YouTube, Gaming and Social Networking Busting TV's Chops 118
splitenz writes "A TV executive told a major Australian broadband conference that television audiences are slipping away into social media, gaming and other online subscription spaces. YouTube and online gaming is taking the traditional TV audience online and TV is struggling to fight back."
I watch lots of TV (Score:1)
I still watch lots of TV. Netflix and Youtube give me hours of entertainment for a grand total of $30/month. ($20 for internet, $10 for netflix). This particular gravy train probably won't continue forever, but it sure is nice.
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That's what happens when you post drunk.
Obviously he is ethanol fueled.
--
BMO
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Why bother when you can sue your customers and bribe politicians?
Finally someone with brains (Score:1)
Seriously - anyone else would have blamed piracy and people downloading episodes from countries that played the shows 6 months ago...
Re:Finally someone with brains (Score:5, Insightful)
What I like is watching the shows when I want to watch them, scheduling them into my life rather than having to schedule my life around them. What all content providers have to get their head around is that these technologies are empowering users to live a social and interactive life their way and if you don't want to keep up with that or embrace it then there is going to be problems.
Re:Finally someone with brains (Score:4, Informative)
And when they go into reruns part way through the season, or they stop broadcasting entirely for a couple of weeks or more and then come back on. And what is it with the short season lengths? TV seasons used to last 25 to 30 weeks. Now they're 12 weeks???? To say TV is getting more lame as time goes on is like saying Ci Lo is just chunky. Maybe if they provided something worth watching instead of 'reality tv' they wouldn't be so far behind. It's all for the shareholders.
Create something cheap to produce to maximize revenue for the shareholders, instead of worrying about good product for the customers and long term stability for the employees. Instead of win, win, win, it is win for a short time, get fucked, get fucked. And then eventually the customers get tired of the crap product and it is lose lose lose. End of story.
Over emphasize of the shareholders so the already overpaid CEO can get bigger bonuses for a short time then out the door with a gold parachute. Same bullshit that plagues the financial industry plagues every other industry in North America and Europe lately. Sure, the shareholders should get paid, but not to the exclusion of long term viability. Businesses like these have adopted the parasitic self-cannibalization strategy since around 1990.
Australian Effect? (Score:5, Informative)
If there was some generational effect going on (the article does note that the elderly watch more than the average) it would be somewhat mitigated by the Economist's finding that
US numbers [nielsen.com] show a similar trend -
Those who are interested should check out the American Time Use Survey [bls.gov] - it has some rather interesting content (for instance: 15 to 19 read for an average of 5 minutes per weekend day while spending 1.0 hour playing games or using a computer for leisure. )
Taking the two pieces together it would seem we're watching more TV in general, and when we're online we have the TV on anyway. Hardly seems worth pounding the drums of the apocalypse over.
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Yeah but if you're watching TV with your laptop you sure as hell aren't paying attention to the commercials, which is all they care about. TV programming is just an inconvenient chore they suffer to get you to watch TV ads.
If more people watch whatever sitcom but all read Facebook while the ads run, the TV execs fail.
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"Viewers watched an average of three hours and 45 minutes of television a day in 2009"
That is absolutely fucking insane.
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One way to fight back ... (Score:3)
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You mean they haven't filled it all up with Two and a Half Men? j/k.
I think the major issue that TV has had with the Internet generation is that it airs the "new" US shows from 6-18 months behind their release dates in the US, which lead to widespread piracy of the shows at their release time in the US and less people watching the "New Episode" release on TV 6 months later. Recently they started lagging behind by only a couple of weeks, but in peak sport times we tend to put shows on hold and catch up 3 mon
Seasons are behind because seasons are behind (Score:3)
it airs the "new" US shows from 6-18 months behind their release dates in the US
That might be because Australia is in the Southern Hemisphere, whose climate is 6 months behind that of Europe and North America. If the weather seasons are 6 months behind, why shouldn't the TV seasons be?
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We could also argue that since our Time is ahead of yours, so too could our Seasons be ahead. :)
If AU is ahead, let it produce the shows instead (Score:2)
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Well yeah (Score:4, Insightful)
People aren't happy with passive entertainment like they once were. They want to be engaged.
