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VICE

Inigo Montoya

The New Dread Pirate Roberts.
Recently I have been working my way through the Vice YouTube channel and I try to catch their HBO show whenever I can find it on Foxtel.
I think my favourite Vice documentaries are the ones they did on DPKR (North Korea) and anything by Hamilton Morris.
Does anyone else love Vice?
 
Yep I love VICE's video work, except they've stopped putting them on Youtube which is annoying.

Hamilton is a definite favourite.
 
Shane Smith interview: Vice chief eyes TV news for 'Generation Y'
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Exclusive: Edgy, youth-focused media group is going global, but has it sold out?

Thursday 16 October 2014

The youth-orientated online media organisation Vice is set to launch its first global television network and will reveal details before the end of the month.

Vice founder and chief executive Shane Smith said the rapidly expanding company wanted its own terrestrial TV channel to gain a larger share of the world’s advertising market and to have greater control over its growth as a multi-platform provider of news and entertainment.

“We have been working for quite some time to be able to programme a 24-hour network,” he told The Independent. “What we have been working on is specific TV formats in news, music, food and travel and we are just finishing up the production of those series.”

Vice, which has become the envy of traditional media outlets through its strong connection to the under-35 audience, is able to expand thanks to a $250m investment by media company A&E Networks, a joint venture between Disney and publishers Hearst. Smith said that a further major cash injection of $250m from investors Technology Crossover Ventures (TCV) would enable Vice to develop on mobile platforms. “Mobile is the majority of our growth...that is going to be our main focus,” he said.

The major expansion is remarkable for a company that began its life in Montreal 20 years ago as a free and snarkily written style magazine. Vice now operates in 36 countries, has a staff of 1,500 and has recently been valued at $2.5bn. It has strong UK connections, including many British senior staff. London is its second hub, after New York.

Its portfolio of online video brands includes the music channel Noisey and tech specialist Motherboard. Five months ago, it launched online video news operation Vice News, which has produced remarkable films on the conflict in Ukraine and from inside Isis’s Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.

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Vice has produced remarkable films on the conflict in Ukraine (Reuters)
In a wide-ranging interview, Smith, who helped to make Vice’s reputation in filmmaking with the luridly titled but riveting reportage of The Cannibal Warlords of Liberia in 2009, said the Ebola outbreak had made the West African state an impossible place for journalists to work. He ordered Vice’s reporters to withdraw and undergo 21 days of quarantine.

“I was nervous, I was afraid. I don’t want my guys to get Ebola but I also don’t want to be guilty of bringing Ebola anywhere else, so I erred on the side of caution – which Vice is not traditionally known for,” he said.

In the summer, Vice News scooped its rivals by embedding a journalist with Isis and filming the terror group as it went about setting up its fledgling caliphate. Some complained that the reports were insufficiently critical but Smith said the pictures spoke for themselves.

“We asked, and said ‘Do you want to tell your story?’ Obviously their story was Isis’s propaganda but the propaganda they showed was very telling. To me it reeked of pre-war Nazi Germany where everybody was happy to show you how well they were doing and meanwhile it was the most terrifying thing on earth.” Vice News has since produced Ghosts of Aleppo, featuring the Syrian forces resisting the Jihadis.

Smith said that “pretty much every young journalist and creative is flocking to us right now” – but the organisation benefits – and is criticised for – using young reporters who are willing to take chances on the frontline to make their names. In Ukraine, earlier this year, Vice’s talented correspondent Simon Ostrovsky was kidnapped. Smith points out that not only did Vice send in a team to extricate Ostrovsky, it helped free other kidnapped journalists from traditional media companies.

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Vice has produced films from inside Isis's stronghold in Raqqa (AP)
“We are incredibly cautious with our journalists. I know because I’m one of the lead reporters. I’m married with kids – I’m the opposite of an adrenaline junkie, I’m a luxury junkie, I like my life.”

