I believe the Landmark OTA stations are for sale, but TWC and the OTA stations are being sold off as separate items.
PTBoardOp94 said:I believe the Landmark OTA stations are for sale, but TWC and the OTA stations are being sold off as separate items.
BRNout said:Thank you for articulating the mindset that has resulted in homogenized radio with little or no local content, with hundreds of TV channels that now offer little or nothing of value and a pattern of steadily decreasing audiences. In other words, it's an awesome description of what it's like inside that little box where all of these folks clearly reside. I'm serious, it's great insight into the small-minded thinking that permeates these places.
To you, these programmers may be "maximizing profit." To me, they are reminiscent of someone struggling their way deeper and deeper into quicksand. Only, in the case of today's big media, these guys celebrate with champaign each time they sink another 6 inches deeper into the sand.
Any ideas of doing TV for fun as well as profit or having pride in what is broadcast have now been labeled as quaint concepts from yesteryear. Social responsibility? Out the window. It's become ALL about profit. Completely. Sure, broadcasters have always been interested in ratings and profit. But, there was another component that had to do with being cognizant of your responsibilities. That's gone now. This generation of decision makers would sell their mother's heart medicine if they could get $20 to buy weed with.
And, the overall ratings show it. Sure, many use various justifications to explain away the bleeding. But facts are facts. Fewer and fewer people are watching TV as we know it. Those who are tend to be less happy with what's on. So, this profit based thinking (i.e. lowest common denominator) isn't working quite as well as your eloquent discussion would lead us to believe. But, I do appreciate the insight because I think that you did a fine job of expressing how the powers that be are thinking.
jal41 said:If News Corporation gets it (unlikely)...TWC stays in Marietta. Quality goes downhill dramatically. "Forecast Earth" and any other program that does not promote a right-wing political agenda will be cancelled. TWC forecasters will have to pledge allegence to the Republican party. Fox News shuts down it's small weather operation in favor of TWC. WAGA Atlanta may move weather operations in with TWC.
imhomerjay said:A pattern of steadily decreasing audiences? Fewer and fewer people are watching TV as we know it? Indeed, facts are facts. The L.A. Times published a story just a couple of weeks ago that mentions the fact that “compared with last May, the number of people using television actually went up, by 2%.” They’re not the only outlet to report those types of findings. A quick search shows that even with this year’s much-ballyhooed writers’ strike, TV viewing held steady or even went up moderately. Looks like people aren’t fleeing the TV in mass…or any…numbers quite yet. That’s what the overall ratings show.
Some of us small-minded people look at the bigger picture (you know, like pointing out how capitalism benefits ordinary people, points that have been conveniently ignored) and accept that times change, audiences change and tastes in entertainment change.
Why don't you ask them if they are as proud as you think they should be?Someone producing any one of the generic, fluff-laden sitcoms and sweet-as-pie family dramas of decades past can be proud of their work, because it was their work.
And what, then, of this alleged lack of social responsibility? Who determines it in a diverse nation of hundreds of millions of people with vastly different backgrounds, lifetyles and experiences? Do we want the government spending our tax money to tell us what private enterprise should be doing to make the world a better place? No thank you; I for one subscribe to the theory that the government that governs least giverns best. That's a subjective opinion of course, and there may be those who feel the government should be legislating such affairs.
That's for PR, not social responsibility. There's no PR boost for reporting real news instead of fluff. Maybe most people want fluff, but there is a SUBSTANTIAL group of citizens who want real news (including people who think they want fluff until they are introduced to real news) and world news. I mentioned before that three news networks are better than one, but when none of them target the substantial hard news crowd - and the same holds in local markets where there are FOUR news operations and they're almost always virtually the same - that's not enough. And it leaves the hard news crowd saying "There must be a better way."Then I thought maybe there really is no social responsibility at all taking place today. Wouldn't that be a troubling fact. So I invested about 15 minutes of time in searching and easily found factual examples of social responsibility alive and well. Lifetime apparently does extensive work on encouraging people to vote and on breast cancer awareness/living with the disease. VH1 does Save the Music. Nickelodeon uses air time to point out the importance of playtime away from the TV, and Cartoon Network does something similar. MTV also has done voter education for younger people for some time.
Indeed the proliferation of channels can lead to smaller slices of the pie for everyone, as the pie itself is not increasing as rapidly as the choices are. That said, TV Land's ratings (as part of the discussion below), year-over-year (May 2008 vs May 2007), also are up by hundreds of thousands of viewers (credit: Marc Berman's daily e-mail newsletter).Morgan Wick said:I suspect the poster you were responding to was referring to individual channels' ratings declining, which comes from the proliferation of so many channels, not homogenization.
But it does result in a tyrrany of the majority (or even plurality) while smaller subcultures get excluded from the TV universe.
Try to convince the working poor, or a 19th-century worker in a factory with no safety regulations, "capitalism benefits ordinary people".
Being in the 21st century, I'll tend to stick to 21st century realities, not a 19th century factory worker.
Recent history has seen more democratic regiemes replacing communist ones than the reverse. Freedom is better than repression. It fosters innovation, it fosters risk-taking, it fosters individual responsibility.Try telling the millions of Americans without health insurance "capitalism benefits ordinary people". Ideal capitalism is just that: every bit the idealist utopia communism was.
Moreover, capitalism and social safety nets are not mutually exclusive. Improving access to health insurance need not mean adopting a socialized system.
