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The Hartford Courant
MUSIC
SOUNDCHECK: Music News & Views
Eric R. Danton
Britney - On Your Own Cellphone
July 4, 2002
You've probably accepted by now that Britney Spears is never
going to call, even if she actually had your number.
That doesn't mean, however, that she won't leave you voicemail
- for a price. (No, not your soul.) For $19.99, you can purchase
a three-month subscription to Britney's wireless fan club, which
entitles you to "surprise" voice and text messages
delivered right to a mailbox you can access from your mobile
phone.
It's the latest in the marketing of Brand Britney (didn't she
used to be a singer?), this time under the guidance of WFX,
a New York wireless network working to marry the latest technology
and entertainment fads.
"Lots of people were thinking about how to sell content
and how to deliver content and how to make the wireless device,
the cellphone, into a medium for entertainment," Jed Alpert,
president and chief executive officer of WFX, says in a recent
phone interview. "A celebrity's voice is a very powerful
thing, intimate information about a celebrity is a very powerful
thing and a cell phone is a powerful thing that everyone has
with them."
Available for the past two months exclusively at Best Buy stores,
other retailers will soon stock Britney WFX, Alpert says. Fans
who buy the Britney kit get kitschy goodies, including a replica
all-access backstage laminate and a static cling decal. They
also get a phone card-size piece of plastic with a sultry picture
of Britney on the front and an access code on the back that
allows them to receive pre-recorded voice and text messages
from the pre-packaged singer and her retinue.
"Britney was a very natural first one to start with, because
she has a very dedicated fan base," Alpert says. "She
is enthusiastic about communicating with people who consume
her product."
A sample access code provided by WFX yielded a voice message
from a woman who identified herself as Sonya, the head of wardrobe
for Britney's tour. Sonya talked on the scratchy recording about
shopping for new outfits for the performer and her dancers and
mentioned that they'd go shopping again in a few days. Not exactly
a peek into the wild backstage world of Britney Spears, but
better than nothing.
Alpert and WFX aren't stopping with Britney. He says the company
has plans to create wireless fan clubs for other entertainers
and expand into the sports world, too.
"It doesn't require a lot of technology or technological
expertise. Your phone becomes, in the case of Britney Spears,
kind of a fan club in your pocket where you have direct access
to the artist," Alpert says. "That kind of commitment
and loyalty from fans is rewarded, because in addition to information,
you get first crack at tickets, first crack at merchandise."
If only we got first crack at buying the artist's stuff at the
post-fame IRS auction, but that's probably a different fan club. |
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