Some good TV shows can do that, but most of them do not.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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...you can grab an HD MP4 of it from a Torrent site the day after it airs?
I fixed that for you. You have got to be more careful about following the rules.
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When the Boomers start dying off, traditional television as we know it will probably die with them.
I'm a boomer, and judging by your post I care a whole lot less about TV than you do. Same goes for my 77yo dad who spends most days in his garden and most evenings on his computer.
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It goes beyond this.
Television content today is increasingly targeting dumb viewers. Advertisers are aware that intelligent viewers are not swayed by their advertising. To keep impressionable viewers watching, you need the kind of dumb content that draws them in. As a result, intelligent content is being pushed to the few premium providers that forgo traditional advertising.
Really? Sorry, but go watch some 80s tv, go watch some 90s tv (youtube might help here). There has ALWAYS been dumb shit on tv, picking out good stuff has ALWAYS been hard. I seriously doubt there is an increase here.
Re:Well yeah (Score:4, Interesting)
I see TVs used for these purposes:
1: Placate older viewers who have not hopped onto the Internet as a mainstream source of information.
2: Act as background noise so people waiting in some sort of waiting room have something to focus on.
3: A distraction in a hospital room.
4: People who want to be spoon fed the news. For example, in 5-10 minutes of reading Google News, I get all the stories that it would take a TV watcher 1-2 hours of sitting there getting spoon fed whatever biased info the station chooses to put on there. Of course, Websites can be biased, but it is easy to flip between several and at least figure out a nugget of truth out of the haystack of propaganda.
With this in mind, it is understandable that the top tier economic base of people have moved from TV to other forms of entertainment.
It shows in how much money is being spent on TV shows too. TV studios don't care to spend the top dollar on sci-fi shows and special effects. Why do that, when doing a "reality show" is far cheaper? Why pay for a sonic screwdriver wielder when a Snooki will score the advertising bucks?
This race to the bottom is not just killing TV, but radio too. Radio once was the place to find new bands. Now, that has been replaced by word of mouth, YouTube, and services like last.fm and Pandora, and what you hear on the radio is likely what people's fathers or grandfathers heard when they were drag-racing their Trans-Ams.
What needs to happen? A return to the roots. TV has a niche for education, especially kids too small to really put in front of a computer. This is what the inventor of the medium conceptualized TV as being for. TV also needs to start showing stuff that other mediums have trouble with, such as films from up and coming producers. Radio needs an enema too. They need to go back to having not just a 1-2 hour special on Friday nights with new stuff, but start showcasing new bands... just like they used to before the late 90s. Then they might be relevant in daily life again.
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This is your own fault for watching "local" news, or the morning semi-newsy entertainment shows. The real news is on CBS or ABC at 4:30am. It takes hours of reading the headlines to get the info they provide in 30 minutes (actually 20 without commercials).
And that's just the top of the heap. The nightly "world"
Re:Content (Score:3)
Hmm.
I don't watch any "TV". I haven't had a "TV" for seven years.
However, I do watch a nice chunk of Hulu, because you can stack 3 episodes and watch them in a bloc on a random Thursday at 10PM. I wouldn't call House, Fairly Legal, or The Chicago Code "stupid". Every writer knows that scripts are "Hollywood-ized", so be it. But those are passably intelligent shows.
You can vote down (or up) ads on Hulu, so presumably if you downvote the Washing Machine ads some five times, they eventually go away. I try to v
Re:Well yeah (Score:5, Insightful)
Television content today is increasingly targeting dumb viewers.
Right. Hogan's Heros. Gilligan's Island. The A-Team. Fantasy Island.
Monday Night Football. NASCAR Racing.
The pinnacle of Western Civilization. Them's some strong rose colored glasses you got on there son.
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Knight Rider!
Don't forget The Hoff !
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I agree. We always look back at the old and think it was great because we've forgotten the mediocre and only remember the truly great or truly bad. For instance, we know music was amazing in the 60s/70s because look what you had: The Beatles, Led Zepplin, The Who, etc. Contrast that with me not naming anyone great making music today and you can see how the times have changed.
