually comes with the maturation of a medium, which is one of the reasons why it’s interesting to note the arrival of Jitterbug.tv, a Web service and iPad app that aims to guide parents into a sort of walled garden of family-friendly nirvana. (Not Nirvana. Those guys aren’t allowed.)

What Jitterbug does, in surface terms, is collect music and music videos for kids, and plug them into a bright, easily navigable central space where they can be seen and enjoyed. It’s basically YouTube/Spotify for the younger set. The concept isn’t exactly new, but Jitterbug adds a couple of twists: One, they focus on independent artists who aren’t getting a lot of push from other family content portals, and two, they’re charging a monthly fee in order to pay the artists royalties.

Those are crucial points. If Jitterbug is successful — and that’s a big if — it could go a fair way toward helping kindie artists monetize their art. I don’t envy the company in its quest to find a suitable price point for the service, but if they can figure out a way to really show people what they’re trying to do, I think there’s a real market for Jitterbug.

The hangup is actually getting people to pay for it. Jitterbug follows a similar service, MyKazooTV, with a free model and a more heavily guided structure. At MyKazooTV, videos start playing as soon as you navigate to the site, rather than waiting for you to choose — a different and obviously in no way better or worse approach, but as most parents will probably say, “Hey, it’s free.

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I don’t mean to insult free — I like free — but as a model for driving creation, it kind of sucks. Which is why, despite experiencing some bumps in the road with somewhat buggy early versions of the Jitterbug app, I hope it catches on. I can vouch for at least one six-year-old girl who adores the app, much to her Coco Loco-loving younger brother’s chagrin; for her, it’s endlessly fun and fascinating to watch her favorite artists act out their musical adventures in clips for songs she knows by heart. I already curate my kids’ cultural experience pretty heavily, but if I were feeling a little lost in my search for family-friendly music, I’d definitely consider ponying up for a monthly Jitterbug account.

How much is it worth? Again, that’s hard to say. Jitterbug faces an uphill fight — as consumers, we’re already saturated with subscription-model entertainment, from the stupid cable bill to more affordable services like Netflix and Spotify. I think what the company might need to do is develop a freemium model a la Daytrotter, where ordinary users have access to a certain amount of content, but the really good stuff is locked away — and the key is stupidly affordable. Unfortunately, a lot of parents don’t think kids’ entertainment is worth paying for and/or aren’t particularly worried about the quality, which can’t help but marginalize the commercial prospects of independent artists who are actively trying to elevate the medium.

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It’s a catch-22, and so far, no one’s really been able to solve it. Services like this one could be part of the answer.

Vote for ‘Roger Nix, President at Six’

I know a lot of artists who are ambivalent about it, but I love the Kickstarter model — it gives consumers a more tangible level of ownership in an artist’s work, and it also makes us wait for what we want in an age when what we want is often only a click away. We don’t often get to anticipate things anymore, you know? I think that’s important.

And speaking of which, I’m anticipating the fall 2012 release of Roger Nix, President at Six, the new book from author Nick Dazé. You see that nifty illustration above? It’s from a story that Nick describes like this:

The story is about kindergartener Roger Nix, an ordinary boy: Roger loves kindergarten, playing make-believe, and hanging out with his imaginary friends (a baby donkey named Jack and a baby elephant named Abe). But when he learns about the plans of Old Man Plee, a perennial presidential candidate, to shut down schools and send kids to work in factories as an austerity measure; Roger decides to run against Old Man Plee as a defender of “school and summer vacation, learning and imagination”.

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Of course Abe and Jack are there to help him every step of the way.

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Written in clever Seussian rhyme and illustrated by Bill Robinson, Roger Nix is a little more than $8,000 away from its $30,000 goal with just a couple days to go in its campaign. A $30 pledge will get you a first-edition hardcover copy of the book and a campaign bumper sticker. I didn’t even need to see the trailer embedded below before I kicked in. How about you?

New Video: Mista Cookie Jar, ‘Happy Place’

Full disclosure: During Mista Cookie Jar’s Kindiefest showcase, I leaned over to Jeff Bogle and unleashed a flurry of expletives that ended with the words “I’m in hell.” Between his aggressively chintzy visual vibe (Cheap sunglasses!

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Roller skates! Vintage clothes!) and Gabba-esque retro sonic aesthetic, the whole thing felt like second-rate Deee-Lite to me.

So maybe it was just the (alarmingly poor) sound at the venue talking, I don’t know, but now that I’m watching the video for Mista’s new single “Happy Place”…

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well, I have to say I like it. There’s still a fair amount of visual shtick involved, but there are clearly plenty of hooks in the cookie jar, and the production is loaded with plenty of radio-ready brightness without sacrificing warmth.

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I’ll be checking out the new album, Ultramagnetic Universal Love Revolution, when it drops on May 8. Visit Mista Cookie Jar’s site for more information, and watch the video here: