Network TV's Reinvention, Minus Much Reinvention At All
from the smoke-and-mirrors dept
It's no secret that these are tough times for network TV: dwindling ad spending, viewers moving away from linear channels in favor of DVRs, and others getting their shows from the web. So it's time for some reinvention, BusinessWeek says. The only problem is that its outline of the networks' reinvention doesn't really sound too different from the status quo, saying TV networks' big upcoming innovations are cutting production costs and slicing an hour out of prime time. It's clear that something needs to happen on the cost side of the equation, so perhaps these are incremental steps forward, but those cost cuts aren't going to help much if the networks don't do more to serve the changing desires and needs of their audience. But to that point, BW also says that "programs will be tailored to audiences" in the future, making one wonder exactly what they're tailored to now. The problem is, of course, instead of doing that, they're more interested in locking up their content and making it more difficult to access. There is one bit of "innovation" in the BW article, tacked on in the very last paragraph: evidently there's a new service being tested that will let friends send text messages to each other about shows they're watching. Now that sounds like a savior...






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Tried & True
Now that's playing fast and loose with the word new if ever I heard. I mean, c'mon guys, can't we already *do* that? What's next? A partnership with the telcos to allow us to call our friends on cell phones after prime time and chat with them about what people on our favorite TV shows did?
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SMS, Twitter, Facebook, email...
Or do they mean a series of menu options that will 'let' you send a canned, "I'm watching American Idol!!" message from your TV?
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Innovation?
This is actually a pretty interesting idea. I'd to look into it further, but I'm currently reading into this new invention that will allow me to transport myself from one location to another, all while seated, and running off of something called petroleum. The term is "drive" apparently, whatever the hell that means.
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What the...
I'm still laughing at this line, especially when these executives are thinking of adding product placement in addition to commercial breaks.
Sure, a ton of ads will most definitely keep people glued to the program.
Ah. The digital era. What fun it's going to be for the next 5 years.
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Re: What the...
There is already the technology to easily place logos over moving objects in video. We can eventually use this to cover all inserted ads it will be a script like the ones that remove banner ads on the web.
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Re: Tried & True
This is.
TV is dead. Long live the internet.
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real innovation
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Great, that's one less hour of TV I have to worry about. Prime time drama shows are the only thing left that I still watch on TV. They can take their reality shows, talk shows, game shows and all the rest and shove it.
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