That said, the transition of prime time TV from sitcoms towards reality programming does seem worse to many of us than what came befor
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For a while, I was watching a lot of History or Discovery channel. But now Discovery is Tools with an attitude shooting crew goes Swamplogging, and the History channel has morphed into the "Oh my freaking Gawd, Nostradamus predicted the Mayan Calendar, fear and end of the earth channel." "And if they don't, the Rosicrucians or Masons are on a mission to send us all to hell anyhow."
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Extreme couponing . Yesiree folks, we're going to make a show about clipping coupons and saving money at the grocery store.
Little people - Big world. Awww, how cute. We just did a remodel on the house paid for by the producers, so we're going on vacation in an incredible spot, also paid for by the producers.
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You can also put it this way:
Watching TV series is like living other people's lives.
At least with social media we are living our own lives again...
No, they're not... (Score:5, Insightful)
If they actually WERE serious about competing, they would make TV easy to watch on the viewer's terms. But they fight every attempt of that happening by continuously putting blocks between the customer and the shows.
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Pretty much. It's easy to see why TV is falling behind when broadcast companies flip shit when video providers like Time Warner Cable make a stinking iPad app to let people have another means of watching TV in their home.
Re:No, they're not... (Score:5, Insightful)
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they seem to *want* people to download shows or watch them through another medium.
They're just trying maximize ad revenue and please advertisers. The viewers are just CHUM to attract the big fish. Ok, so it's not a car metaphor.
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Not to mention the horribly antiquated technology they're using...
Is it 1080? or 1088?
59.94 FPS, 23.976 FPS, 3000/1001 FPS?
Why are you letterboxing 16:9 content?
Why the HELL are you letterboxing 16:9 into a pillarboxed 4:3 into a 16:9 stream?!
Overscan?... still? What is this, the 1970's?
Is it Interlaced? Is it Telecined? Is it interlaced and telecined? who knows/cares?
They had a chance to change for the better with the switch to digital broadcasting and recording, but completely blew it - ATSC? what a pile
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Whenever there's a good show it's almost you can bet money it will be canceled by the end of season 1 (or the first half of season 1).
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They change show's time slots, both time and day, break seasons up into at least 2 widely spaced parts, pop up insanely large and distracting station identifiers, alter show start times slightly so poorly designed DVRs miss the beginning or the end. In general, they seem to *want* people to download shows or watch them through another medium. I find it incomprehensible.
Man. The hate. I know Fox canceled 'Firefly', but that was years ago.
Let it rest, already.
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Not entirely true. My wife and I have 1 login for Netflix, 1 charge per month, but we can use that login on as many machines as we want.
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Because 95% of the world's population lives outside of the USA?
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Because 95% of the world's population lives outside of the USA?
We are the ones that are supposed to be consuming. Everybody else is supposed to work. That's what they told me anyway.
Re:No, they're not... (Score:4, Insightful)
Why does anyone need cable anymore with Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu Plus?
Reason 1: Comcast and other cable ISPs give a deep discount on TV to their Internet subscribers.
Reason 2: As I understand it, Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu Plus are good for works that can be tape delayed by months to a year. Live news and live sports are not this way. Some people like to watch MSNBC's Morning Joe with their morning joe. And if you have a sports fan living with you, he won't be amused at losing access to sporting events that aren't on the broadcast networks, such as out-of-market games or motor racing.
Reason 3: Services like these tend to be U.S.-only, and I've been told they lack foreign counterparts due to country-specific exclusive licensing deals signed before there was a European Union. How much does a U.S. green card cost again?
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Reason 3: Services like these tend to be U.S.-only, and I've been told they lack foreign counterparts due to country-specific exclusive licensing deals signed before there was a European Union. How much does a U.S. green card cost again?
Yeah, the situation outside the US sucks as far as services like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, iTunes etc. are considered.
Most check your IP, so it doesn't matter if you're actually American or not.
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Reason 1: Comcast and other cable ISPs give a deep discount on TV to their Internet subscribers.
