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MSN's silver bullet? MSN UK's first original commissioned web series, Kirill, proved a hit online. But why was it done, and what are Microsoft's long-term video ambitions? Adam Benzine talks to the project’s key players. ![]() Within days, however, full details of the project had spread like wildfire across the internet. Perhaps a little predictably, too, when you consider what the project was: the first original sci-fi web series to be commissioned by MSN UK, Microsoft’s web services division. Kirill, a web-based miniseries consisting initially of 10 three-minute episodes, was made for MSN by Big Brother producer Endemol and UK-based production company Pure Grass Films, which Endemol bought a 40% stake in last March. Each episode was pre-roll sponsored by Microsoft Xbox. ![]() "From a script perspective it's quite a mature and sophisticated piece of online entertainment," says Pure Grass Films' CEO, Ben Grass (above). "The project resisted the temptation to be wham-bam storytelling. It leaves a lot to the imagination and keeps you guessing. In that sense, it's quite true to the sci-fi genre." By November, the show had already been streamed more than a million times. ![]() Days after Kirill's unveiling, as if to reinforce its commitment, MSN announced it had poached Ashley Highfield -- the CEO of Project Kangaroo and the man responsible for helping launch the BBC iPlayer -- to be MD and VP of consumer and online at Microsoft UK. How much Highfield's hop was down to the quagmire Kangaroo found itself in is debateable, but for MSN at least, his hiring was seen as something of a coup, and a statement of intent. But what is the computing giant’s intent? Is Microsoft planning its own iPlayer, of sorts? A video platform with Highfield at the helm and filled, perhaps, with high-quality, brand-sponsored original programming like Kirill? "Our intention is to be the number one video platform for premium and top-level content, and we want to work with all sorts of broadcasters, indie producers and try all sorts of things," says Geoff Sutton, MSN's VP for EMEA. "But there's no plan at this stage to do lots more original stuff. We've not got, and we won't have, massive budgets to go commissioning programmes -- that's not our business. But we’ll certainly work with filmmakers, TV makers and advertisers and figure out new models and how to build great content. We're in the foothills with this and we need to see how it goes." For the Kirill project, which all at Microsoft are keen to describe as an experiment, the key aims were to drive downloads of Silverlight, Microsoft’s web browser video plug-in, and receive positive editorial feedback. ![]() On the feedback front, however, the news has been much better. "I've personally never seen an audience speak so positively about a Microsoft product before," says MSN portal business manager Rob Crossen, half-joking. Though MSN is now keen to commission a first series proper of Kirill, the economy in which the web series was originally greenlit last summer was markedly better than the one the company currently finds itself in. "We're working very closely with Endemol to see if we can do a first and a second series this year," says Bale. "We have every confidence that we'll be able to get advertisers in behind it, but that will be one of the preconditions of taking it much further – getting advertisers to support it."And if MSN can get the funding, Crossen hints at something even more ambitious than Kirill in the pipeline. "When it started out we were looking to do something that was either very viral or that was a TV crossover and went totally mainstream. In terms of what we might do next, I think we might look for something that does provide that sort of TV crossover," he says. "But moving forward, these sort of things are going to have to be self-funded to be successful, much more so than six months ago." 12 Mar 2009 © C21 Media 2009 |
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