-Newsletter
est. 4/15/97- -Website est. 12/15/97-
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updated: 1/15/07
Advertise
on The Digital Bits! Site
History Traffic
& Demographics About
the Staff Link
to The Bits
Want
to expose your product or service to over one million unique, tech-savvy
consumers a month? Advertising on The Digital
Bits is a great way to do it! We have terrific rates and
numerous options, which can be tailored to your specific promotion
needs. For more information on rates, advertising options and design
services, please contact our advertising coordinator, Sarah Hunt:
shunt@thedigitalbits.com
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Site
History
The Digital Bits began as an
online newsletter in April of 1997, when site editor Bill Hunt
discovered that there was a tremendous un-met need for accurate
information about the DVD format among both consumers and individuals
within the industry. Demand for the newsletter quickly grew, so The
Digital Bits website was officially launched on December 15,
1997. The result has been steady, continued growth ever since.
The Digital Bits is regarded by
industry professionals as a leading source of reliable DVD information,
and is currently the oldest remaining, continuously operating DVD
information website on the Internet. The Bits
is widely read within the major Hollywood studios and equipment
manufacturers, and its readership includes hundreds of thousands of DVD
consumers from around the world. The site and its editors were
instrumental in the effort to oppose the Divx pay-per-view disc format
(an early and now-defunct competitor to regular DVD), giving early
adopters the
very first published look at the technology. The
Bits has aggressively worked to promote DVD's
anamorphic
widescreen capabilities, and is currently leading
a combined online
effort to promote a single, united high-definition DVD format.
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In
October of 2003, site editors Bill Hunt and Todd Doogan released
The
Digital Bits: Insider's Guide to DVD in conjunction with
publisher McGraw Hill. The 432-page book is designed to serve both as
a beginner's guide to the DVD format, as well as a handy reference
book for more experienced fans of the format. It explains the DVD
format and all its features in simple and easy to understand terms,
including such seemingly bewildering topics as film aspect ratios,
surround sound and anamorphic widescreen. The book tells you how to
build a good home theater on a budget, provides background on the
history of the format and even looks ahead at the future of DVD
technology. It also takes you "behind the scenes" on the
making of 20th Century Fox's 9-disc Alien
Quadrilogy, to show you just how much work really goes into
the production of a DVD special edition. Finally, the book offers
reviews of more than 100 of the best DVD special editions ever
released.
The
Digital Bits: Insider's Guide to DVD has been well reviewed
by both critics and consumers alike, and was ranked in Amazon's top
100 sales chart within a week of its debut. |
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The Digital Bits has been
referenced in such publications as The New
York Times, The Washington Post
, Fortune, Wired,
the USA Today and others, and has
been profiled in the industry trade Video
Store (now Home Media Retailing).
In addition, the site has been quoted on G4's Attack
of the Show, as well as CNN, ZDTV, MSNBC, ZDNet, TechWeb, in
national ad campaigns from 20th Century Fox and DreamWorks, and by
thousands of other newspapers and online sites. The
Digital Bits was chosen as one of the
Top
5 DVD sites in 1999 by E! Online. It ranks at the top of
Yahoo's
list of leading DVD websites, has been recommended by Project Cool
and WebStar's Six Pack to Go, and was voted a Number One site in the
Internet Top 100. The site was also recommended by PC
World magazine as one of
50
Really Useful Websites for Really Busy People.
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Entertainment
Weekly has also named The
Digital Bits one of their 25
Favorite Online Entertainment Sites for 2006, alongside
such other Internet faves as Ain't
It Cool News, the IMDB
and The
Onion! The publication has
posted their