I've never heard of cable TV for $7-8 above your internet bill. I pay about $46 right now for Cox cable internet, and I'm absolutely sure they won't give me cable TV for an additional $8. That's all I pay to Netflix.
Reason 2: As I understand it, Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu Plus are good for works that can be tape delayed by months to a year. Live news and live sports are not this way. Some people like to w
"Sports are a waste of time" == trolling (Score:2)
I've never heard of cable TV for $7-8 above your internet bill.
Cable operators such as Comcast offer a "limited basic" or "lifeline" package, which includes local channels, public access, home shopping, and little else, for about $20 per month. The discount off the cable Internet access bill for also having TV is also about $20 per month: roughly $45 per month on the same bill as cable TV or $65 per month otherwise. So even if you have a good antenna, it's like getting the public access channels for free. The next step up ("digital starter") includes ESPN and MSNBC, wh
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And what exactly do you get for $20 per month? Local channels? I already get those for free, in full 1080 HD; why would I pay for them, just to have the cableco compress the hell out of them? Home shopping? Ever heard of the internet? Public access? Why do I care?
Even if you personally believe this, saying such in some households would be tantamount to trolling.
Maybe those people (it's not whole households who believe otherwise, it's just one mentally-ill male who bullies everyone else in the househol
How do I help a sports addict? (Score:2)
Public access? Why do I care?
Even if you don't care, somebody else does, especially for people whose favorite soap opera is C-SPAN.
Maybe those people (it's not whole households who believe otherwise, it's just one mentally-ill male who bullies everyone else in the household) should go get psychiatric treatment for their sports addiction.
In order to want treatment, a viewer will have to see why his addiction is harmful, and that will include understanding exactly why NFL football, NHL hockey, and other spectator sports are a waste of time. Have you any resources about this so that I can help my sports fan
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Public access? Why do I care?
Even if you don't care, somebody else does, especially for people whose favorite soap opera is C-SPAN.
If someone wants to spend $20-40 / month just to watch public-access channels, that's their right, but I suspect if you did a poll asking people "if you had to choose between getting all your current TV/movie needs met for free or $7/month with Netflix over the internet, but it wouldn't include the public access channels, would you choose internet/Netflix for $7 or would you cho
Public access and TV+Internet bundle discounts (Score:2)
If someone wants to spend $20-40 / month just to watch public-access channels, that's their right
Perhaps my point missed you. Due to the pricing structure of cable Internet, the "lifeline" TV is free with the subscription to Internet because the monthly discount for bundling TV with Internet balances out the monthly price of "lifeline" TV.
if you had to choose between getting all your current TV/movie needs met for free or $7/month with Netflix over the internet, but it wouldn't include the public access channels, would you choose internet/Netflix for $7 or would you choose to subscribe to Cable TV just to keep access to public-access channels?
Option 1: $65 per month for Internet without TV and $8 per month for Netflix.
Option 2: $20 per month for public access channels, $45 per month for Internet with the TV subscribers' discount,
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Perhaps my point missed you. Due to the pricing structure of cable Internet, the "lifeline" TV is free with the subscription to Internet because the monthly discount for bundling TV with Internet balances out the monthly price of "lifeline" TV.
Things must be different for you. Here in AZ with Cox, it's $46/month for cable internet. Any other services cost extra. You can't get local channels effectively for free; IIRC the cheapest option is basic cable at $30/month, but it's been a while since I checked.
C
Out-of-market sports and spoilers (Score:2)
The problem with sports fans is that can't just be happy watching a game once in a while, or even once a week
Even once a week costs money for cable TV if the local networks in your area happen not to carry your favorite team's games.
And suggestions of just recording it for later are poo-pooed as if it makes a difference to watch it live or not.
Watching live does make a difference. Are you familiar with the concept of a spoiler [wikipedia.org]? One's co-workers will likely be discussing Sunday night's game on Monday morning at work, and knowing the outcome in advance will spoil the drama of the game. But I'd love to hear a convincing argument that spoilers don't exist. Besides, even recording it for later requires a subscription to cable TV
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Besides, even recording it for later requires a subscription to cable TV with DVR service.
