Content with a kick: Tony Cort combines marketing experience with a black belt to start an online martial arts channel.EIGHTEEN YEARS OF TAE KWON DO tae kwon do Korean martial art resembling karate. It is characterized by the use of high standing and jump kicks as well as punches and is practiced for sport, self-defense, and spiritual development. In sparring, blows are stopped just short of contact. taught Tony Cort a thing or two about discipline, confidence, and self-defense. However, this second-degree black belt realized that while America loves a good martial arts This is a list of martial arts, broken down by region and style. African martial arts Eritrea
"There are 28,000 martial arts schools in 4,400 cities nationwide, and about 24 million martial arts practitioners over the age of 12," says Cort, 44. "That's a significant audience, but also a fragmented one that had no media platform on which to showcase itself." Intent on bridging the gap, Cort began the development of a martial arts channel in 2000. Four years later he founded Newark, New Jersey-based Breakthrough Communications. What began as a marketing company for the martial arts community morphed last July into Breakthrough Interactive Group Inc., an entertainment firm that produces an online channel targeting this group. Known as MAC Experience (www.macexperience.com), the platform comprises TV programming over the Internet, education, social networking See social networking site. social networking - social network among martial arts enthusiasts, and e-commerce products. Programming ranges from pure entertainment to education to health and fitness, while MAC University provides distance learning. "We switched from a focus on cable and satellite content distribution to an interactive communications company Communications Company is a communications unit of the United States Marine Corps. They are part of Combat Logistics Regiment 37 , 3rd Marine Logistics Group (3MLG) and III Marine Expeditionary Force (III MEF). The unit is based out of the Marine Corps Base Camp Smedley D. centered on new media technologies such as Internet and wireless delivery," says Cort, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of the six-employee firm. He expects revenues to reach $4 million in 2007 through advertising and sponsorships. Catering primarily to an audience of males age 12 to 24, the firm's recent content includes an interview with martial arts movie stars Jet Li and Tony Jaa Panom Yeerum (Thai: พนม ยีรัมย์; Khmer: ចាភ្ំ យីរុាំ and a Muay Thai (Thai kickboxing) demonstration by Jaa. The company also has special programming for families, females, and 25- to 29-year-olds. Cort developed programming models that go beyond kung fu kung fu Pinyin gongfu Chinese martial art that is simultaneously a spiritual and a physical discipline. It has been practiced at least since the Zhou dynasty (1111–255 BC). movies. Technology played a key role in that effort, says Cort. To satisfy its audience's growing need for mobility, MAC Experience also offers select programming for download to an MP3 player A digital music player that supports the MP3 format, which was the audio format that started a revolution in online music downloads and distribution. All portable music players, the iPod being the most popular, support MP3 along with one or more other audio formats. , cell phone, or laptop and cultivates a social networking environment where martial arts enthusiasts can interact with each other. "We saw the Internet as a global distribution opportunity," says Cort, who pinpoints fundraising as a key business challenge. Raising money from family and friends (in the amount of $1.25 million since inception) is one thing, but convincing angel investors An individual who invests his or her own money in a private company, which is typically a startup. An angel investor is not an employee or member of a bank, venture capital firm or other financial institution that normally makes such investments. of the opportunity is something else entirely. "We're on the cusp of a great opportunity here," says Cort, "but because no one else is doing it, we've had a hard time finding investors." Cort says audience response, however, has surpassed his expectations. With a presence in 101 countries, MAC Experience boasts an average viewership of one hour and 41 minutes for its martial arts channel, and 44 minutes for its radio channel. One martial arts instructor impressed by Cort's efforts is Master Dennis Brown of Washington, D.C. (www.dennisbrown shaolin.com). "A lot of people have tried to get martial arts on TV, but they never seem to pan out," says Brown. "Tony's vision was much clearer than anyone else's because he's not just a karate guy, he's also a marketing professional who knows how to get the word out and give the audience what it wants." |
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