Just looking at how the entertainment industry works is fascinating, they can create such incredible brands in so little time. Take the boy band "One Direction", every single teenager in the first world has heard of them, they haven't even existed for 2 years and the hype surrounding them is huge, they were formed artificially. There's also the boy band "The Wanted" (Bieber's manager Scooter Braun is their manager too) who were also formed artificially, they're growing as a brand too and there is huge hype surrounding them.
The entertainment industry appears to the outside to be very simple, most people think that bands start out and make some music and grow in popularity organically, but that seems to rarely be the case, SOMEONE put every successful musician where they are and often it's a very strategic thing. Entertainment is where the money is.
This is the sort of thing the people that want to "disrupt" the music industry don't understand, they think that artists not getting 100% of their music sales is a terrible thing, what they don't seem to understand is there's a reason the music industry takes a big cut. Justin Bieber would not be making 9 figures a year if he'd sold his music on Bandcamp.
People drastically underestimate the difficulty that is present in industries other than their own.
Engineers/Programmers are notoriously bad at this. Disrupt Education/Hollywood/Music/Movies/Medicine/Everything!
Now, they will eventually be proven correct (anything that can be defined; can and will be automated), but it is the systemic underestimation in difficulty that's the problem.
Doing well in any industry is hard, and most people don't understand that when they only have the facile prejudices of various industries to rely upon.
Things are broken, yes. People will fix it, correct. But it is not nearly as easy as people like to think it is.
Coders scream in shock and horror when people call them nothing more than code monkeys (which they obviously aren't) or when people state how easy programming is compared to generating a brilliant idea (it's obviously not).
But coders will scream just as loudly that others aren't very bright, smart, worthy/aren't doing work in their industry correctly.
Things are harder to do than most people, including you or I, can possibly anticipate without the requisite domain knowledge.
Most kids are insane. Such insanity comes because they don't think before they act, they don't worry about risks and so creativity flows instantaneously. I know this as I was insane as a kid. I used to sing at every opportunity and occasion. I won awards at numerous occasions singing devotional songs in Indian classical music genre. I have sung in front of large audiences, in stadiums, before sporting events, tough competitions etc. In fact the only thing I enjoyed totally in school was singing and science exhibitions.
The only issue was 'video camera' was not affordable and accessible at that time. There was no Youtube and my parents thought singing and music won't help me make a living. I begged them to let me learn how to play an instrument. But they didn't let me go close to it.
You will be shocked how many kids are talented but never receive the appreciation and much needed direction they need in the early part of the their lives. A lot of talent goes wasted this way.
If Justin Bieber is what he is today, he is a insane kid who works very hard and enjoys what he does. But he has also had the advantage of getting the right direction and appreciation from people around him.
If we list tech companies that massively disrupted non-tech industries, you come up with a list like:
* Napster
* Wikipedia
* Craigslist
* AirBnB
If you list companies that didn't disrupt non-tech industries, and created new value, you come up with a list like:
* Apple
* Microsoft
* Oracle
* Dropbox
Based on my naive list of companies, disruption of non-tech industries seems overrated.
...
Libraries and the centuries old librarian profession as well as Yellow Pages, Printed Map books, and oh, privacy.
Also Apple disrupted the record industry with $.99 songs + iTunes and iPod.
Amazon, not on your list, has disrupted retail.
You need to look not just at the direct products produced (which may not be disruptive in the classical sense), but also at the positive externalities that they effect.
Apple made the computer personal when it was founded (or at least that is my impression). That didn't disrupt too many people, but think of all the secondary effects. People could learn to program, people could automate things, they could reduce their reliance on word typesetters, photocopiers, radios, television, encyclopedias - the list goes on.
Oracle did kill a lot of big government/company paper waste (not that there isn't any left :), and stuck it into databases, effectively wiping out an industry and creating the new data warehousing/analysts that we know of today.
Google makes research/discovery democratic - instead of editorial. It allows people to directly connect with what they want (information/news/stuff), disintermediating a lot of advertisting channels at a lower cost (TV/Radio/Newspapers especially).
Microsoft got "a PC on every desk", think of all the secondary effects of that (networking/internet/app development/programming tool etc.)
