What's the big deal? The first infomercial aired in 1922. Money is money. Cable TV between 2AM and 5AM is pretty much all infomercials.
I can't believe I'm actually agreeing with TheBigA about this. In a forum that's overly spammed with ridiculous threads that are nothing more than stupid lists, this is one of the worst. And that's saying something.
I like this topic; it's very educational for folks who may be unaware that they are not the only ones living with local TV stations affiliated with NBC, ABC, CBS, and FOX that would broadcast paid commercial programming on weekdays during the daytime.
As I asked in another thread, you are aware, are you not, that no network provides content 24/7, and that all stations are on their own to fill up the hours when the network they are affiliated with are not providing programming, right?...
And just how many idiots do you think are (1) upset that their local OTA station airs infomercials while they're at work in the daytime and aren't watching TV anyway...
...yet would somehow (2) find it "educational" to know that strangers in other cities also have infomercials on their local TV stations, even though they cannot actually see the content on those stations?...
...After all, though some folks might stream out-of-town radio stations for God-knows-what reason, no one can stream an out-of-town network affiliate.
WDIV has expanded it's Noon news out to 1 hour effective today. This replaces paid programming which had been running for a couple months after they took off a rerun of Jeopardy!.
The report about WDIV-TV in the previous message reminded me of the time WPMI-TV in the Mobile, Alabama-Pensacola, Florida TV market usually had paid commercial programming shortly after their local 12:00 p.m. news program between 12:30 p.m. and 1:00 p.m. from Monday through Friday and the news program's timeslot being expanded from 30 minutes to 60 minutes afterwards.
^I believe you were using sarcasm against me.
My TV 9 as the station is known does not show infomercials weekdays, unless you count the Kenneth Copeland and Joyce Meyers Ministires as infomercials.
In these markets where we're discussing infomercials in daytime slots, does anyone on this board have access to ratings? I'm curious whether these shows register any measurable audience and how much they hurt the audience of the following program, if at all. (To do that, we'd need to compare the ratings in the same time slots in a market that does not have infomercials in the same time slots.)
Also, look at the schedules for Peoria's Big 4. You can't get through part of the morning without seeing an infomercial.
FOX: 6-7am, 7:30-9am
CBS: 9-10am
NBC: 11-11:30am
ABC: 11:30am-Noon
Compare that to Champaign-Springfield's Big 4, where the only "infomercials" seen in the morning are for evangelists Kenneth Copeland and James Robison at 6am on FOX.
From the "Cursed TV Markets" thread: