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Sunday, August 30, 2009

TV producers/advertisers hope to make Nielsen ratings a thing of the past

Nielsen ratings have always been an imperfect system of projecting who is watching what when. The advent of DVR technology and internet-streamed programming have made the television ratings game even more challenging.

So the major TV companies -- General Electric's NBC Universal, Time Warner , News Corp.ViacomCBS Corp., and Walt Disney -- have teamed together to fight against Nielsen, which not only delivers arguably flawed data, but charges a hefty fee to do so.

Advertisers, meanwhile, are also hoping for a new solution to figuring out the best time slots to reach a captive audience.Procter & Gamble  and AT&T  are already on board with the media giants to develop a better system that would measure viewership across multiple platforms. (Currently, Nielsen polls 18,000 homes and tracks their viewing habits via a special remote control).

The consortium's plan is expected to sign contracts for other companies who develop reliable ways of measuring viewers across all digital sources, including Hulu. No word on how the consortium proposes to measure iTunes downloads. 

Could this change the TV-ratings landscape? All of a sudden, will American Idol lose luster while 30 Rock rockets to the top of the charts? Or will Nielsen maintain its stranglehold of the ratings game? Stay tuned.

Beth works for The Options News Network (www.ONN.tv), which provides daily stock and options commentary. The above comments are not intended as trading advice.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

How Will Television Reinvent Itself?

Because of growing competition and dwindling TV ad dollars, the big networks will be forced to make major changes, and fast

It's not easy being a network executive these days. Consider the challenges: While NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox continue to siphon upwards of 60% of the television advertising dollars and to attract the biggest audiences, broadcast revenues are down an estimated 9% this year and may never be what they once were. Competition, meanwhile, is everywhere. The cable guys are making some of the most popular shows on TV and are pressing for an increasing share of advertising dollars as companies target the kind of audience niches in which the likes of AMC, TNT, and Bravo specialize. And it goes without saying that the array of entertainment options—YouTube clips of improbable Scottish singers, online games, pirated movies and TV shows—is luring eyeballs away from destination television.

For decades network TV has been about reach. Programmers traditionally chose shows with broad appeal, the better to get millions of viewers and, in turn, persuade national advertisers to buy those eyeballs. That era is essentially over and the networks are scrambling to adapt to a fragmented landscape where even popular shows are lucky to pull in 10 million viewers. "They have to rethink what they put on the air, how many hours they'll do it, everything in their playbook," says a former top executive who now produces TV shows.

Read this fascinating Business Week article that discusses the future of TV by Clicking Here.

A series of articles and other resources on the Future of Television can be found by Clicking Here.

Who Will Emerge as The Future of Radio?

As the audience for AM and FM radio declines, start-up entrepreneurs and giant media companies alike search for the "next radio" -- a way to make money by helping listeners discover new music. Online music providers such as Pandora, Imeem and Last.fm provide an early glance at that next chapter in radio history.

As in other areas of media, the music industry is finally starting to come around to the difficult truth that we now live in a world in which consumers expect information and entertainment to be free. Efforts to sell music by subscription have mainly failed. (Yahoo recently gave up on its Music Unlimited subscription service and sent its customers to Rhapsody, another struggling music provider.) But traditional radio's offer of free music surrounded by audio advertising is also being rejected by a generation that resents undesirable interruptions.

"They want to be the program director and they insist that the program be free," says Jerry Del Colliano, a professor of music industry at the University of Southern California and a former executive at Top 40 WIBG in Philadelphia. "Young consumers don't have that need that we older folks have to have someone knowledgeable about the music tell them what's new. They have their social network to tell them what's cool."

Since 2005, Tim Westergren has crisscrossed the nation gathering fans of Pandora, his site that lets listeners create their own stations by typing in a favorite song or artist and letting the software generate a stream of music that shares your favorite's characteristics. Based on a handcrafted database that catalogues more than 500,000 songs according to their rhythm, harmony, mood, style and lyrics, Pandora serves up selections that you then fine-tune by rejecting those you loathe and embracing those you adore.

For those who recoil at the notion of anyone -- a radio station program director or Pandora's musicologists -- deciding what music is best for them, Last.fm chooses tunes in a different way. Rather than employ its own experts, Last.fm relies on the collective listening habits of its users. When you choose a song on the site, you see a list of artists who are "similar;" if many people who joined you in listening to Booker T. and the MGs also listened to the Delfonics, the software leads you in that direction.

