I post this in reaction to the cancellation of Pushing Daises.
I remember us, back in 2002-2003ish, in this very forum, talking about how "new media" was hurting Enterprise's Nielson Ratings, and it was actually one of those most "TiVo'd" shows out there, or people taped it, and "the way people watch TV is changing"
This is back when TiVo as a brand new thing.
DVR recorders are now as common as VCRs, and simply buying the DVD box set and marathoning it is also an even more viable option than it used to be.
Yet the networks still treat "New Media" as well...."new"
But it's been over SIX FRAKKING YEARS since we were upset that Enterprise got better ratings than Nielson gave it credit for.
At first, a joke is funny.
But after six years, it stops being funny.
This isn't funny anymore; does hollywood truly move at such a GLACIAL pace, that 6-7 years isn't enough to realize that the Nielson ratings system simply doesn't work anymore?
So Fuller from Pushing Daises has been complaining that all of the smart people willing to sit through a long story arc just TiVo it or buy the DVD's, so the networks want shows that are basically fighting over the low-brow and no-brow morons who are just flicking channels; making "Bottle episodes" and killing long storyarc-based shows.
And I just realized....it has been YEARS since this problem started, and they still haven't adapted to it? That the "way people watch TV is changing"?
I mean "Lost" was the first one to really bring this problem to the notice of the mainstream media; after the great first season, the ratings plummeted, and this was because it was so successful everyone made sure to record it.
But I mean really, just sit back and think...think of how much time has passed....5 to 6 years have passed....think of just how much has gone on since then, and yet the networks are still just not getting it.
The only channel that really handles this WELL is Adult Swim: the idea is that they put up all of their premiere episodes on their website, and *heavily advertise* that the episodes are on their website, and then get real ad revenue from the internet airing, using built-in commercials at the chapter breaks.
It's sort of like what Heroes did, but Adult Swim just actively *embraces* this more than any other channel I know of.
I remember us, back in 2002-2003ish, in this very forum, talking about how "new media" was hurting Enterprise's Nielson Ratings, and it was actually one of those most "TiVo'd" shows out there, or people taped it, and "the way people watch TV is changing"
This is back when TiVo as a brand new thing.
DVR recorders are now as common as VCRs, and simply buying the DVD box set and marathoning it is also an even more viable option than it used to be.
Yet the networks still treat "New Media" as well...."new"
But it's been over SIX FRAKKING YEARS since we were upset that Enterprise got better ratings than Nielson gave it credit for.
At first, a joke is funny.
But after six years, it stops being funny.
This isn't funny anymore; does hollywood truly move at such a GLACIAL pace, that 6-7 years isn't enough to realize that the Nielson ratings system simply doesn't work anymore?
So Fuller from Pushing Daises has been complaining that all of the smart people willing to sit through a long story arc just TiVo it or buy the DVD's, so the networks want shows that are basically fighting over the low-brow and no-brow morons who are just flicking channels; making "Bottle episodes" and killing long storyarc-based shows.
And I just realized....it has been YEARS since this problem started, and they still haven't adapted to it? That the "way people watch TV is changing"?
I mean "Lost" was the first one to really bring this problem to the notice of the mainstream media; after the great first season, the ratings plummeted, and this was because it was so successful everyone made sure to record it.
But I mean really, just sit back and think...think of how much time has passed....5 to 6 years have passed....think of just how much has gone on since then, and yet the networks are still just not getting it.
The only channel that really handles this WELL is Adult Swim: the idea is that they put up all of their premiere episodes on their website, and *heavily advertise* that the episodes are on their website, and then get real ad revenue from the internet airing, using built-in commercials at the chapter breaks.
It's sort of like what Heroes did, but Adult Swim just actively *embraces* this more than any other channel I know of.