Yes, but I was addressing men who have sports addictions and listing some of the highly annoying habits they have.
Anyway, you're right about spoilers, but so what? Is it really THAT important? You don't see anyone get their panties in such a bind about finding out the outcome of some movie. If you don't want to get spoiled, don't talk to people at work about sports when you haven't seen it yet. Most sports fans I'v
User interface on TV news web sites (Score:2)
If you can plug an FM transmitter into a cable box's audio jack, you can certainly do the same thing with a PC or notebook.
First, this test subject is unwilling to learn how to navigate a video web site. Every time I offer to show her around, she says "I'm not doing it right now; let me go do $chore". She prefers the user interface of a cable box in which power, volume, and channel number are the only things to worry about. She told me that she doesn't even want to explore free on-demand videos for fear that she might accidentally choose a pay-per-view selection.
Second, unlike C-SPAN.org, MSNBC.com appears to offer no live s
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Star Trek Prophecy (Score:3)
Star Trek:TNG - "The Neutral Zone"
SONNY Yeah, boob-tube... you know. I'd like to find out how the Braves are doin' after all this time. Probably still finding ways to lose.
DATA (to Riker) Oh -- I think he means television, sir.
SONNY Or maybe catch up on the soaps.
DATA (to Sonny) That particular form of entertainment did not last much beyond the year Two Thousand Forty.
Mainly to do with Australia (Score:1)
To put it in perspective, Australian TV has been racing to the bottom for as far back as I can remember. Basically we copy US (and often UK) shows with our own versions but with only half the budget and effort. If one station lands onto a 'hit', the other commercial stations will pour every spare cent into copying that concept themselves, so you end up with mulitple stations broadcasting the same show. Yet at the same time most of the acclaimed US/UK shows they get the rights to get buried on timeslots that
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you end up with mulitple stations broadcasting the same show
Yeah, last night the royal wedding was on almost every fucking station. I was going to watch the chaser's "uninformed and unconstitutional" coverage of it but then the royal family pulled the plug on their licence [abc.net.au].
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poor content (Score:3)
Re:poor content (Score:4, Interesting)
With you in spirit, but your statements are tinged with hyperbole. The major networks air more than 2 good shows a week, and more and more "cable channels" like AMC, USA, TNT, etc have begun airing some quality original programming. However, for every show like 30 Rock or The Closer, we get ten Real Worlds, Survivors, or Dancing with the Stars.
Premium channels have been booming with original content in recent years. Maybe it's just because I did not have access to them much before BT trackers and release groups got into them, but I think there are more original shows on HBO, Showtime, etc than there used to be. Sure, you had things like 1st and Ten, Dream On, and the Red Shoe Diaries on HBO and Showtime 15-25 years ago, but now you have so much more. A lot of great shows in recent times have come form these networks (Deadwood, Weeds, Dexter, The Sopranos), along with a great deal more entertaining ones (The Tudors, Rome, Secret Diary of a Call Girl (not original, I know)).
As someone else has stated, the real problem is that TV providers have made it an increasingly hostile environment to watch their content.
- More commercial time per hour. The average 1-hour show is under 44 minutes now.
- Channel identifier logos on constantly. In the beginning these were semi-transparent line-art, now they are colorful and often animated.
- Squashed and sped-up credit sequences. Sure, few people want to see them, but sometimes we do, and without commercial/news at 10 hype
- Pop-up in-show ads "New Episode of Dancing With the Stars NEXT" at the bottom of the screen, blocking this show
- Time-shifting to screw up DVR users
- Loudness tricks to make commercials seem louder than the show. Gotta crank up the movie because it's so quiet, then WHAM! "BUY ZEST SOAP!"
- Constant schedule changes
I gave up cable TV about 8-9 years ago. I was heavy into anime at the time, had just moved, so I went with internet and substantial DVD purchases (back when DVDs were still $30 each, though you could get them for ~33-50% off online). I found out I just did not need to veg out in front of TV shows I didn;t care about every evening. I read more books, was online more, had other things to do.
It was liberating. ^_^
TV is good for live (Score:2)
So, it's video that you can't pause, rewind or fast forward.
