https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvNsc3F4UYI
Will digital really take over live, in person entertainment in the long run?
Transcription
Why digital content will never monopolize.
Hi I'm Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live.
I'm gonna talk about digital content versus physical content and live interaction.
A lot of people, especially with, so recording this, and in March, the end of March 2021, we've gone through an entire year plus of COVID-19 pandemic madness.
Whether you agree or disagree, you have to agree that it has been a wild ride, regardless of what has occurred. One of the things that's happened is everything has been forced into the digital realm, whether you wanted to or not, some meetings have only been available digitally, some conferences, some speeches.
I mean, there's a million different forms of content out there that we would normally have the ability to capture it in physical format, or in a digital format, or in a in person format, I should say.
It's only available digitally right now. Or up until now, and things are starting to open up right now. But up until now, a whole lot of digital was about all you can get, right. And most of that's through force of law. Okay.
That's really the only way, I mean, there's a whole nother topic talking about monopolies. The only true monopoly you can ever really have long term is via force of law.
Beyond that, when people talk about technologies coming up it doesn't mean that the old technology completely goes away in most cases, unless it makes it completely irrelevant.
But even that classic that everyone always brings up about the horse buggy whip people talking about how, you know, there will always be horses, and they'll always be a need for horse buggy whips. Well, it's true, there are still horses that are guiding carriages around Central Park and so forth.
But it's not as widespread as it was, as it once was, okay, cars took over completely. But it doesn't mean that people don't walk anymore. It doesn't mean that people don't ride their bike, it doesn't mean that people don't jog.
In fact, I would venture to say that we've increased the amount of other activities that people can do not that they do, but that people can do outside of the typical transportation of a car.
I mean, just since having cars, we've invented other ways of getting around. But that's neither here nor there that it's the idea of the digital monopoly, the idea that digital is going to destroy print, that digital is going to destroy what the the ability to be able to get digital in your home, is going to destroy the movie theaters.
And I'm sorry, unless the government forces movie theaters to shut down, people are going to want to get out and go watch a movie on a big screen, or some facts, some reasonable facts, only people are going to we're going to want to go watch plays, people are going to want to have that physical interaction. It's built into our substance as humans, I should say.
I want to show you where there's some cracks in this whole thing. And this, this is one of the things that I've seen a lot lately with digital entertainment.
So you can go and purchase a movie digitally on Amazon.com, you can purchase a book digitally on Amazon.com. If Amazon decides that there are parts of that book or movie that need to be edited, and the publisher does not edit them, they can delete it, it doesn't matter that you think you have ownership of it.