K.M. Richards
Program Director, The Eighties Channel™
In light of that quote, I will reiterate what I have said a few times before in various threads: The broadcasters are operating under some delusion that consumers will pay for the programming they presently receive free of charge as advertiser-supported services. And they are, for the most part, wrong.
There might -- might -- be a market for the existing "big network" shows to be receivable and viewed free of commercials, as a secondary pay-TV service alongside the extant free-to-air commercial-supported network service. But even that market has probably already adopted streaming, or (like myself) have a DVR that can skip past the commercial breaks ... I am one of those clever ones who figured out how to program a TiVo remote to jump ahead in 30-second increments like the old ReplayTV ones did, so I likely wouldn't be a subscriber so long as I can still receive what I do now.
In fact, that's really all I am asking for: Innovate all you want, but leave what I already get in place. I suspect the majority of OTA viewers have similar POVs.
There might -- might -- be a market for the existing "big network" shows to be receivable and viewed free of commercials, as a secondary pay-TV service alongside the extant free-to-air commercial-supported network service. But even that market has probably already adopted streaming, or (like myself) have a DVR that can skip past the commercial breaks ... I am one of those clever ones who figured out how to program a TiVo remote to jump ahead in 30-second increments like the old ReplayTV ones did, so I likely wouldn't be a subscriber so long as I can still receive what I do now.
In fact, that's really all I am asking for: Innovate all you want, but leave what I already get in place. I suspect the majority of OTA viewers have similar POVs.