[meteorite-list] Meteorite Men effects

Linton Rohr lintonius at earthlink.net
Mon Mar 22 17:25:59 EDT 2010


Thank you for the insight, Steve.
I had a feeling the instant field appraisals were not instigated by you and 
Geoff.
Keep up the good work, and good luck scoring a season 2.
Linton

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <meteorhntr at aol.com>
To: "Adam Hupe" <raremeteorites at yahoo.com>; 
<meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com>; "Adam" 
<meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 1:41 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Meteorite Men effects


> Hey list,
>
> Interesting topic. I thought I would change the Subject Line though.
>
> Let me give you guys a little behind the scenes understanding of what 
> happens in the making of Meteorite Men.
>
> There is a production company that owns the show by the name of LMNO 
> Productions.  They have been around maybe for 20 years with 150 or so 
> different programs under their belt.  Some were long running series, some 
> were just one-offs, but they have a very experienced staff of 
> professionals that know what they are doing.
>
> They came up with the idea of the Meteorite Men show after reading a front 
> page story about me in the LA Times back in 2007.  They had not seen 
> anything about the earlier programs Geoff and I (nor anyone else) had been 
> on when they called me that first time.
>
> They made a short 4 min video and pitched it to a handful of networks, and 
> Science Channel gave them the best offer for a pilot, so they took it.
>
> Geoff and I were hired as the "Talent" and we were in show business!
>
> Now here is how it works: there is an Executive Producer assigned by the 
> network to oversee the production of the episodes.  Geoff and I have a 
> boss, that is the show's Executive Producer who has a boss that is the 
> owner of the LMNO Production Company.
>
> We all, in reality, have one customer, and that is the Science Channel's 
> Executive Producer.  If this one man is happy, we get paid.  If he is not 
> happy, they keep sending the video back to get it changed to how he likes 
> it.  Once it is adjusted to how he likes it, we get paid.
>
> In theory, the Executive Producer on the Network side hopefully knows what 
> his network's audience will like, and he directs us all in the right 
> direction.  If not, he gets fired.
>
> Rest assured, nothing makes it onto your TV sets at home that is not 
> exacly what he wants.
>
> Now, we have been told that if we do get a second season, the network will 
> send the episodes from the first season to some very exhaustive market 
> research, where carefully selected participants will sit in dark rooms 
> watching the episodes with a dial in their hands. When they like something 
> on the show, they dial it one way. When they don't like something, they 
> dial it the other way.
>
> Sometimes this gets to be subconscious in the minds of the viewing 
> research subjects. But it is very scientific, and it is the one way to 
> actually trump the personal opinion of the networks EP.
>
> If every time my face is on screen, most or all the people turn their 
> dials to the right, and every time Geoff is on screen, they turn it to the 
> left...well...then there might jkust be tryouts for a replacement 
> Meteorite Man to take one of our spots.
>
> If they don't like my Tshirt, or the way I go "Oh, oh, oh..." Right before 
> each comercial. But rather they like how I say "Geoff, look what I found!" 
> then we can rest ashured I will be instructed what to say or not say in 
> the future, or by the magic of "post-production" I will say the right 
> things before all the future commercial breaks.
>
> Each of first 7 episodes were quite different in many ways. It will be 
> interesting what the market testing might end up revealing.
>
> If the key demographics don't like the values of the meteorite being 
> revealed during the show, then I'm sure what our one "customer" wants will 
> end up changing.  And in turn, that will change the directives to our 
> production company in how the put future shows together in post 
> production.
>
> Starting a letter writing campaign to Science Channel might be tempting, 
> but unless you have a Nielson Box, on your TV, I don't think it will help.
>
> Let me point out that about a dozen years or so ago, I did a promotional 
> campaign in the media that generated 240 samples of suspected meteorites 
> being sent to me. Out of that batch, 3 were genuine meteorites.
>
> I could have complained about the 79 wrongs for each 'rite, but I didn't. 
> It is a numbers game.  Yes it can get frustrating dealing with the wrongs 
> and the people who send them in.  May I suggest that if you are such a 
> person who easily gets frustrated, don't solicit that people send you 
> samples to evaluate.  I'm sure there are more than enough others to pick 
> up the slack.
>
> Who knows what all the good and bad will be from the Meteorite Men series? 
> Let's have this discussion in 40 years, and if 20 of us talk then, we 
> still will probably have 20 different takes on it then.
>
> I understand in general, some people are "the glass is half empty" 
> pessimistic types, and they often really enjoy being negative.  While 
> others are the "half full" optimistic types.  And of course everyone is 
> entitled to their opinion.
>
> But, much, if not most of this is out of both Geoff's and my hands, not to 
> mention anyone else reading this.  What happens is going to happen anyway. 
> So, my advice would be for people to plan to take advantage of the 
> change(s) as best you can.
