The only thing the "content is king" phrase does these days is hang the Boring Banner around the neck of the person who uses it. Yes, of course it's true, The One universal television truth (and if you don't know it what are you doing in this business anyway). But who wants to lurch around the aisles of hackneyed-R-Us unless it's to challenge what's there and come up with something new?
Some new thinking about who's paying for what in the broadband environment questions existing definitions--TV definitions, at least--of content. "Is content really king?", asks Pricewa