Hey guys, glad to see this topic has a lot of feedback about the idea of streaming in general!
Quick disclosure:
1) Wall of text ahead. Sorry. A lot got covered and I want to respond accordingly.
2) I help organize and run clipstream, so that means I technically have a personal bias. No shame in admitting that. Allow me to explain how I see things...
We started off as a simple webshow party. There were plenty of fuckups, streaming issues, hardware failures, one dude literally had about 3fps video going on. We laughed at it and said we should do this monthly. What it turned into was a type of web show that some people in the online scene had been asking (and dare I say) demanding for a while.
I think web shows are great because it grabs a wider-spread audience (as in anyone who can visit our ustream channel,) it makes it easier for people to have guests from further away (seriously, I did a double-take when I realized we "booked" artists from almost every continent,) and it reaches an audience that the live, physical shows can't easily obtain-- the too far away, the lazy, the cheap and the super-shy types. Granted, that's definitely not our entire demographic and I don't have any problems with them liking our shows, but you don't see a lot of them heading out to concert venues to rock out with people more involved in the live show scenes and it's good to always have their support.
There is the issue of no financial revenue being generated. By all means, if you're not willing to do a free show, that's your call and I'm never gonna judge anybody for that. We're not here for the money, we're here to get new, veteran and up-and-coming artists to play their stuff and promote anything they've been working on. We just want to further encourage people by having another venue open for them. We're here to help encourage people to download and buy the music they've been rocking out to.
I honestly think web shows and live shows can easily co-exist since they serve similar purposes. You can argue semantics but they are similar beasts with a different method of going about the same purpose. There's some things I feel that can never be replaced from some of the live shows I've been to, but I also know that since starting up clipstream, I've been opened up to a massive amount of new, amazing content from people a lot of us didn't recognize before-hand.
As for the show content themselves, we are technically at the mercy of whomever is playing on our stream. It does get boring just watching someone sit there in their bedroom, but I believe that's where a group chat is integral to the web show formula. It's internet-social, if you will, since you're there to chat with people and share your dis/approval for a song or artist. That being said, yeah, just someone's hands or their bedroom can get a bit stale, but sometimes that's also the easiest or most convenient place for people (i.e. the highschoolers that have played web shows) to play their music. I'm guilty of it, sure, so are a lot of people. I tried using XSplit to have multiple shots including a screen showing what's going on in my instance of Famitracker, a webcam of me being stupid, silly pictures of cats in space, and so forth. People have told me they found it was more entertaining... the downside is that my desktop needs an upgrade and ran a bit choppy. Also Xspit's audio quality is questionable without a monthly subscription. You could say web shows are a bit experimental in the technical aspects.
Length has definitely been a question for all of us that are a part of clipstream. On one hand, 10-12 hours is a damn lot of music. On the other hand, it also guarantees we'll get people who only have a limited window of time available (which is surprisingly more people than I would've ever expected.) Our show lengths have usually been caused by the demand of people wanting to play on our shows.
As spry said, we've noticed a handful of the issues you guys have brought up (regarding both our show and other shows) and we're working on making them and other issues happen as little as possible. Any suggestions and feedback would be ABSOLUTELY welcomed. We want to be something that everyone can appreciate. Clip III had the most problems by far (which admittedly were partially just dumb mistakes,) but we'd rather have the least amount of issues possible. Ask anyone that's played our first two shows; we've always tried to make sure to work with whatever people have asked of us and made sure everyone was on the same page (to be fair, I'm pretty sure I personally annoyed the shit out of one someone with how thorough we were, and if they're reading, sorry about that.)
All in all, thank you to everyone here who's been a part or watched our little webshow that could. It means a lot to us and we hope we can make the show even better than it's already been.