Saturday, February 28, 2009
And That's The Way It Is...
Tim Arango NYT "Broadcast TV Faces Struggle To Stay Viable": For decades, the big three, now big four, networks all had the same game plan: spend many millions to develop and produce scripted shows aimed at a mass audience and national advertisers, with a shelf life of years or decades as reruns in syndication. But that model, based on attracting enough ad dollars to cover the costs of shows like “Lost” and “ER,” no longer appears viable. Network dramas now cost about $3 million an hour. The future for the networks, it seems, is more low-cost reality shows, more news and talk, and a greater effort to find new revenue streams, whether they be from receiving subscriber fees as cable channels do, or becoming cable networks themselves, an idea that has gained currency.
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How fortunate that I have so many good books to read.
ReplyDeleteThere is one other alternative.... Play the current big auto makers game. Develop a new concept in network brodcasting or go under. Fox the new kid in town seems to have a hand on what Americans want now and it is not "I Love Lucy" episones every week. Gte creative or die. There are hundreds of specialty channels on cable filling then gap, or will politicians feel the 4 networks are all too big to fail?
ReplyDeleteI say dig up Peter Finch and bring back Howard Beale...
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