...I started the thread because I genuinely am not sure how things shake out with the pro's and con's. For example live streaming is great. How many does it pull in that aren't already hard core pool addicts though? Is it really adding to our base or just supporting the existing base? I'm not expecting answers to these questions and others, they are just what inspired the thread.
I have to agree with you on this point, Hu. Of course, the live streaming is great, but I too wonder if it will pull in new interest. If it does, then, of course, that's a good thing for pool overall.
When I go to the U.S. Open, the majority of the audience sitting in the stands are friends and family of the pool players competing in the tournament, as well as the players themselves. It is the same at most other pool venues I have been to.
That said, the Internet is definitely a medium that is here to stay, and if you're not on board with it, then you'll be left behind, pool included. :wink:
I will give one example. I read a bunch of interviews during the presidential campaign last year. One factoid really stuck out for me when John McCain admitted in public that he did not know how to use e-mail, and thus was not Internet savvy. Are you kidding me?
On the other side of the fence, Barack Obama was even Twittering, had a strong website presence, and used the Internet to spread the message of his campaign. He wrote to his followers on Twitter that he would let them know who his Vice Presidential candidate was before it was announced. Unfortunately for him, the news of Biden was leaked on CNN before he could do this. Obama's campaign reached millions upon millions via the Internet, and his usage of the Internet, I believe, advanced his chances to win the election.
The Internet is here to stay. Big newspaper giants like the Tribune and the McCatchy family of newspapers are filing bankruptcy. Most people want to read all about it on the Internet, and many newspapers today do have a dot-com presence. The print media is becoming a thing of the past.
When you do the numbers, the dot-coms of ABC, NBC, FOX, and CBS have much more participation than TV today.
There's even a new gadget on Amazon for books, where folks can download reading material and not have to purchase the actual hard-copy book. This will be GREAT for school textbooks, not to mention the convenience of carrying around this little electronic gadget and download as many books as one desires.
YouTube, FaceBook, Yahoo! News, and Google, in particuar, have more individual viewers than any other medium today. I have the stats somewhere, and they are in the tens of millions.
So, yes, I believe the Internet can effect change for the better in pool. Whether it will be live streaming, AzBilliards-dot-com, or the pool magazine online websites, I'm not so sure today. As you said, Hu, the hard-core viewers of live streaming today is mainly us. How to grow it via the Internet is still a question in my mind.