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beantownradio25
Guest
Is OTA TV becoming obsolete? How does the future of the Big Three (or four) networks look?
Mark said:Until broadband (and I mean at least 3.0mb download) becomes cheap enough for everyone to get (or available to everyone), OTA TV is safe.
I lost TV when we went digital. I can't get OTA signals, but I do fine with downloading any show I want to see and watching it like that.
TV has figure out something has to be #1. If it is reality or comedy, it doesn't matter, whatever is #1 will pull in the top ad rates.
There is no incentive to produce quality shows. In the old days you had limits on commercials and such which drove companies into that need. Now you don't have that.
Another part is the emergence of venture capital companies. And this isn't only in TV it's now everywhere. Sure we have companies like Hilton which are hoteliers and some TV companies, but most are now run by people that want to make money.
This isn't a rap by any means, but what it means is you don't have a William S Paley who was as concerned by image as he was by profit.
And part of the way to do that will spell the end of broadcast TV as we know it, if you look at certain topics here.Mark said:Until broadband (and I mean at least 3.0mb download) becomes cheap enough for everyone to get (or available to everyone), OTA TV is safe.
M.J. said:As for OTA TV, there are going to be stations shutting down sooner or later. There have already been two shut down in the past year in Canada, and I read on this board that a PBS station in Texas is shutting down this year. I think we will see a scaling back of the number of stations - small markets may end up going down to one or two stations with multiple subchannels delivering all the major networks, and larger markets may end up going down to 4-5 stations.
imhomerjay said:One person's viewing habits don't necesarrily reflect what the vast majority of people are doing. Check the numbers--people watch more TV now than ever before (the number has generally been a straigh upward slope for eons).
imhomerjay said:It counts as watching Internet content, measured separately from TV in the more commonly accepted sense. Both measured, and both increasing. You may not be watching anything over the air/on cable (now THAT'S an irrelevant distinction to most viewers), but hard as it may be to believe, that's not a trend that's about to make ABC, CBS et al fade to black anytime soon.