...and the results are mixed:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/ar...lagging.php?nid=2228&source=title&rid=5458374
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/ar...lagging.php?nid=2228&source=title&rid=5458374
landtuna said:I'm always amazed at stories such as this.
The major shortcoming of Leno's new show, according to affiliates, is not capturing an audience and maintaining them into the local news. Yet when interviewing viewers as to their preferences in local news most people seem to be very definitive; that is, they greatly prefer one station over another. This seems to fly in the face of objections to Leno.
I mean, virtually every TV these days has a remote. Are the pollsters saying the American fist is not strong or motivated enough to push a button to change from Leno to their preferred local news?
And what I've always wondered is, how do you sell that to advertisers? ???BRNout said:...broadcasters are counting on getting ratings from TVs left on the same channel after viewers have jumped into the shower, left to walk the dog or fallen asleep...
Toledo Eleven said:The stations always promote their news in prime time (stay tuned for...coming up at 11) and if no one sees the promos, no one stays tuned.
landtuna said:Are the pollsters saying the American fist is not strong or motivated enough to push a button to change from Leno to their preferred local news?
M.J. said:The irony in the article is that the CEO of Post-Newsweek doesn't think NBC's experiment is working, and yet one of Post-Newsweek's two NBC affiliates is WDIV, which hasn't seen much of any impact on ratings at 11.
Mark said:landtuna said:Are the pollsters saying the American fist is not strong or motivated enough to push a button to change from Leno to their preferred local news?
I think this is exactly what they're saying. News is pretty much interchangeable. In terms of content, if I watch the local news on CBS, NBC, or ABC, I get the same stories, with the order varied, but the same stories. So why bother changing stations unless I truly hate the anchor people.
Not here in Denver (At least not as much)M.J. said:Someone said that many viewers are firmly committed to a particular station for local news, but I think that might be less true today than in the past. Years ago viewers wanted to see certain personalities deliver their news, weather, or sports - well-known and well-liked names such as Bill Kurtis, Dick Goddard, Bill Bonds, Roger Grimsby, Irv Weinstein, Jack Hines, and so forth - and as newscasts become less distinct from their competitors in content, and key personalities retire or otherwise move on, I would say there will be less loyalty to stations.