Cartoon Network's Website Was Deleted. That Should Scare You All
David Zaslav, CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, faces backlash for management decisions harming cultural heritage, including film cancellations and website shutdowns, leading to financial struggles and concerns over media preservation.
Read original articleDavid Zaslav, CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, has faced significant backlash for his management decisions, which critics argue have harmed cultural heritage. His tenure has been marked by controversial actions, including the cancellation of completed films, the removal of numerous HBO originals, and the recent shutdown of the Cartoon Network website, which redirected users to the streaming service Max. These moves have not only disappointed fans but have also led to a decline in the company's stock value and the loss of valuable broadcasting rights. Critics highlight that Zaslav's approach reflects a broader trend of erasing beloved media from public access, raising concerns about the preservation of cultural history in an increasingly fragmented digital landscape. The article emphasizes the importance of maintaining access to classic media and warns against the consequences of prioritizing profit over cultural preservation. As the media landscape evolves, the fear is that more significant works may be lost, contributing to a collective cultural amnesia.
- David Zaslav's management has drawn criticism for erasing beloved media and cultural artifacts.
- The shutdown of the Cartoon Network website is seen as a significant loss for cultural preservation.
- Warner Bros. Discovery has faced financial struggles, including a drop in stock value and loss of broadcasting rights.
- Critics argue that the trend of removing content from public access threatens cultural history.
- The article warns of the dangers of prioritizing profit over the preservation of important media.
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My culture is not products that others prepared for me to lure me into watching advertising.
Did someone expect these companies to maintain publicly available archives of these products well after it's relevance had faded?
If it's really important to you, I'm sure pirates have it. If not, maybe this should motivate you to get involved in piracy.
There’s marketing, obviously, advertising what the company does. There’s e-commerce, directly selling the company’s products. They should ideally have a sort of encyclopedia of information about the company and its products and services past and present. And of course, they should offer a directory of ways that people can interact with the company, their customer support, etc.
For a company like cartoon network, there’s no e-commerce. There’s no customer support. There’s no documentation. There are no products.
They should make cartoon network into an encyclopedia of all the information about the network, past and present. All the programming schedules, all the shows, and their credits, etc. But doing that is a big project that costs money to build and maintain perpetually. Does it make money? No, it’s just the right thing to do. And its a job that’s already done by wikipedia, imdb, and so many fan sites. Even if they succeed and become the best source for that information with the top search result, what’s the benefit? How much revenue will they be rewarded with for stealing that traffic back from wikipedia?
That leaves marketing. What purpose is cartoonnetwork.com as an advertisement for cartoon network? It doesn’t show up high in search results. Anyone who visits it already knows about it. Social media platforms serve the purposes of the marketing department. The web site is largely a waste of time and money for them.
So this sort of company that has no ecommerce, no products, no reason to directly interact with customers, doesn’t have much reason to have a web site in 2024. I think we’ll see a lot of companies in the same position delete their web sites as well going forward.
Kinda sad.
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