Smith, 44, is not worried that Vice will go out of fashion, saying it will mature with its under-35 audience. “We are going to continue to grow because we are a voice that Gen Y trusts and we are going to grow exponentially with Gen Y.”

Smith is in London this week selling Vice’s offering to advertisers. Its commercial inventory is sold out for the next eight months – partly explaining the new TV channel. “Seventy-five per cent of the world’s advertising is still in TV,” said Smith.

Now Disney and Hearst have joined a long list of corporate partners that already includes 21st Century Fox (James Murdoch has a place on the Vice board), the task of retaining the unique sensibility of the youth brand might be harder still. Smith argued against the idea that these giants will try to change the way Vice operates, saying they are there to learn how young people use media content. “They invested...because they don’t know what the hell is going on with social (media) or mobile.” He also insists that Vice staff “in the trenches” don’t take their orders from corporate partners.

Besides, he remains the largest shareholder of Vice and has super-voting stock which gives him power over the rest of the board. “Nobody gets to tell us what to do. I get to tell everybody, for better or worse, what to do. I’m the Stalin of Vice and as long as I am then nobody gets to say anything else!”


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/m...ef-eyes-tv-news-for-generation-y-9799957.html
 
Yeah the fact the 20th century fox owns 5% of vice now is probably why The Australia also wrote an article on them....

Vice to expand Australian office

VICE Media has plans to expand its Sydney office from 40 staff to 70 by the end of next year in line with the company’s rampant international growth.
Global general manager Hosi Simon said the company was growing dramatically, with the New York office to double to about 900 staff over the same time-frame.

Vice began life as a Canadian magazine but has grown into a multiplatform, youth-focused media company headquartered in New York but now focused on global expansion.

It launched an international news division in March featuring “immersionist” journalism from global trouble spots — such as embedding a reporter with terrorist group ISIS.

Last year Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox bought a 5 per cent stake for $US70m; advertising group WPP is also a shareholder.

In April, Vice raised $US500m from San Francisco-based venture capital firm Technology Crossover Ventures and US media company A+E Networks, each of which took a 10 per cent stake, valuing it at more than $2.5bn. Other talks with Time Warner’s CNN ended without a deal.

Simon, who addressed advertisers at a YouTube function in Sydney on Wednesday night, said the company “almost overnight” changed to focus on online video focusing on “under-reported” areas of interest such as immigration, the environment, crisis and conflict; it got more than 50 million views in its first month.

“It took 10 years to get to a print run of a million and only one year online,” he said.

Vice now has a presence in 36 countries and produces more than 1000 hours of content a month.

Its growth comes as other mainstream media companies in the US and elsewhere, including CNN, are laying off staff.

Simon said while Vice News had already been called the next CNN, it was more likely to be “10x the next CNN”.[DOUBLEPOST=1413538118][/DOUBLEPOST]Annnd Vice is now officially not cool :bored::rolleyes:. It was good while it lasted.
 
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Anyone see the one about krokodil? It was very interesting while also scaring the crap out of me at the same time.

I also enjoyed the Homie vending machine doco. That guy really makes me want to visit NY.
 
Anyone see the one about krokodil? It was very interesting while also scaring the crap out of me at the same time.

I also enjoyed the Homie vending machine doco. That guy really makes me want to visit NY.
Is that one where people in Russia are mixing Heroin with nasal spray and taking it make peoples feet, hands legs and arms rot and fall off.
Crazy that people have resorted to adding even worse things to these harmful drugs.
 
I really enjoy watching the videos that Ben Anderson makes... This probably has to be his best one....

 
@Inigo Montoya ..I will watch them. Some of them are long though so it may take me a couple of days before I give any feedback ( if I feel it necessary) ok?
Sure.. I plan on posting more of their videos as well... they have made a lot of them...

Oh here is one that is about Australians... sadly they don't make many about OZ.... and when they they are about this... ugh...

 
I'm not really that much of a current affairs persons (besides reading articles), sowy. I'd much rather watch basketball right now or an HBO show than sit through any of that, hope you have it in your heart to forgive. :redface:
 
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