Ditto Gary & Deg,

It does take a village of distributors to provide the variety of content we 
need in higher education. I have purchased digital rights for streaming content 
from AIT, Ambrose, California Newsreel, Chip Taylor, DER, Fanlight, FMG, 
Milestone, Mypheduh Film, New Day, PBS Video, and VEA. We've been pleased with 
the content and service. We stream everything  ourselves with the exception of 
New Day and a portion of our FMG titles.

Shelia D. Owens
Distance Education
200 Brister Hall
(901)678-2236 Office
(901) 678-5112 Fax
www.memphis.edu/ecampus


-----Original Message-----
From: Deg Farrelly [mailto:deg.farre...@asu.edu] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2011 3:54 PM
To: videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
Subject: Re: [Videolib] Your favorite streaming media vendor

Thank you Gary for stating this so well.

There is no one-stop shopping for media content... Especially quality media 
content.

I'm at the National Media Market now, looking at the offerings from a wide 
assortment of video distributors for higher education.

Here are some (but not all) of my favorites (In no particular order)

Alexander Street Press - subject specific collections of high quality films, 
including the entire Filmakers Library catalog, in a rich interface that 
includes transcripts that track with the video stream.  Hard copy sales also 
possible.  Quickly expanding collection in the VAST collection

Media Education Foundation - the best source for insightful deconstruction of 
mass media.  Notable titles:  Killing Us Softly, Codes of Gender, Dreamworlds, 
among many others

Ambrose - THE source for BBC Shakespeare Plays... And classic titles:
Ascent of Man, Shock of the New, etc.

Icarus -  Strong collection of social issue titles

Bullfrog - Social issues and strong focus on environmental issues

Cinefete - small company, but rich collection of documentaries.... A couple 
favorites:  Chicken for Africa, Razor Wire Rodeo

Films Media Group - broad-based large collection, well established deliver 
model, individually linkable segments.


There are many others here at the Market.... Jus this is a quick answer.

Most of these vendors can provide streaming rights, some stream themselves.

But as with building any great collection, your content will have to come from 
many different sources.

My $.02


--
deg farrelly
Arizona State University
P.O. Box 871006
Tempe, AZ 85287
Phone:  480.965.1403
Email:  deg.farre...@asu.edu


On 10/19/11 1:05 PM, "videolib-requ...@lists.berkeley.edu"
<videolib-requ...@lists.berkeley.edu> wrote:

>The question you've asked is really not the correct one to ask, in my 
>opinion.  Video vendors who offer digitral delivery aren't like Baker & 
>Taylor...they're generally not jobbers, they're distributors of 
>particular catalogs of materials which they've acquired from individual 
>(generally
>independent) filmmakers.  Films Media Group (aka Films for the 
>Humanities and Sciences) comes the closest to the Baker and Taylor 
>model of broad content distribution, but even they are a bit different than 
>book jobbers.
>
>The real question to ask is:  which distributors have the types of 
>content that is appropriate and needed for your institution.  The 
>answer to this question may very well require that you deal with a 
>number of distributors, rather than one universal distributor of 
>content.  It may also mean dealing with distributors that, at present, 
>don't offer digital delivery at all.
>
>It's always dangerous and wrong-headed, I think, focusing on technology 
>(how something can be delivered) and putting content second.  Sometimes 
>there's an overlap between the two--content and delivery--but not, by 
>any means, always.
>
>Gary Handman





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