What I've been wondering is why do they call it Apple Jacks if it doesn't taste like.... Okay, just kidding there.
Actually, I wonder, do online advertisers feel financially secure? From what I understand when it comes to sponsoring online video content the advertisers have to pay every time a video they sponsor is viewed (actually I think I read in the thatguywiththeglasses forum that they only have to pay if the viewer watches the commercial portions, so if somebody starts watching a video but then decides to stop watching before all commercials are shown those companies don't have to pay). Do companies ever worry about what would happen if a video they sponsor get more views than the companies have money to pay for advertising? If it's advertising on television they only have to pay for each time the commercial is shown regardless of views, but online anybody can keep rewatching the same program more freely. And just because people see the commercials doesn't mean people will buy the products; I've seen many commercials for products that I have no interest in, regardless of what I think about the actual commercials.
I've noticed that iTunes seems to have a number of exclusive compilation albums of various artists and such, but since people can choose between downloading full albums or just individual songs, what's the point of download-only compilations? I can see physical compilations being useful, but if you can download each song individually than what's to stop people from just downloading songs from the studio albums or compilations that exist in physical media?
In an "Ask Al" entry at weirdal.com, Weird Al Yankovic once mentioned that he gets more money from physical album sales than digital, even though (from his point of view) it'd make more sense for him to make more money from the digital sales since there's less expenses (no packaging, no shipping, etc.). But that makes me wonder if everybody working on the albums get residuals from downloads, or if it's the main artist/songwriter/whatever. Considering individual songs seem to cost 99 cents to 1 dollar and something I can't quite figure out how they can divide such a small amount of money to everybody involved on individual tracks. But just because I don't know how it works doens't mean that it doesn't work.
On the subject of iTunes, considering people can just download individual songs from each album, do album sales get counted if just a few tracks get downloaded? Or would each song from the album need to be downloaded a certain amount of times (whether by the same person or multiple individuals) in order to count as a full album sale and therefore bring the album to gold or platinum (or higher) status?