You see my point?
Facebook disrupted the traditional way of meeting friends and connecting with them.
Dropbox disrupted movable storage (Flash or Memory cards)
Someone else mentioned Google and Amazon.
[1]http://www.businessinsider.com/mary-meekers-latest-incredibl...
This has definitely given more market power to book authors(leaving aside amazon power grab).
Similar models can be offered to the music industry. They'll just enable artists to get more control over the process.
So the boy band will pay high royalty rate to the marketing guys because he is mostly marketing based, but the amazing new musical talent who seems to get a lot of people via viral marketing will share much less of the money.
"Bieber has come a long way in the finance department since I first broached the subject with him a bit over a year ago. 'I have a business manager,' he told me at the 2011 Grammys. 'That basically sums up the question.' Today that’s changed: 'I do calls every week with my business manager and my lawyer,' he says. 'Each week I’m learning something about my business and what I need to know for my career.'"
"His eye for technology and trends ultimately determines the go or no-go--and some of the investments have come through his own contacts--but the guy actively scouting deals, whether venture capital investments or brand extensions, has a nickname worthy of a teen idol’s manager: Scott Braun, known to all as Scooter."
"On the tour Bieber will be showcasing the more grown-up fare of Believe--a crucial step as he tries to transition from teen idol to adult icon. 'It’s not really a transition, it’s just opening doors,' he insists. 'I’m trying to make music that’s a little bit more mature and that can appeal to all ages, and I’m not trying to lose my younger fans.'"
It sounds like he's essentially paying for glorified advertising and/or making marketing deals. Hardly "Venture Capital". Looks an awful lot like a puff piece to me... "teen idol to adult icon"?
http://www.privco.com/knowledge-bank/private-equity-and-vent...
Another high profile celebrity doing smart things with their money is Jessica Simpson (she hasn't done any venture capital investing... yet but she has quite a large empire of businesses and investments in the property market). She buys houses, renovates them and then sells them for a profit, not bad for someone who is portrayed as an idiot. She has clothing lines, a perfume range and a whole heap of other pieces of equity.
It always makes me glad to hear celebrities spending their money wisely and at the same time (even if an investment has been given for an expected return much like every other investor would expect) people like Justin are helping the little startup guys get a break and make a difference.
Did you miss the part about making $105M in the last 24 months? He's already set up for many life times.
Props to Ashton Kutcher to leading the way for venture investing. Smart move.
If this whole situation of him assaulting a cameraman is just swept under the rug, with his managers insisting that he never do anything like that again. It will be an indication that news networks can even be bribed to not report on criminal behavior. I think it's funny the managers are trying to cover up all the court proceedings as Justin leaving for a while to do some secret concerts. Galling. I do hope that he fails in life, show me that this world is indeed a meritocracy after all, and that fortune can purchase fame and success for a while. As long as you pay dearly to sustain it.
I wish I had Justin Bieber's Managers propping me up in life, I'd be a world sensation too if that were so.
2.
" I do hope that he fails in life, show me that this world is indeed a meritocracy after all, and that fortune can purchase fame and success for a while. As long as you pay dearly to sustain it. "
This is incredibly harsh. When you say that you "want" him to fail to show you that the world is "indeed a meritocracy", you are implicitly assuming that there is an inherent total ordering in which he comes at the bottom and that this is all that matters. This is a rather flawed assumption for two reasons 1) I am not even sure you can characterize an accurate objective total ordering for music 2) Even if you did, just like in the CS tech world where there are people who are incredibly smart but don't sell their products for a billion dollars, I would argue that musical ability is not really the only thing that matters when it comes to financial success. This is even more true for pop where success is determined by the number of people who enjoy the artist's music (and apparently from Bieber's financial success, it looks like there is a huge bunch of people who like his product and wish to buy it.)
"I wish I had Justin Bieber's Managers propping me up in life, I'd be a world sensation too if that were so."
Remember that he wasn't born with these magical "Managers". He also had to get his break in the wide world before he gets these magical "Managers".
I googled for "justin bieber court case" intrigued by your comment about how there was a cover up from Big Media.
Top 3 results for that query?
LA Times MTV CNN
They're doing a really bad job of covering it up.