>
> Last night the US Congress passed some radical changes that will 
> dramatically effect a lot of people's lives in respect to Health Care in 
> the US.  Will it be good for everyone?  Will it be bad for everyone?  Who 
> cares? What matters is to determine how it might effect you, your family, 
> and if you are an entrepreneur, how it will effect your business; then 
> make the best out of it.
>
> Same goes here.  If you are a curator, or a private collector, a dealer, 
> or a hunter, change probably is coming.
>
> You can choose to complain about the change, or prepare the best you can 
> to take advantage of it.
>
> One thing I have always loved about Robert Haag is that he is always up. 
> Always blowing and going. He always is encouraging and there is something 
> magnetic about his optimistic personality.  And we all know other people 
> that are the opposite of Bob, always complaining and bitching about 
> something. Now, pessimistic can be nice people on some levels, but in 
> general, they tend to be repelling rather than compelling.
>
> How you choose to respond is your choice, but I will suggest that people 
> should spend their energy doing something where there is at least a slight 
> chance that something will change for their efforts.  I would suggest that 
> the values of meteorites shown on the Meteorite Men episodes is not going 
> to be one of them.  That decision is way above all our pay grades.
>
> Meanwhile, I would like to thank everyone that has reached out in 
> encouraging ways to me.  I have always said the real treasures in this 
> business are the friends I have gained.
>
> And as the old saying goes "you can't please everyone" but it is still 
> nice to know when you do please someone.
>
> Godspeed,
>
> Steve Arnold
> Of Meteorite Men
>
>
>
>
>
> Sent from my BlackBerry Smartphone provided by Alltel
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Adam Hupe <raremeteorites at yahoo.com>
> Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2010 12:05:08
> To: Adam<meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Rocks from Space Picture of the Day - March 
> 22,
> 2010
>
> Dear List,
>
> I guess I am a realist. I saw my last passion, Treasure Hunting destroyed 
> by a few feeding the pigeons (the press.)  At first, the news they 
> reported was exciting.  Later the press seemed to focus on the uglier side 
> of the avocation with time realizing better ratings. They seemed to only 
> report on those breaking the law instead of what good was coming from it. 
> They would report people midnight gardening (illegally digging) on 
> heritage sites instead of the amateur treasure hunter who helped somebody 
> locate their lost and treasured wedding ring or a hobbyist helping the 
> police department locate metallic evidence.  They seemed to only focus on 
> how valuable other finds were and that the public was being ripped off.  A 
> mostly positive hobby was nearly destroyed in a single decade.  City, 
> state and federal parks became off limits almost over night. Laws were 
> twisted, become unclear and most hung up their metal detectors for good.
>
> Others joined clubs, came up with a universal code of ethics and chose 
> professional spokespeople to deal with the press when not avoiding it.  It 
> took decades to partially restore the reputation of this activity as a 
> family type pursuit.  Still, there are very few areas that are not 
> off-limits like the heydays of the 70s when they were free to roam about. 
> Thier number one unspoken but clear rule "Do not feed the pigeons, good or 
> bad."
>
> Here is a hypothetical scenario:
>
> Somebody digs a hole looking for meteorites that are far more valuable 
> than gold or even diamonds according to what they heard on TV and leaves 
> it uncovered.  Then some poor unsuspecting victim breaks their ankle in 
> that uncovered hole and and then the word gets out. The press reports it 
> and now this area is off-limits permanently to others.  Then all meteorite 
> hunters will be judged as disrespectful filthy treasure hunters who could 
> care less about other people's rights even though the vast majority are 
> good law abiding citizens.   The motivation for digging was due to this 
> unsavory person believing the monetary reward was worth the risks.  It 
> only takes one person who has little regard for other people to cause a 
> lot of damage.
>
> This has already happened at Meteor Crater but was cattle breaking their 
> legs, not a human victim.
>
> I see this hobby going the same way. The only reason I am engaging in this 
> thread is that I really care.
>
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Adam
>
> ----- Original Message ----
>
> From: Meteorites USA <eric at meteoritesusa.com>
> To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> Sent: Mon, March 22, 2010 10:51:09 AM
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Rocks from Space Picture of the Day - March 
> 22, 2010
>
> Hi Adam, List,
>
> You really have to take the bad with the good when talking about 
> anything... Most of this can all be summed up in one word. Ratings. It's 
> an unfortunate truth that most people don't like to be "educated". People 
> want to be entertained.
>
> When you concentrate on the education you lose a large portion of the 
> viewing audience. For the Meteorite Men show to work they had to make some 
> sacrifices for the benefit of the probable success of the show. The show, 
> which most people I know really enjoyed, was a BIG hit in both the 
> meteorite world and the main stream, was a good mix of adventure and 
> science, but the network HAD to throw in the money thing. The ratings, the 
> popularity, and the next season of the show depended on it. This of course 
> is from a business stand point.