TiVo DVRs can pause and rewind TV. As for fast forward, TV is good for the kind of thing that's impossible to fast forward because it's being broadcast within a minute after it happens: news and sports.
cable co will fight back with lower caps (Score:1)
cable co will fight back with lower caps
Just Another Screen (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I am going to blame the messenger, i.e. Nielsen. Shows that trend towards tech savvy types will always struggle and die if the only emphasis is going to be on boxes that measure appointment viewing. I don’t have a box, so I don’t matter. If I don’t matter, why subject myself to appointment viewing commercials ALONG with the obvious product placement?
If modern HD TVs are are just another computer screen, what is in store for appointment viewing as we undergo generational attrition?
For me, modern television is going through the same death spiral that modern commercial music is going through. My music interests have gone entirely independent of the big music labels because of the crap they pull and produce. The more they dumb down, the less of my attention they get. Viewing numbers will distribute across the hundreds of channels of reality programming and the few die hards will congregate around the few bright spots of fictional storytelling while they last. (You should prepare for vastly smaller seasons of shows, like the British models.)
I don’t matter, so why even try to make it through these endless show hiatuses that kill anything serialized? Why endlessly pine and dread if the uncounted just don’t matter?
Screw off Nielsen. Take your appointment viewing system and burn in hell for killing too many of my loved ones. I for one am finding it too painful to play with your stacked deck.
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If modern HD TVs are are just another computer screen
Modern HDTVs are potentially "just another computer screen", but the general public sees general-purpose computers and consumer electronics as two separate realms, as repeatedly pointed out by CronoCloud and other Slashdot commenters. In practice, modern HDTVs are consumer-electronics-appliance screens.
Live news and sports (Score:2)
why even try to make it through these endless show hiatuses that kill anything serialized?
Game shows broadcast live, such as Major League Baseball, National Football League, National Hockey League, and National Basketball Association, draw appointment viewers despite their annual hiatuses.
fictional storytelling
I switched away from FOX News Channel because I was tired of the fictional storytelling, but political news shows like MSNBC's Morning Joe Brewed by Starbucks still draw viewers.
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"Game shows broadcast live, such as Major League Baseball, National Football League, National Hockey League, and National Basketball Association, draw appointment viewers despite their annual hiatuses."
Very good point. Thanks for that perspective. Forgot about live events...
Spock the profit (Score:1)
Holy cow does this mean that Spock's comment from ST-TOS will turn out to be true. "television-- That form of entertainment didn't last much past the mid 21'st century". :)
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well shoot someone already beat me to it.
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Perfectly normal response expected (Score:2)
Don't fight back, don't get up. (Score:1)
go to sleep now
you messed up the news and created predictable, pathetic, mind-numb, formulaic content bereft of artistic value
but that's okay. you didn't have much choice on that silly broadcast-only medium
now it's time to rest. stop squirming in your box
shush, shush
go to sleep
Individual channels... (Score:1)
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Record companies do the same thing.
When they have a monopoly on the pieces that they put together, they usually use the good stuff as bait to force you to swallow the other stuff with it.
Going ala-carte lets you be too picky for their pocketbook.
The problem is scheduled programming. (Score:1)
Well, lets see what is on TV shall we? (Score:3, Interesting)
The BBC, yesterday. One side showing "the wedding". The only way I watch that if they made it interactive and I could enact my republican fantasies. Once thing about the French, they know how to deal with royalty. Russians too. Nice job guys, want to helps the rest of the world out?
The other side, snooker. The most boring thing ever to be televised apart from hurdling. That is it! On a friday! Prime time TV? Must watch TV? Not on the beeb.
Have I Got News For You is still funny although this weeks episode seems to have been cancelled and the previous one was more about "The wedding" then the middle east being on fire. Gosh they have plenty to say if Israel defends itself by killing a single muslim in a week but if muslims kill hundreds of muslims that is apparently not fit to discuss in a satirical news program. Am I so wrong in finding it all funny?
The rest of the time, cooking shows. Now don't get me wrong. I like food and I am actually quite good as a cook but how many master chefs can one stomach? According to the BBC dual and even triple episodes in a row.
