> No, I do not. I tend to give average viewers a lot more
> credit for being smart than the other online media geeks do.
> Viewers are resiliant. They do not build true loyalties to
> TV stations. They go where their favourite shows are and
> watch them. Changing the *name* of a TV station means
> nothing. If anything, the more detrimental thing that could
> happen to a TV station is changing where it lives on the
> cable dial. *That's* how most people associate with their
> channels (and trust me... I know... I worked for nearly half
> a decade in cable.) The names mean nothing. If the shows
> are on as they always have been, the viewer will find them
> and watch.
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That's not true. The New PL (CFPL-TV London) built a very strong local brand over the past few years, and they were very well known and talked about among the general public - not just us online media geeks. They dumped it and are now A(lberta) Channel. People are still calling the station Channel 10 or TV-London though. People ARE resistant to change. The fact that the Ottawa Sun had an article about CJOH rebranding to CTV Ottawa shows that there are a lot of people that care about this. People outside the online media geek world still call CJOH's newscast "Newsline", and CFTO's newscast "World Beat News".
Yes, people do associate programs with cable channels - even I do. However, with increasing satellite penetration, there needs to be a way for people to differentiate between all the CTV stations shown. "CTV Southwestern Ontario" doesn't cut it, because it is such a long and cumbersome name, compared with the simple CKCO.
> As for consolidated brands in the States... it hasn't worked
> because it's never been aggressively implemented. The
> better example is the UK. Most people today couldn't give a
> care if they're watching Westcountry, or Central, or Tyne
> Tees... they're watching ITV (which has consolidated its
> brand save for two hold outs.) IMHO, the only losers in the
> ITV network branding are the stations who've chosen to hold
> the line with local identities, not getting any benefit from
> potential national advertising that's taking place.
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Well, yes it has been tried, and it has failed. WTXF (Fox) in Philadelphia (formerly WTAF) was known as TV-29 in the early 80s, then became Fox 29. Around 1995 they became known as "FOX Philadelphia". I think it was 2001 when they brought back the Fox 29 moniker.
I believe there was also an ABC affiliate in Florida that tried to become known as just "ABC", but again the station ditched the brand after several years.
You see, in all these cases, there must be a way of differentiating a station in one region from a station in another region. If you live in Belleville, you get CFTO and CJOH on cable. If you're new to Belleville, how do you know which station to watch? Do you watch CTV or CTV? If you know that one station is CJOH broadcasting from Deseronto (rebroadcasting Ottawa), then it's pretty simple.<P ID="signature">______________
From WNBC-TV New York this is Liiiiive at Fiiiiive!</P>