"I often hear people from my parents' generation say, 'There will never be another Beatles,' and they are absolutely correct," McKinnon says. "Not because there will never be another band capable of making music as well as the Beatles, but because we no longer have to form our musical preferences based on a limited number of competing radio stations. We now have millions of people making millions of choices about what they want to listen to; it becomes rather improbable that a large majority will gravitate to the same conclusions about what music they prefer."

That may be the ideal, but the reality looks a lot more like hit radio. The top artists on Last.fm the other week were Radiohead, the Beatles and Red Hot Chili Peppers -- not exactly acts unknown to FM radio. Indeed, on the most popular online music sites, the lists of most popular songs are almost indistinguishable from what's on most pop or hip-hop radio stations.

Whatever form the next radio takes, it's clear what need it will fulfill. "Every day I am bombarded with new and interesting technologies competing for my already limited time," Patrick McKinnon, 27, a computer engineer in Austin says. "Having the ability to turn on a personal radio station that will grow and evolve as new music becomes available, tailored accurately to my musical preferences, will be truly amazing. It isn't here yet."

Click here to read the entire article.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Americans watched 21.4 billion videos online in July


From the duh Dept.: Consumers increasingly are viewing content on computer -- not TV -- screens.

An astounding 158 million U.S. residents viewed video online in July, the largest audience ever. Some 21.4 billion videos were watched, according to market researcher ComScore.

Google sites continued to rank as the top U.S. video property, with a record 8.9 billion videos (42%) viewed. YouTube.com accounted for more than 99 percent of those videos. Viacom Digital ranked second, with 812 million videos (4%), followed by Microsoft sites, with 631 million (3%).

USATODAY August 27, 2009

Monday, August 24, 2009

CBS News pioneer Don Hewitt reshaped coverage


By Gary Strauss, USA TODAY
Don Hewitt will be best remembered for creating CBS' 60 Minutes, television's most successful newsmagazine. But long before the immediacy of the Internet, Hewitt's pioneering efforts in television's early days were pivotal in shaping the medium as a leading source for breaking-news coverage.

After joining CBS in the late 1940s, he directed TV's first network newscast and orchestrated TV's first presidential debate, the 1960 John F. Kennedy/Richard Nixon faceoff that observers say set the tone for image-driven politics.

Hewitt was instrumental in developing editing, camera and production techniques that remain in wide use today. Says CBS president Les Moonves: "Since the very beginnings of our business, he literally invented so many of the vehicles by which we now communicate the news."

Click here to read the entire article.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Relatable characters help fill television's generation gap


By Marco R. della Cava, USA TODAY

From The Brady Bunch (a Technicolor version of suburban life that still managed to tackle the growing pains of a blended family) to Beverly Hills 90210(a Dante-esque vision of teen life in L.A.'s faux paradise) or Sex and the City(a parable about the highs and lows of singles living New York's vida loca), indelible television always has heart, soul and a fierce familiarity.

In these TV worlds, marriages fracture, babies cry and friends die. Disputes don't always get resolved, and a good laugh doesn't necessarily conquer all. Most of all, they're people and predicaments that become achingly real.

The increasingly fractured nature of today's entertainment landscape means it's unlikely any one television show will ever again capture our collective attention like these TV milestones, Brooks says. But their cathartic kind are still very much needed.

The Brady Bunch may not have felt truly real, but it presented a curious combination of canned one-liners, relationship problems and a willingness to work those out. Brady went on to truly strike cultural gold during its mid-'70s syndication run, which led, decades later, to feature films and a touring stage production.

The Cosby Show, Friends and, to some degree, Seinfeld invited viewers into a world whose characters generated a measure of envy. You wanted to if not live in, then at least visit their domains.

"Friends epitomized aspirational TV with its cast of fit and funny people," says producer Tom Nunan, former entertainment president of UPN and now a visiting assistant professor at the University of California-Los Angeles. "Friends was almost a reaction to dysfunctional shows like Roseanne. Viewers wanted to experience milestones with characters that were similar to their own."

Nunan was among the executives pitched on Friends. "There was no way to tell this was going to be a big hit," he says, laughing. "If I knew what created successful aspirational TV, I'd be richer than Aaron Spelling. It's usually four factors: the show runners behind the program, the perfect concept, the perfect cast and the right network. All those stars have to align. It's ephemeral."

Click here to read the entire article

10 shows with ageless appeal