TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Is the Kickstarter bubble bursting for celebrities?

9 pointsby thibautdavoultover 11 years ago

4 comments

nonchalanceover 11 years ago
This is a terrible analysis that fails to understand why veronica mars was so successful.<p>As discussed here when the VM kickstarter succeeded, there was a very loyal fanbase to the series and there hadn&#x27;t been a new show or movie in years (since 2007). There was a ton of latent demand for a product.<p>If I were doing this analysis, I&#x27;d try to separate established brands from new concepts. Bell&#x27;s project to a great extent was driven by the brand and Braff&#x27;s project leveraged Garden State. Since Spike Lee&#x27;s project was entirely driven by his name, I&#x27;d look at his with a different lens<p>The best part of this article is the quote &quot;Judging a trend from 3 data points isn’t the wisest thing to do&quot;
评论 #6290425 未加载
mehwootover 11 years ago
<i>But when Kickstarter’s founders have to defend their own platform, a platform that once was nominated idea of the year by TIME, you know something must be rotten in Denmark.</i><p>The fuck kind of logic is this? When somebody defends their company, you know something must be wrong? That&#x27;s some astute analysis there.<p><i>Judging a trend from 3 data points isn’t the wisest thing to do, and this descending slope may only be coincidental.</i><p>And yet that&#x27;s what you lead with, huh.
评论 #6290610 未加载
jonathanjaegerover 11 years ago
&quot;So, naturally Strickler won’t pull the plug on celebrity projects, and he’s going to defend their right to exist for as long as he can.&quot;<p>Just because it&#x27;s a big direct revenue source, that doesn&#x27;t mean Kickstarter can&#x27;t pull the plug on something. They recently banned hardware projects that just showed simulations without an actual product built yet. They&#x27;re playing the long game and don&#x27;t want to hurt the trust the community has in the platform -- so they&#x27;re not in it for a quick buck at any chance, and they reject a lot of projects that don&#x27;t meet their somewhat strict guidelines.<p>That being said, where do you draw the line on &#x27;celebrity&#x27;? At some point, if hypothetically they banned celebrity projects, who determines the level of celebrity? It&#x27;s so ambiguous to the point where it doesn&#x27;t make sense to address it. I think the celebrity stories are a non-issue and the press always wants &quot;controversy&quot; to talk about even if it&#x27;s drummed up by them.
评论 #6290278 未加载
Amadouover 11 years ago
I see a pattern - it is the level of quirkiness. I think the more quirky a show the more likely it is to generate major fan loyalty. The show has to be good as a baseline.<p>Veronica Mars fans are legion, there is even a slight overlap with Joss Whedon (of Buffy, etc fame) as he had a very rare bit-part in one episode. Braff is known for somewhat quirky stuff too, Garden State was offbeat. Spike Lee is very mainstream hollywood nowadays, working with a-list actors and directing some very profitable movies.<p>So from the perspective that good-quality quirkiness generates fan enthusiasm it makes sense that these three particular projects would draw interest and dollars in the proportions that they did.