picks online, and you'll find them in the June 23rd 2006 print
issue as well (see pages 38-40). By lucky chance, it's the Superman
Returns issue, so lots of folks are sure to read it. We're
certainly honored by this! It's nice to know that after TEN years of
covering movies on disc, we're still holding on to our relevance and
street cred.
In addition to official
studio DVD news and
reviews, the
site regularly publishes
in-depth articles
and interviews with industry insiders, including such leading
film directors as David Fincher, William Friedkin, John Landis and Baz
Luhrmann, providing Bits readers
with an invaluable, behind-the-scenes look at the DVD format. The
site's Rumor
Mill section allows consumers to stay in touch with the
latest developments, and gives them a reliable look at titles in
production for DVD release in the months ahead.
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The
Bits also runs an extremely popular monthly
Trivia Contest,
giving readers the opportunity to win DVD players, movies and other
prizes. The Digital Bits' own
Bitsy
Awards are highly regarded within the industry. And the site's
scope has recently been expanded to cover the latest developments in
high-resolution audio (DVD-Audio, Super Audio CD & DualDisc) and
particularly the new HD-DVD and Blu-ray Disc high-definition video
formats.
The editorial staff of The Digital Bits
is key to the site's success. Editors Bill
Hunt and Todd Doogan
are well known within the industry for their work on The
Bits, as well as their regular GeekBits
column in Geek Monthly (and past
work in such publications as Widescreen
Review, Home Media Retailing
and Computer Power User
magazines). They've helped to bring several films to DVD, including
Synapse's Six Days in Roswell and
Triumph of the Will, and 20th
Century Fox's Alien. Both Hunt and
Doogan have served as judges for numerous industry awards. Hunt has also
addressed the DVD Video Group on format-related subjects, and has hosted
numerous discussion panels on DVD. Regular Bits
columnist
Adam
Jahnke is well known for his work with Troma, and has
written two books for Troma's Lloyd Kauffman including
Make
Your Own Damn Movie! and
The
Toxic Avenger: The Novel. Another frequent Bits
columnist,
Barrie
Maxwell, is a widely-regarded expert on classic
Hollywood cinema. What's more, regular Bits
columnist
Robert
A. Harris is one of the leading film preservation
experts in the world, having personally restored such classics as Lawrence
of Arabia, Vertigo and
many others.
Traffic & Demographics
The Digital Bits regularly serves
more than 16 million pages of content a month, a number which reflects
more than a million unique readers - with an aggressive core of daily
visitors (metric information is tallied by our own server software and
is confirmed by third-party metrics tracking data). More than 80% of our
audience are college graduates, with an average household income of over
$50K per year. Men make up roughly 68% of our audience, and more than
70% of our readers are between the ages of 25 and 44. Many are computer,
electronics and home theater/film enthusiasts by their very nature, and
would be considered "early adopters" of new technology, as
they have been among the very first consumers to embrace DVD-Video,
DVD-Audio, Super Audio CD, HD-DVD, Blu-ray Disc and HDTV. Better still,
The Digital Bits attracts new
readers every day, serving as a guide to an ever-changing landscape as
new forms of digital entertainment find their way to the marketplace.
About the Staff
Bill Hunt is the Editor
of The Digital Bits, and the
co-author of
The
Digital Bits: Insider's Guide to DVD. Hunt is originally from
Fargo, North Dakota, and studied film history and theory at the
University of Wisconsin - Madison. He began his career as a producer and
director of industrial and educational video in Minneapolis, where he
developed projects for 3M, Texaco, the NFL and the Minnesota Twins among
other clients.
After working behind-the-scenes in Hollywood on various TV and film
productions, Hunt started The Digital Bits
in 1997, during the very early days of DVD, with the goal of bringing
together the Hollywood DVD community and movie fans from around the
world, to promote the growth of the format.

