Seems fair and genre television is one with a good chance of success with that model.
i don't understand why we still have shows that play on linear TV why no film 22 hours of a season and put it right out on DVD? i hate to wait... with DVD you can watch as long as you want... start, stop, rewatch... i need DVD... something "REAL" no video file or stearming video... a easy DVD....
Just this week HULU announced an original series starting in August from producer/director Morgan Spurlock (Supersize me, & "30 Days").I think eventually you are going to see a PPV aspect to regular TV, but it might be awhile.
It is similar to Netflix pickup of a new original series for 2012 with Kevin Spacey.
By the time the next Trek TV series is in development I think we will see CBS television license it in the USA or have it on an affiliate cable channel rather than CW. That license will probably be a subscription model of a streaming season pass like a NFL season pass just not $300. More like $20./season and I think maybe with 1 sponsor with 5 commercial slots for the show.
There I said it. I think they would start selling paid season passes while the pilot episode is in preproduction.
Are you willing to pay $20/season for a 5 episode show?
Are you willing to pay $20/season for a 5 episode show?
I'm willing to pay £5 for a feature film on DVD.
Personally, I wouldn't pay $4/episode for anything. I get episodes on Netflix for about $1.50/DVD, and that includes three or four episodes per disk. When people become used to paying $X for something, it's very hard to get them to pay $X+ anything, especially in this shitty economy.
Well said AviTrek.Because pay-to-view would be spun as cutting edge future of TV, while DTV is bottom of the barrel content.
These days on Amazon.com's Video on Demand service offers a 'season pass'.
some shows are $.94 while others are $2.84 per episode.
Let's compare 2 other 60 minute dramas:
iTunes offers Desperate Housewives for $.99 for a 48-hour rental,
$2.99/episode for HD purchase
or $49.99 for a season pass while another show Glee is $57.99 for a season pass.
If the next Trek series were not broadcast on a linear TV channel in the USA I'm guessing the above would cost the same.
Even if it were syndicated-only I think the price would still be the same cost as above.
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Alternatively in the USA only if CBS Television were to make deals with most of the
Top 10 Largest Cable Companies by subscribers
* 1. Comcast Corporation
* 2. Time Warner Cable, Inc.
* 3. Cox Communications, Inc.
* 4. Charter Communications, Inc.
* 5. Cablevision Systems Corporation
* 6. Bright House Networks LLC
* 7. Mediacom Communications Corporation
* 8. Suddenlink Communications
* 9. Insight Communications Company, Inc.
* 10. Cable One, Inc.
DishNetwork
DirectTV
Verizon Fios
AT&Ts U-verse
for on-demand only distribution of the next Trek series
It would then not need a linear TV channel even though CBS owns a number of channels.
All CBS-owned channels could promo the show as video-on-demand only. Sort of like "pay-per-view" but allowing viewers to see the show at any time instead of at a particular time like a pay-per-view boxing match.
I would think a proper Star trek series should be available on regular television. That is where it's home is and has been for decades, and where it should be viewed. But that's just my opinion.
the dream of an À la carte cable service?as I mentioned in the provider for new Trek series as original series download thread the idea
This is all good competition and this may all be bleeding-edge of technology now...but it may become mainstream by the time the next Trek TV series is ready for preproduction.If you’re looking for a real Netflix competitor, you’ll have to wait until later this year when Verizon and Redbox plan to debut their co-branded streaming service.
So now we have two very distinct levels of commerce here: The Networks, that need high ratings to drive up ad costs and their price for syndication, and The Advertisers, who need high ratings for their commercials and need to make the right ad buys for their brands in order to increase the sales of their product. And right now, you only have one currency measurement: Nielsen.
But, times – they are a changin’. Enter everyone’s favorite game-changer: Google. Google’s business is run on revenue primarily from Ads. So, it should be assumed they want to grow more of that business. In order to do this, I presume they are going to need to measure everything the way that Nielsen does, and the way Facebook does, and service the consumer (and particularly their advertising clients) all at the same time.
And here is how they are doing it: Go to Google right now and click on their new privacy policy, which takes effect March 1, 2012.
Every one that uses a Google login for anything will be consolidated into one DNA fingerprint across the world.
Consider their incredible algorithm that changed the way we search and discover content as we know it. Now, link that all to your TV through Google TV.
Google appears to be quite brilliantly focusing their success in ad revenue growth on the ability to give advertisers what they have been longing for since the beginning of time: true insight into consumer behavior (psychographics, specifically), target-ability and scale of audiences – all in one place. Now that is the real threat to Nielsen.
The Networks and The Advertisers (And How Google is Crashing the Party) [part 2]And so far, Nielsen has been the only company that could find a way to get all of these clients to accept one piece of data as their trading currency. That in and of itself is remarkable, and whether that changes any time soon will remain to be seen. Until then, set your DVRs to record. You don’t want to miss the next two years in television.
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