>
>>From my perspective, I was a bit disappointed in the amount of "cha-ching" 
>>moments there were versus the hard science or even the adventure. I would 
>>have personally liked to see more science but realistically speaking most 
>>people will tune it out. We, as meteorite people, are interested in it 
>>because it's what we do, we love it! We could watch a full hour on the 
>>"Science of Meteorites". Hell, I could watch a mini-series of 6, 2 hour 
>>long shows dedicated to the science or meteorites. But that's freaking 
>>BORING to most people!
>
> The short of it is, the Science channel had to make a business decision. I 
> think the Meteorite Men is a good show "for the masses". It works, people 
> love it, and it's probably going to result in a second season. Here's 
> hoping!
>
> I believe you can have a good balance of science, adventure, and treasure 
> hunting in the world of meteorites. It's all related, to exclude one from 
> the other would not be fair nor realistic.
>
> Realistically speaking, how many people are going to drop what they are 
> doing and become meteorite hunters? They may get all pumped up after 
> watching the show and go buy a detector and meteorite cane, but once they 
> get in the field and wander the desert or farm fields for a few days with 
> no finds, they'll realize how hard it really is. The difficulty will weed 
> out those who are serious about it. As for the scammers, they're 
> everywhere. You can't make something that reaches millions and promotes 
> "$" without scammers jumping in to take advantage. It happens, and they 
> will also weed themselves out.
>
> The Meteorite Men show has also grown the collector base! Lest we forget. 
> More collectors divided by same amount of material for collecting, creates 
> higher demand equals market growth. Some people don't want to see this 
> growth as the believe it will undermine the science, but I believe it will 
> be an ultimate boon to science by interesting more people about 
> meteorites, and the knowledge one can learn. It's hard to say how many 
> people will be motivated to become next generation scientists, but the 
> simple fact is MILLIONS of people now have a chance to own a meteorite and 
> they are becoming more interested in the science.
>
> Regardless of how you feel about the Meteorite Men show, I think this will 
> be a positive thing in the future. People are becoming more aware of their 
> world, the science, and the adventure. If people can make a living doing 
> it too, then I say go for it! Keep in mind there are lots of kids and 
> young adults that watch too, they are in school and will be motivated to 
> become meteoriticists, astronomers, astrobiologists, or even astronauts. 
> They could become the next generation engineers which launch toward a 
> manned asteroid discovery team which may land a human being on an 
> asteroid! Manned space flights to a nearby comet anyone?
>
> I say yell it from the rooftops! Stream live video around the world. Let 
> everyone know about meteorites, and the wonders they bring to human kind!
>
> Oh yeah, meteorites are cool... ;)
>
> Regards,
> Eric Wichman
> Meteorites USA
>
>
>
>
> On 3/22/2010 9:59 AM, Adam Hupe wrote:
>> A lot of viewers are clinging to the hope they will become overnight 
>> millionaires. Most of them will not listen when you tell them their 
>> prized new "Moon rock" is a piece of quartz or their new "Pallasite" is 
>> nothing more then slag. They will become increasingly angry when you try 
>> to explain why. They know it is real because it looks just like the one 
>> they saw on TV and will not be told otherwise.
>>
>> I do not even respond any more as I do not like to be put in a position 
>> as the bay guy who has to break the news that their worthless rock will 
>> not make them the latest millionaire.  This is what happens when the 
>> media focuses too much on the monetary aspect of meteorite collecting. It 
>> out weighs any educational benefit this type of show may have  provided. 
>> The state Washington and Oregon suddenly announced their no collecting 
>> policy on federal land; the timing is uncanny.  A lot of scam artists 
>> will also attach themselves if the smell of easy money is present.  One 
>> just has to look at the most expensive "meteorites" on eBay to see this 
>> effect.  Now, there is always a few fakes listed in the top dollar page.
>>
>> I would hate to see meteorite hunting/collecting go the way treasure 
>> hunting did 25 years ago when the avocation almost went extinct, mainly 
>> due to the press.  Professional  treasure hunters now avoid the press 
>> when values are put up. Just look at the Mel Fisher group who had to 
>> fight for a decade to keep a good portion of their major find due to the 
>> fact the press attached a billion dollar price tag to it.  Everybody 
>> seemed to have a claim on it when they didn't lift a finger to find it. 
>> The press made it look easy when in fact Mel suffered many hardships 
>> including the loss of his sons life.
>>
>>
>> Best Regards,
>>
>> Adam
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----
>> From: "michael at rocksfromspace.org"<michael at rocksfromspace.org>
>> To: 
>> "meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com"<meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>> Sent: Mon, March 22, 2010 6:20:26 AM
>> Subject: [meteorite-list] Rocks from Space Picture of the Day - March 22, 
>> 2010
>>
>> http:www.rocksfromspace.org/March_22_2010.html
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ---
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Thumbed On My BlackBerry
>> ______________________________________________
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