Click Conan O'Brien, right now; Louis CK Needs
$5.
OK, so Louis CK most assuredly doesn't need
your five bucks.
But if you click on Conan O'Brien above, you'll
be taken to Louis CK's web site, where you
can buy a copy of Mr. Szekely's new film,
Tomorrow Night.
And let's be clear: despite Louis CK's statements
that Tomorrow Night was made in 1998 on Late
Night With David Letterman and on The Tonight
Show with Jay Leno, it clearly wasn't.
His appearance on The Daily Show with Jon
Stewart, where Stewart pretended to have given
Louis CK $5,000 to get the film done, is all
the proof you need of that.
And look up at that picture of Conan again;
the date on the YouTube trailer for Louis
CK's Tomorrow Night is a clue, too.
Note, January 30 2014: for accuracy, the crossed
out words about Louis CK's Tomorrow Night
don't belong here.
I thank the commenter who wrote this for calling
me out on the matter, and invite you to stay
tuned for more ...
None of which matters.
Louis CK is a marketing genius, and a smart
enough business person to realize that he
needed to enlist the help of a serious distribution
company to get Tomorrow Night out there.
A bumpkin Louis CK is not; that's a download
of Tomorrow Night coming at me from Amazon
Web Services:
Louis CK Tomorrow Night Download
As I pointed out when Louis CK opened the
floodgates for media business change, he understands
that there's nothing to stop you, once you've
downloaded Tomorrow Night, from seeding the
latest Louis CK masterpiece to a torrent service,
sharing it with the world for free.
So in typical Louis CK style, that's being
covered here on the Tomorrow Night page, too:
Louis CK and a Plea Not to Torrent Tomorrow
Night
This story, by the way, is about Influency
and you way more than it is about Louis CK
or Tomorrow Night.
In the posts I've written this week, one on
business model influency and this one about
different types of intelligence, I showed
you how your back catalog of content can drive
your ongoing Content Marketing efforts.
Given Louis CK's immense popularity and the
strong likelihood that there are about a zillion
people looking for Tomorrow Night today, I
sure was glad to have a few Louis CK stories
here to point to and the very much in-context-and-timely
opportunity to capitalize on that.
Maybe we can even generate enough traffic
to crack the popularity list that this piece
about how much money Louis CK has in his PayPal
account is on as I write this.
If we do, you can expect something from me
like this story about Louis CK and Transparency.
And it's about that, too; isn't my transparency
in writing about Louis CK's Tomorrow Night
obvious?
Of course it is.
So: you know what to do next.
Right?
