New York City TechStars’ reality TV show to air this fall on Bloomberg
1Tuesday August 2, 2011, Courtney Boyd MyersBloomberg
1Tuesday August 2, 2011, Courtney Boyd MyersBloomberg
In April of this year, we introduced you to the 11 hottest companies in New York City’s inaugural TechStars program. During the 3 month-long program, Bloomberg videographers followed the entrepreneurs through long days, even longer nights fueled by 5-hour energy drinks, multiple pivots and one potential love story, all under the shepherding of Managing Director David Tisch. The footage is one part documentary, one part reality TV show and it will air this fall over 7 episodes on Bloomberg TV. Tisch says that TechStars was approached several times by networks wanting to do “reality” shows, but that they declined. They ultimately chose Bloomberg because they wanted to do a fact based show that did not change the essence of TechStars itself. The show tracks the first class of companies in the NYC TechStars program from before selection through demo day and beyond. Companies include: OnSwipe, Immersive Labs, Nestio, Veri, ToVieFor, Shelby.tv, RedRover, MigrationBox, CrowdTwist,FriendList, and ThinkNear. “I think the show gives a never before seen look into the true struggles and triumphs a company faces in their early days. TechStars believes in being open about what we do, the show is an extension of that goal,” says TechStars NYC’s MD David Tisch. ”There wasn’t one scene we did that having the TV cameras there affected. This is about simply showing that it’s hard. You’re going to see two companies fail publicly in just two months during this program. But you’re also going to see entrepreneurs like Reece [Pacheco of Shelby.TV] come in with a profitable business, shut it down, start a new one and then raise $1.5 million in just 3 months.” The first episode introduces TechStars’ founder David Cohen, Tisch, the teams, as well as the application process. Main characters of the show include Reece Pacheco, the CEO of Shelby.TV (who celebrates crossing the 1K mark in Twitter followers on the show), Jason L. Baptiste the CEO of Onswipe (who yells his famous line: “Apps are bulls*it!”) and the beautiful CEO Melanie Moore of ToVieFor. Many of the TechStars mentors in NYC such as Dennis Crowley of Foursquare, Fred Wilson (USV), Jeff Clavier (SoftTech VC), Chris Dixon (Founder Collective, Hunch) Alexandra Wilson (Gilt Groupe), Roger Ehrenberg (IA Ventures), Brad Feld (Foundry Group), Mark Suster (GRP), Gary Vaynerchuk (Vayner Media), Ben Lerer (Thrillist), and dozens more will appear on the show.New York City TechStars’ reality TV show to air this fall on Bloomberg
“At the end of the day I hope it shows entrepreneurship in the right light and shows how hard people work. I really hope that the tech community embraces it and doesn’t hate on it and bad mouth it–’Oh, those hyped up reality stars’– just because they’re not a part of it. At the end of the day we got into TechStars first, before there was a TV show, and we deserved to be there,” says Pacheco of Shelby.TV.
A reality TV show about engineers and entrepreneurial geeks? Is this the ultimate revenge of the nerds? As much fun as that potential headline sounds… it’s really proof that the Internet’s toolbox is open for those who want to use it. The people drawn to the TechStars NYC program are opportunists– they’re entrepreneurs interested in education, viral videos, fashion, publishing and advertising. The series promises to be less a show about nerdy programmers- but about an energy that encompasses the startup culture in 2011. It’s a new era, and many believe that TechStars’ graduating class this spring was only the first chapter in what will be a very long book on New York City’s tech scene.
“It was fun. It was an experience. They told us it was going to be more a documentary, less of a reality show. To us it’s an accurate way to show what entrepreneurship is, both the struggles and the bad parts. While movies like The Social Network make it look like it’s all hookers and blow, Bloomberg’s series will be a good way to see what we really go through, and it’s a great representation of the city,” says Baptiste of Onswipe.
TechStars currently runs a weekly video series called “The Founders,” which documents the adventures of of three companies throughout the summer in Boulder, Colorado 2010 from the time they arrive through investor day and beyond. This new TV series will undoubtedly attract more attention to the program, which is, as they say, already to harder to get into than Harvard. The show, called “TechStars,” will premier on Sept 13 at 9pm and midnight eastern time, and will air weekly with a finale on October 18. It will also be available on the web.
<p><a href="TechStars" _mce_href="http://vimeo.com/27175079">TechStars">http://vimeo.com/27175079">TechStars Trailer</a> from <a href="Vortex" _mce_href="http://vimeo.com/user5930576">Vortex">http://vimeo.com/user5930576">Vortex Media</a> on <a href="Vimeo.http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
Company: Onswipe Year founded: 2010 Location: New York City Jason Baptiste is nothing if not confident. "We're sitting between two huge shifts," he told the audience at TechStars's Demo Day on April 11. "The shift in the media industry from print to digital, and the shift in the entire computing industry from point-and-click to touch-enabled devices. We get a chance to change everything. We get a chance to rewrite all the rules. And in order to do this we are not raising a Series A, we're raising a Series Awesome. Because I can tell you that Onswipe will own this market."...........more http://www.inc.com/30under30/2011/profile-jason-baptiste-andres-barreto-founders-onswipe.html
Jason Baptiste and Andres Barreto, Founders of Onswipe
Whether they’re making whiskey, wallpaper or websites, these 20 entrepreneurs are working night and day to build the next big thing. Here’s how they’re doing it—and why.
1. JASON L. BAPTISTE, 25
ONSWIPE
Adapts content for touch-enabled devices in less than three minutes

The idea for OnSwipe struck while Jason Baptiste was searching for a way to make his writing about entrepreneurship from Onstartups. com available for the iPad. “From that came this whole big thing that would ultimately make it easier to publish beautiful content on tablets,” Baptiste says. He’s working with WordPress, which uses OnSwipe to power its 18.6 million blogs, and is in talks with several magazine publishers. “We see a world where people aren’t making money with ugly text link ads, they’re making it with beautiful full-page ads,” Baptiste explains.
As touch and swipe technology becomes ubiquitous, Baptiste sees enormous growth potential: New York-based OnSwipe thinks its projections for Q3 of 2012 will be met by the end of this year. Baptiste’s publishing technology embodies exactly what he loves about the start-up world: “You can recognize something you’d like to see in the world and you can make it happen.”
http://www.worth.com/index.php/component/content/article/2-make/2617-20-entrepreneurs-to-watch