Fame.Me Aspires To Become Net's American Idol
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http://www.fame.me/
Imagine American Idol on Facebook. Yes, not on TV, but on Facebook. Further still, imagine American Idol without Jennifer Lopez, Randy Jackson and Steve Tyler, but just the American population spotting the next big singing sensation.
Impossible? Not quite.
Brett Marl of Fame.Me is looking to up the game by bringing a contest like American Idol to the Facebook generation, more like turning an interactive TV show into an even more interactive, accessible website. If that sounds a lot like YouTube to you, consider this: 60 hours of video is uploaded into YouTube every minute of the day so that getting spotted in a crowd like that is like finding a needle in a haystack – but probably not if you're a kitten or an adorable baby with a toothless grin.
FameMe is structured like a contest. The judges are people at home, sitting in front of their computers, with three chances to vote for their favorite performers dai ly. FameMe makes full use of existing social media, Facebook and probably Twitter in the future, for both contestants and supporters to campaign for votes.
Fame.Me is only four months old, but Marl and his team are confident the site will be the next big thing.
[HT - Unusual Business]
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http://www.fame.me/
Imagine American Idol on Facebook. Yes, not on TV, but on Facebook. Further still, imagine American Idol without Jennifer Lopez, Randy Jackson and Steve Tyler, but just the American population spotting the next big singing sensation.
Impossible? Not quite.
Brett Marl of Fame.Me is looking to up the game by bringing a contest like American Idol to the Facebook generation, more like turning an interactive TV show into an even more interactive, accessible website. If that sounds a lot like YouTube to you, consider this: 60 hours of video is uploaded into YouTube every minute of the day so that getting spotted in a crowd like that is like finding a needle in a haystack – but probably not if you're a kitten or an adorable baby with a toothless grin.
FameMe is structured like a contest. The judges are people at home, sitting in front of their computers, with three chances to vote for their favorite performers dai ly. FameMe makes full use of existing social media, Facebook and probably Twitter in the future, for both contestants and supporters to campaign for votes.
Fame.Me is only four months old, but Marl and his team are confident the site will be the next big thing.
[HT - Unusual Business]
The Mom And Pop Business - Successful Parenting Startups To Watch
How I Increased Sales 350% With Press-Releases
From Police Work To Sauerkraut - Tim Forrest Story
Bootstrapping 101: Tips to Build Your business with Limited Cash and Free Outside Help
From 0 To $30,000 A Month With Dropshipping
Will HubSpot Rewrite The Rules Of Marketing?
Live And Learn - Google Documentaries
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