OldNumber7 said:
nomadcowatbk said:
What are the incomes and education of the anti-TV you know (the kill your tv types)? Many on public assistance have cable (though it's included with the rent at a lot of places). The poor don't seem to vocally anti-TV.
This is sort of a different issue. Lots of educated/upscale people can bemoan the glut of junk on TV, but that doesn't mean they don't have cable/satellite and don't find something to watch and enjoy. Lots of poor people will watch whatever is on just to kill time and because it's cheap, escapist entertainment. They don't demand better because junk is good enough. That was true before cable, and it's still true whether the poor have cable or are just watching over the air.
My own viewing behavior has changed in recent years. The TV is on, but I am usually watching with only half an eye because I am online often. I downgraded to the most basic cable tier because I really didn't feel like I'd be missing much (and with the exception of sports, that's been proven true).
Yes. Somebody said earlier in this thread that wealthy educated people claim to watch TV only rarely, and only watch PBS. I don't think that's true - this isn't the 70s. First - PBS sucks these days, and is a shadow of its former self. Second, most of the talked-about dramas these days are not on Masterpiece Theater - they're on premium cable, and even basic cable - F/X, AMC, TNT, etc.
Wealthy educated people are no different that anybody else - they want to watch
Mad Men, Breaking Bad, and
Boardwalk Empire just like the rest of us- these are the buzz-worthy and critically acclaimed shows.
The days of PBS being the only place to see high quality dramas has been over for a couple of decades.