photo
by Mark
Robert Halper |
In
addition to editing The Digital Bits,
Hunt is a regular contributor to Geek
Monthly magazine, and has served as the Inside
DVD Contributing Editor to Widescreen
Review magazine. He has also written on the subject of DVD
and other industry issues for Video Store
magazine (now Home Media Retailing),
has served as a judge for a number of DVD industry awards, and has
appeared to discuss DVD-related issues on G4's Attack
of the Show TV program.
In addition, Hunt and Digital Bits
contributing editor Todd Doogan also write together under the auspices
of their own company, mr-2 media.
Hunt currently lives with his wife, Sarah, in Irvine, California. You
can contact him online at billhunt@thedigitalbits.com |
Todd
Doogan has written about film and DVD for The
Digital Bits since coming aboard in 1998, and now serves as a
Contributing Editor of the site. He is also the co-author of
The
Digital Bits: Insider's Guide to DVD. Prior to his work on
The Bits, Doogan was the featured
video reviewer and celebrity interviewer for TNT's Rough
Cut website.

photo
by accident
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In
addition to his work on The Bits,
Doogan is a regular contributor to Geek
Monthly magazine. His writing has also appeared in Video
Store (now Home Media Retailing)
and Computer Power User
magazines, on Playboy.com and
within the ever expanding Troma Universe.
Doogan is also a film archivist for Turner Broadcasting System,
caring for the vast library of legal research pertaining to the MGM,
RKO, Warner Bros. and Hanna-Barbera libraries.
When not locked away in his Turner office or reviewing classic
samurai flicks for The Digital Bits,
Doogan and Bits editor Bill Hunt
also write together under the auspices of their own company, mr-2
media.
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Doogan
currently lives in Atlanta, GA. Drop him a line at
todddoogan@thedigitalbits.com

photo
by Mark
Robert Halper |
Sarah
Hunt has been an intergral part of The
Bits behind the scenes from day one. She creates and posts
the weekly contests, as well as coordinating all the advertising and
promotions for the site. She is also a graphic designer and creates
many of the banners that you see on our pages. In August of 2003,
Sarah had the idea to develop the The
Digital Bits Artist of the Month program to help artists
gain Internet exposure and to bring a little art into the lives of
Bits readers. Sarah also serves
as the site event photographer. She has a degree from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison in Radio, Television and Film, with a minor in
Journalism/Advertising.
Hunt is originally from St. Paul Minnesota and currently lives with
her husband, Bill, in Irvine, California. You can contact her online
at thedigitalbits@aol.com. |

photo
by Tisha
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Adam
Jahnke joined The Bits
in 2000. In addition to his
The
Bottom Shelf (which focuses on cult, foreign and unsung film
and TV releases on DVD) and
Jahnke's
Electric Theatre (reviews of the latest theatrical
releases), Jahnke has interviewed such filmmakers as John Landis and
Francis Ford Coppola and reviewed everything from A.I.
to Y Tu Mama Tambien (he regrets
that he has not yet reviewed a title that begins with "Z"...
an oversight he plans to rectify very soon).
Outside of The Bits, Adam has
worked for legendary independent film studio Troma Entertainment for
five years, where he wrote the 20-episode comedy series Troma's
Edge TV for Channel 4 in the UK, and worked in a wide
variety of capacities on a number of feature films (including Citizen
Toxie: The Toxic Avenger IV).
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More
recently, Adam's turned his attentions to the book world, having written
the widely-acclaimed
Make
Your Own Damn Movie! and
The
Toxic Avenger: The Novel for Troma president Lloyd Kaufman.
Adam lives with his wife Tisha deep in the heart of L.A. You can
contact him online at ajahnke@thedigitalbits.com.

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Barrie
Maxwell is a freelance writer who has written about classic
films and DVD for The Digital Bits
since 2002 when his
Classic
Coming Attractions column first appeared. Prior to joining
The Bits, Barrie contributed
reviews and a regular classics column to the DVD
Verdict review site. His writing on film has also appeared
in the Australian Kino Cinema Quarterly
magazine.
Barrie's film background includes university study of film history
and theory as well as 50 years of enthusiastic film watching. In the
past, Barrie's had a lengthy career in Arctic climatology, heading up
Canada's national climate applications program for the federal
government as well as representing Canada in international Arctic
climate research activities.
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After
a period of consulting work in the same field, he now focuses his
energies entirely on classic film history writing when not working on a
new house located in the lake country north of Toronto.
Barrie currently lives in downtown Toronto, Ontario with his wife Sue.
You can contact him online at
barriemaxwell@thedigitalbits.com.
Link to The Bits
Websites wishing to link to The Digital Bits
are always welcome to do so. We ask that all links be directed to the
home page if possible.
Feel free to use any of the graphics below on your sites when linking.
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