Happy 2nd Anniversary, StreetJelly! August 17th, 2014
On August 17th, 2012, the very first musician performed on StreetJelly.com! …and to quote a great lyric, “what a long strange trip it has been.” Yes, year two is now in the books, and we keep on truckin’. It has been an intense busy year. The site has grown tremendously and we are most proud that we still keep it a friendly fun destination for pure live music on the web. Here are some quick stats to date:
- 70,000 unique visitors came to the site 300k times
- 1.3 million page hits
- 696,000 minutes of streaming video, 11,600 hours
- 14,800 musical performances
- 1,540 musicians on StreetJelly
- 306,400 tokens tipped to musicians, that’s over ¼ million tokens – $50k
THAT’S A LOT OF TIPS ! ! !
Read about Year One click here
Timeline Highlights
August 18th, 2013 – Jellypalooza Online Music Festival! We kicked off our one-year anniversary with the first ever truly Online Live Streaming Music Festival. 12 hours straight of continuous multiple streaming musicians. The Second Annual Jellypalooza is scheduled on 8/31/2014, Labor Day weekend.
August 25th, 2013 – Meadow Ryan Album Release Party.
October 19th, 2013 – Big Deal Extravaganza! Awardees of the Big Deal rocker pin (a 500 token value) perform special back-to-back shows. Clifton Printy, and Image and Family.
October 31, 2013 – Halloween Jam! StreetJelly musicians perform live shows in scary …and silly costumes.
November 10, 2013 – The Merv Roast Amanda secretly plans a surprise roasting of Merv. Mini-Merv looses his shins!
December 15, 2013 – Jelly Jingle Oh, this was so much fun. All day, SJ musicians performed Christmas and Holiday carols. We are totally doing this every year.
December 31, 2013 – Another tradition continued. Our second New Year’s celebration by SJ musicians singing Auld Lang Syne in every US timezone. 19 more timezones to go for next year.
January 28, 2014 – StreetJelly wins 1st place in the Tennessee Veteran’s Business Associations business plan competition.

Purple Saturday
February 14, 2014 – Sing me a Love Song Night Who needs dinner and chocolates when you get great musicians singing all love songs live on Valentine’s Day.
March 1, 2014 – Purple Saturday Purple what? It’s a StreetJelly thing, you gotta know the SJ anthem – Purple Rain. “Purple Saturday” was our tribute to all things purple. It was a ton of …uhem …purple fun.
May to July, 2014 – Street Jelly Media, Inc. participates in a media business accelerator program, MediaWorks, hosted by the Knoxville Entrepreneur Center. This is behind the scenes stuff, but nonetheless an important step in growing StreetJelly to the next level. It takes a village (not my words) to build a great and successful start-up.
July 2014 – The Great StreetJelly Guitar Giveaway Music Video Contest
This was the battle of all jelly battles for a beautiful brand new J. Backlund Retronix R-800 guitar. There was jelly-blood everywhere by the time the dust settled. But only one musician was victorious – Alex Mason of Nashville, TN.
Here are all the great music video entries…
- WINNER Alex Mason, Grand Market
- 2ND PLACE JoshOftheNorth, Junk Food Junkie
- LarryL Podline66, Ebony Eyes
http://youtu.be/QJ_oyr4crtQ - Image And Family, Story of our Feelings
http://youtu.be/BGHsY0T37aY - Josie C, Oh Heavenly Day
http://youtu.be/QayW7DKvvng - Don Brandfas, Highway 375
http://youtu.be/wzOQETtzcv0 - John “Jersey JB” Bishop, Just One Day
http://youtu.be/pjrgO0-m9E4 - Clifton Printy, Dumb Ways to Die
http://youtu.be/DJ0-Mt_DFZU - Pete Bensen, Paint the Sky
http://youtu.be/U19FDaxCXE0
What’s Next?
Two big things coming for 2015.
- Website Updates: design and features. Yep, we’re not going to keep it the same forever. Stay tuned for pretty layout changes, and as always, new features.
- Mobile App. Yes, let’s get our jelly-fix everywhere and anywhere.


When people ask me if I am a musician, I usually say, “no, I’m a music lover.” Well, that’s not entirely true. When I was a kid, I did belong to a few musical marching bands known as 
They would invite fire departments from other towns (Connecticut and New York) to participate in the parades. The parade itself was actually a competition among fire departments to display their best fire trucks and equipment. Prizes were handed out for best truck, best marching unit (firemen – yes, they marched too), best drum corps, etc. The fire departments would hire a drum corps to help them march in the parade by keeping time with a continuous drumbeat. The New Fairfield Volunteer Fire Department would always hire the New Fairfield Sparklers Drum Corps.
The free food and drink after the parades were off to the side of the carnival grounds, roped off from the general public. We called them “bullpens.” They were full of 100s of drunken firemen. You do remember the free beer part? It was also very easy for a crafty kid to sneak over to the beer side and grab a brewsky. Uh-em, so I’ve been told.
I had a blast with my first show on StreetJelly, and I plan to be a regular. It was fun to be able to interact with music fans I had never met before. Think of it like you would any other gig. It’s all about playing great music and connecting with the viewers. If you just play songs and don’t interact at all, it doesn’t create a great experience. One last thing: have fun!










The less time people stay connected to your stream, they will be counted in bars on the left side. The longer time they stay, they will be collected in the right side bars. For example, all the bars stacked to the left means most everyone left after a short time, while all the bars stacked to the right mean most people stayed for the entire show. But remember, the timer for a viewer starts counting whenever they arrive. If a viewer arrives late at the end of a set, then their viewing time would naturally be a fraction of the total length of the show. That late viewer would be represented in the bars on the left.
Most shows will have a nice spread of viewers who stay for various lengths. But you will always have many viewers that pop in for a very short time, hence the large bar on left.
We call these the “busy body” viewers who can’t sit still. These people are bouncing around the site, checking out multiple shows, making dinner on the side, and not able to stay long.
Here we see our favorite couch potatoes. Most people stuck around for much of the show. The musician has managed to capture and entertain their crowd for a nice long time.
This is a special case when either the show is less than 12 minutes long (remember we divide the bars up in 12 time increments); or you are looking at a show way back in time before we collected viewing time information (back in 2013).
We live in interesting times. Anyone with a few free computer programming tools can create an internet company. Anyone with a guitar and webcam can broadcast their music to the world and reach millions. Oops, did I just peg the Bullsh!t Meter? I did. While those statements are technically true, they are extremely hard. Extremely hard!