Okay, so to discovery, geographic channel and animal planet. If anyone in America is bored, then you please go and shoot that mexican dog licker? My god that show is on 24/7. If I want to train a bad dog I kill its owner, then eat the dog. Just because a single program does well does NOT make it a good idea to replace your entire schedule with it. Diversity, it is the spice of live. For instance I would like some cat sprinkled on my chow.
Discovery? Come on, Cake Boss? Are you serious? And you thought American Chopper was gaying it up as much as possible. (come on and entire show with butch men in leather making shiny stuff). I get tired of the same formula. "Oh shit, we are running out of time, yet again, we do so every single time but never learn to start a bike, cake build a tiny bit earlier because thatwould deprive us of fake tension only the most gullible would believe". Even if some of the programs are interesting, the commercials kill it. Not just to long, to loud and to stupid, they repeat the same ones over and over in the same show AND then run ads for the very show I am trying to watch. That is like ordering a burger and then being told about that very burger instead of serving it.
Comedy Central? Thank you, I seen the Simpsons a dozen times over and Family Guy and such are simply not funny to anyone who isn't 12.
There is simply nothing to watch. Now I don't hate TV, I am as ready as the next guy to sit in front of the idiot tube after a day at work and let my mind rot. I like it, just there is absolutely nothing on or if it is it gets interrupted by a 5 minute commercial block. That causes me to look away and when I look back, the NEXT commercial block is on.
Instead, I simply download the few things I want to see (since I am in europe often the entire season is available already by the time I hear about it) and watch them in HD with no commercials blocks and no re-scheduling because some jack-booting asshole wants to get married to a slut.
TV has a problem. People like mindless entertainment but for millenia they had to create it themselves. Once every household had a musical instrument because that was the only thing to do at in the evening hours. Theathers were everywhere filled with crap actors for when people got fed up with the same song every day. Then movies came and made entertainment for the masses for the first time. TV made it even easier, just pump a production straight into everyones home. The perfect way to spend those hours between work and going to bed. Don't deny it and claim you read a book, statistics prove you didn't.
But that was in the days when we had no choice. Either you watched it on the TV stations terms or you didn't. And because they controlled us (don't deny it, I seen the empty streets when something special happened in TV land) they thought they would always control us and added longer and longer commericial blocks, now even showing ads over the programs
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Well that was some amusing rambling. I take it you were drinking tonight.
I guess I agree, except for the family guy jab.
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Maybe if TV didnt suck so much... (Score:2)
Aussie FTA TV has far too much junk on it these days.
We get old shows that have been aired so many times the tapes have worn out (Bewitched, I Dream Of Jeanie, The Flintstones, JAG, McGuiver, Everybody Loves Raymond, Cheers, The Brady Bunch, Seinfeld, MASH, The Nanny, 2&1/2 men and others) and worse still they play the same subset of the series over and over and over again instead of playing all the episodes that exist.
We get crappy reality TV like Farmer Wants A Wife, Masterchef, Junior Masterchef, So
Radio is complaining too... (Score:1)
"A radio executive told a major conference that radio audiences are slipping away into TV. Soap operas and recent news footage are taking the traditional radio audience and radio is struggling to fight back."
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Good. (Score:2)
Network TV can die in a fire. Even the vanishingly small number of decent shows (I could count the number on one hand after a brutal industrial accident) consist of 30% commercial time. And the fire network TV dies in can be stoked by the former network executives.
Speaking of ads, TFA has a large intrusive bold text ad right in the middle of the story, which means I'll soon be getting my FAs here like everyone else: secondhand hearsay.
Well earlier (Score:1)
Earlier we had an article here about the closing of the last typewritter factor. Some techs are just obsolete and need to be phased out. TV seems to be one of them. They are idiots of course in the entertain industry as we all know and will hang on by their teeth if they must as long as they can. Eventually we will close the door on the last TV manufacturing department in the world, and even then, they will still fight to survive. TV is dead because it failed to meet the needs of the people. Programming i
Best SEM Agencies (Score:1)