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https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/nfts-are-another-sign-of-creators-taking-back-control/
Across the board, creators are striving to claw back
control, agency and, increasingly, revenues from employers, publishers and
distributors.
One way is via non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which give
creators new ability to go directly to customers. But are they a flash in the
pan or here to stay?
NFTs are irreplicable blockchain-based tokens that
effectively assign ownership, in some form, for a specific digital item. A
robust market for NFTs has sprung up among collectors and speculators.
Key milestones in the market’s development included the sale
of a digital collage artwork by the artist Beeple for $69 million and the sale
of the first-ever tweet (by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey) for $3 million. The
NBA’s Top Shot Licensed Digital Collectibles NFTs launched in June 2020, and
had traded more than $550 million for video “Moments” by May 2021.
Although musicians may have missed out on live performances
and the merchandise sales that go with them, Grimes sold thousands of NFTs at
$7,500 each for two short videos — the digital equivalent of signed,
limited-edition prints, as PwC points out in its Global Entertainment
& Media Outlook 2021–2025.
The Kings of Leon launched an album last March as an NFT
that included a limited edition vinyl disc, along with MP3 files and a GIF of
the artwork.
Brands are getting in on the act too.
In June, Anheuser-Busch minted NFTs for its premium Stella
Artois beer and partnered with ZED RUN to create 50 unique horses for digital
horse racing. The horses sold for millions of dollars, according to Spencer
Gordon, who leads the marketing team at Anheuser-Busch.
“When they sold we donated the money to help bars and
restaurants in Europe that were suffering from the (COVID-19) crisis,” he tells
Forbes.
But the cutthroat race to be one of the first brands to
launch an NFT has resulted in a clutter of low-quality NFTs issued only for the
sake of earning money rather than resonating with buyers, writes Forbes’
Rashi Shrivastava
“There is no real functionality or even art to it,” says
Nick Tran, global head of marketing for TikTok. “There is no craft, it was
literally just, let’s get this out quickly, get the headline, move on to the
next thing. Ninety-five percent of those are probably going to fail.”
TikTok has a creator marketplace that helps brands in 40
countries find partners, and its Creator Fund enables people whose
self-generated content makes waves on the platform to earn money from their
posts.
Young creators are also at the core of the business model of
Roblox, a gaming platform that enables users to build their own games and play
games developed by others. Roblox went public in a blockbuster IPO in March
2021 and boasts a market capitalization of about $55 billion.
“Substack, the newsletter platform company whose slogan is
‘Take back your mind,’ has emerged as the portal of choice for hundreds of
independent writers — many of whom have left struggling newspapers and digital
media operations and are now eager to sell subscription newsletters to their
fans and audiences,” reports PwC.
Unionization is another sign of creators asserting
themselves. In Hollywood, a standoff between the Writers Guild of America and
the Association of Talent Agents resulted in a new code of conduct for agents,
aimed at ending the “packaging” or bundling of talent by agents for TV and film
production.
Musicians are seeking a bigger payback too. PwC reports that
the rapid growth in streaming has powered corresponding increases in the value
of large catalogues of music and their associated rights. That’s good news for
formerly embattled creators who aim to monetize their portfolios of work.
Taylor Swift, after a long-running dispute with the company
that owned rights to her master recordings, began re-recording and reissuing
her previously recorded hit songs to regain ownership. Other major transactions
included Paul Simon selling his catalogue to Sony for $250 million, Stevie
Nicks selling a majority stake for $80 million to independent operator Primary
Wave, and Bob Dylan selling his 600+ song catalogue to Universal for a reported
$300 million.
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