George Gilder has seen the future and...wait for it....he believes TV is "dying fast and it will be followed by Hollywood". Apparently, Gilder believes the abundance of bandwidth will cause the demise of traditional media. Let's be honest, this is an old mantra being recycled for 21st century if you recall Gilder pounded the table in the 1990s on how the power of fiber-optic technology was going to dramatically change how information was delivered. While Gilder was on the mark, he was far too bullish about the rate and impact of change. This didn't prevent people from enthusiastically following his advice, which made Gilder quite wealthy - at least on paper - from selling newsletters and giving speeches. When the telecom/dot-com boom ended, Gilder was suddenly shunned as a stock promoter gone bad. Gilder made his remarks about TV during an AlwaysOn conference appearance, which must be part of an attempt to rehabilitate his tattered reputation. While I'm sure Gilder is trying to be outspoken and controversial, his vision for the future of TV is far from novel or insightful. With the emergence of video-on-demand and IP-TV, everyone realizes how people consume programming is bound to change. Give AlwaysOn domo Tony Perkins some credit for trying to generate some buzz for the conference by inviting Gilder. The reality, however, is Gilder has already enjoyed his 15 minutes of fame but like many one-time high-flying entrepreneurs, he's trying to reformat an old message rather than develop a new take on the world.