I have been saying that the media blew this story's importance all out of proportion.
So what else is new? How about Ebola? Anyone you know have it? Me neither.
I have been saying that the media blew this story's importance all out of proportion.
So what else is new? How about Ebola? Anyone you know have it? Me neither.
They reported the snowstorm in Buffalo, didn't they?
How is their decision to interrupt the network feed an example of bias?
Media OCD. Ebola. Ferguson. Cosby. ISIS. That's just this week.
Don't these network geniuses realize a substantial portion of the audience DOES NOT WATCH LIVE?
They know EXACTLY how many people watch live, how many watch a few hours later, and a few days later.
Maybe they know in the sales department. The programmers and the newsies either don't know or don't care.
Their bosses know, and consequently they know. They DO care and it gets discussed at programmer conferences around the country all the time.
Whether "they" know or not isn't the primary issue. The issue is what constitutes a reasonable excuse to break-in a published program? I think the answer is simple and so, apparently do the suits. I think you break-in when you have enough of a story which is likely to affect a substantial number of your viewers/listeners. The World Trade Center aircraft crashes certainly qualify as would a severe earthquake. The suits apparently feel any excuse to push their brand is automatically excuse enough. That's why we get break-ins here in Phoenix when it rains (yes, rain in the desert is somewhat rare but not cause for heavy breathing by the weather guessers). Sometimes they actually show video of a puddle!!!! A PUDDLE!!!!! I saw a picture of one in book once but didn't realize they were REAL!!!!
The network newsies insist on having the authority to break in.
Fred, I think we are in ferocious agreement on this.
Good point.
Of course they did, because they saw what I saw - that all the media exposure and "warnings" about lawlessness would entice the very thing that was being warned about. We even had two small demonstrations here in the Phoenix area - please tell me those were justified based upon the events in Ferguson.
This is great example of the media blowing a local news story totally out of perspective. Although many people have been following this story it won't affect very many people outside of the immediate area and it sets no national agenda. By hammering it over and over again the news media did the nation no favors by ensuring people in Ferguson would react to the exposure....and they did.
The local authorities should have declared martial law and locked down the town thereby preventing the lawless element from looting and burning. They had that responsibility to their local people. Let the people demonstrate legally after a cooling off period but not when tempers are running high and the exploiters are seizing the moment to steal and destroy.
The media and local law enforcement let the people down......again. It is shameful.
It reaches the point of being ridiculous. About 10 years ago, some European leader died and somebody at CBS decided people had to know this right now! Only right now was about 10:55. So, they cut into (and blacked out) the conclusion of (I think it was) CSI. This just a few minutes before the start of the late local news. And everyone who had invested nearly an hour in the show didn't get to find out whodunit. And the newsies couldn't understand why people were upset with them.
I remember it was Yassar Arafat and that it had been pretty much known he was on his last days, so it wasn't unexpected or break-in worthy, but at that time of night the Up to the Minute people were in to make that call and did so. It cost the producer of UTTM their job and CBS took away their authority to break in because of that.
As for my experience, I'm thankful to have the TiVo and Windows Media Center apps on my phone to allow me to bump up recording times, along with Hulu Plus, so my only concern was if I had enough minutes and DVR slots added in to cover everything, and the only worry was Scorpion since it's near-impossible to watch that online. Worked fine, albeit adding a bit to my DVR hard drive, and tonight Sleepy Hollow did have an episode replay, so I know how to swerve around all of this. Not many people do though, and I'm the first to admit that. The same a week before with a presidential speech that could easily have been a press release or part of the daily White House press briefing; ABC didn't want to break in, but my local station decided to take it, possibly cutting off Grey's or Scandal. Had to add time there, though since I have two ABC affiliates on HD and other other didn't take it, I could also record it on that channel.
Network shows are all (or almost all) available on-demand and maybe they'd really prefer to have people watch that way since they can disable fast forward capability.