Not sure whether I did, but maybe I spent less than if I had gotten the store brand. Both were on sale.Hey, he got a great deal on toilet paper, didn't he?
There's some interesting stuff in these inserts.
Not sure whether I did, but maybe I spent less than if I had gotten the store brand. Both were on sale.Hey, he got a great deal on toilet paper, didn't he?
Rather then having to filter new TV show ideas thru the current "major" TV Network "confabs", the TV show creators could just deal with TV station group owners directly.
A PD of WOWO in Fort Wayne in the 1950s talked about that era, when the announcers who said things like "Main Auto Time is 1:30, time to pick up new spark plugs. Now, it's Mary Noble, Backstage Wife", had to become DJs.Well...radio suffered thru the fairly quick shutdown of Network radio when TV came along and many Network radio shows moved to TV.
At that time, there was no guide about what to do when a radio station found itself all alone, without much programming from a national radio Network, yet radio survived and prospered by transitioning to music/news/talk/sports.
Rather then having to filter new TV show ideas thru the current "major" TV Network "confabs", the TV show creators could just deal with TV station group owners directly.
(perhaps I should trademark "TotalEverything247+")
Kirk Bayne
Could they run "The Tonight Show" 10 to 11 (eastern) instead. I am sure there more folks awake at 10 rather than 11:30.
do they even watch it at night any more? maybe they watch it in the morning nowAsk Jay Leno about the Tonight show at 10PM. It was a flop.
Just because people are awake doesn't mean they'll watch.
And those O&O station enjoy considerable income from cable carriage fees... which can be as much as half of a station's income.TV networks provide programming and national news that otherwise wouldn't be available to local stations.
In many cases, the network is the one who funds and creates the programming.
Just as it was with radio back in the day; TV networks owned the stations they broadcasted on. Today you have a combination of non-network-owned network affiliate's with access to a certain network programming, along with the identity and exclusive rights to that programming within their market, and stations that are owned by a network. Those stations are called O&O stations (Owned and Operated). NBCUniversal has several O&O's accross the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Same goes with ABC/Disney. Affiliated stations get their revenue from local breaks in network programming, local newscasts, and open 'paid programming' slots. O&O stations are the network, with all the revenue going to the parent company.
No, TV began right after WW II, and network radio continued into the 70's. The drama shows were gone mostly in the first 10 years of TV, but there was a good deal of content such as breakfast shows and things like Monitor that continued on even longer.Well...radio suffered thru the fairly quick shutdown of Network radio when TV came along and many Network radio shows moved to TV.
Stations converting to music was not caused specifically by the decline of the 4 networks. After WW II in the 40's the number of stations nearly tripled in 10 years and nearly none were network. The thing that made them viable was the decline of the influence of the musicians union and its dictatorial leader, allowing stations to program recorded music all day.At that time, there was no guide about what to do when a radio station found itself all alone, without much programming from a national radio Network, yet radio survived and prospered by transitioning to music/news/talk/sports.
None of whom will want to put up the capital to create a show and get it to run for 4 to 5 seasons... the profit for scripted shows comes from the syndication after-life.Rather then having to filter new TV show ideas thru the current "major" TV Network "confabs", the TV show creators could just deal with TV station group owners directly.
That happens all the time and for years. Movies edited for TV is a good example. There are all sorts of classic movies being carried on 'dot' or diginet stations across the country.One other option is to broadcast TV shows originally produced for pay TV, suitably censored for broadcast TV.
There's also MeTV, Grit, Movies!, Cozi, Drama, Oxygen, and other's doing this on your local station, all watched for free and ad supported.The Comet TV digital TV subchannel has done this with both the New Outer Limits TV show (IIRC, originally produced for the Showtime cable channel) and the new Battlestar Galactica TV show (originally produced for the cable only, ad supported Sci Fi channel).
You just called (the Olympics) an albatross.
I guess what some might consider "exciting viewing" must be subjective, as I'm guessing most would find it quite boring. There are a number of radio talk shows, from local small-market stations to larger nationally syndicated programs which one can watch live via various streaming and other sources. Some nationally syndicated radio shows like Howard Stern or Tom Joyner (now off the air) where they had multiple people conversing in the studio and a fair amount of high profile or celebrity guests made for decent TV, but those weren't just simple single camera video feeds - it was a "production" with graphics, multi-camera shoots and probably some editing. On the flip side, I've seen others which were quite boring and didn't really make for good TV at all. Just a single camera pointed at the host, watching them talk or read items either printed or displayed on their computer screens and talking to people, either callers or show producers or whomever, who were entirely off camera. In the later '90s and early '00s MSNBC used to televise Imus' radio show and even that, to me, was relatively boring and I could only watch so much of it. Networks like C-SPAN also used to do live video feeds of various radio talk programs. I think I found them interesting because I was working in the business, but in general it really didn't make for great or exciting TV that would hold many listeners, get decent ratings or excite advertisers to pay the bills.could be very exciting viewing watching someone sitting (nearly always, except Tom Leykis) and talking into a microphone, sometimes motioning to someone behind the glass.
You seem to be discounting streaming viewership on Peacock. All the major media companies are going all-in on streaming, and not as much on linear TV because they're banking on streaming and subscriptions backstopping the loss of cable viewers. This was the first Olympics NBC was able to test the waters on streaming, and from what I understand it did quite well, including offering up a UHD version to Comcast cable customers.By that, I meant a financial albatross.
It's my understanding NBC is paying about $1 billion in rights fees for each of the five remaining Olympics in their current long-term deal. The network will also spend tens of millions more in production costs.
All that for an event that runs sixteen, seventeen, or maybe eighteen days at most.
With much lower ratings, can NBC get enough revenue from sponsors to at least break even? Running commercials during events exclusively streaming on Peacock (or shown live on Peacock but later on tape over NBC or one of it's sister cable networks) may help the bottom line but I suspect NBC is thinking about whether they can make money from future Olympics.
Radio on TV has been proven to be ultra boring, and a complete loser. Watching some ugly guy wearing headphones in a closeup shot in front of a giant microphone, expressionless, listening to a caller, is like trying to watch paint dry. Not exactly compelling TV.How about "Talk TV" as a replacement for Network TV shows, many of the talk radio shows I listen to have a video feed (Internet/app viewing only, currently), maybe create a digital TV subchannel with these video feeds - could be very exciting viewing watching someone sitting (nearly always, except Tom Leykis) and talking into a microphone, sometimes motioning to someone behind the glass.