Whither those fans had TV Land never been launched? Someone back then had an idea and tried it out. Is there some little-known obligation that once you launch a business, you sign a blood oath never to adapt your business model? That you can't change to reach the audience you want? If that's the case, where is the incentive to be take the gamble and start a business at all? Should a restaurant not be able to introduce new items and discontinue lesser-selling ones because someone in their clientele might like the old menu?Whither the remaining TV Land fans with no access to RTN? Whither the fans of MTV and Weather Channel with no access to the Internet and, in the case of the latter, Weather Plus?
Not everyone's tastes in entertainment change, and when networks change their focus to follow the dollar, those people are among those thinking "There must be a better way."
That on a literal basis not everyone's tastes change is certainly true, but it is the exception, not the rule. Again, please explain how it is a reasonable burden on a business owner to be forbidden from changing their business as their overall audience does experience changes.
As to the weather channel viewers without the Internet, what of the people unable to afford or unwilling to pay for cable or satellite? Is a local broadcaster now to be obligated to carry all weather all the time because someone wants it in an over-the-air format? Sometimes people cannot have or cannot afford something. Life does not hand everyone everything they want gift wrapped.
Every major city I know of has a regional sports network in addition to the ESPN family, and there are specialized channels for the NFL, NBA, NHL (next year, baseball too), golf, tennis, the Fox college sports and soccer channels and others.I will admit that having CNN, MSNBC AND Fox in the news business is a net good over having one news channel, and ditto having Disney, Nick and Cartoon Network over one tween-centered network (even if kids and older teens have been abandoned as all three channels chase the tween dollar). Ditto the HBO, Showtime and Starz families over one movie channel. And it would be a lot better if we had three big sports channels instead of just ESPN being able to dictate the sports pulse.
If a vacuum is left, one that has a large audience looking to see it filled, that lesser network has the opportunity, under capitalism, to try to gain penetration and audience. TV Land didn't burst out of the gate with the distribution it has today.But whenever a specialized network like TV Land chases the dollar, it reduces competition in the field they leave behind. That's not good for your beloved capitalism. When it leaves an outright vacuum, often that vacuum is filled by a network with less penetration, less audience, and less marketing muscle.
If no one enters a field in the first place, is that a better vacuum in your scenario?
Your beloved Republican party, the party of small government since Reagan, just spent eight years causing the size of government to balloon and getting us bogged down in a costly war in Iraq. I'm very curious to find out who you're voting for in 2008.
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Faulty assumptions on your part. I am not a registered Republican and do not consider any party to be 'beloved.' As my signature might suggest, I do not support the Iraq war; nor do I support deficit spending or government intrustions in private matters. Contrary to what you seem to assume about me based on your statement, support of free markets is not the provinceof just one party.
Maybe most people want fluff, but there is a SUBSTANTIAL group of citizens who want real news (including people who think they want fluff until they are introduced to real news) and world news.
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And in a free market society, you (or anyone) are (is) free to pursue that substantial audience if that is what you care to do. Religious broadcasters are one example of having the freedom to pursue a different type of business model (regardless of what you, I or anyone thinks of the content itself). There is no law preventing anyone from offering the programming you advocate. I would like to have it too, but I recognize that freedom, a pesky little concept called the First Ammendment, means it cannot be legislated upon a free enterprise.
I mentioned before that three news networks are better than one, but when none of them target the substantial hard news crowd - and the same holds in local markets where there are FOUR news operations and they're almost always virtually the same - that's not enough. And it leaves the hard news crowd saying "There must be a better way."
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Then offer it. In all seriousness, go for it. Show the fluff operations what they're missing, and before you can blink you'll have more hard news from more sources.
Capitalism's biggest - perhaps root - problem is that it chases what's popular - not what's best.
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And still the question stands: by whose judgement do we determine what's "best?" The FCC? Some new government agency? You? Me? Popular vote? Is that power you want to cede to the government?
Humans have flaws. Any system created by humans will have flaws. However, there would seem to be some reason people continue to try to come to this country, in some cases risking life and limb to do so. Maybe, just maybe, the opportunity to try to make a better life than they can under more socialist systems is one motivating factor. (I'm guessing it's not just to come eat at TGI Fridays.)
Give some credit to the founding fathers. The system of checks and balances, while as noted is not perfect, has helped put a check on unfettered mob rule. Perfect? No. Does it take too long to correct flaws sometimes? Yes.There's a reason there are no true direct democracies in the world today: mob rule almost always leads to folly if not worse. Unfortunately, capitalism is essentially mob rule with politics isolated from it. There must be a better way.
Among all of the flawed systems, though, I'll take capitalism over socialism and communism. Care to share your preference?
I would do the same, if you hadn't said "that government governs best that governs least", and it was government regulations that saved those factory workers.imhomerjay said:Being in the 21st century, I'll tend to stick to 21st century realities, not a 19th century factory worker.
I did say communism was an "idealist utopia". In fact capitalism and communism, for all that they are opposed to each other in the modern world, are scarily similar in their ideal form, and thus suffer the same pitfalls. If you read Marx, his idea of communism was - to express it in metaphor - that a million monkeys on a million typewriters could produce the works of Shakespeare. In other words, under communism everyone would follow their own desires and just so happen to advance the common good in the process. (He believed in a flexible idea of human nature by which, in his ideal future, society would develop such that there would be people who grew food just because they wanted to, that made furniture just because they felt like it, that cleaned latrines just because they decided to, etc.)Recent history has seen more democratic regiemes replacing communist ones than the reverse. Freedom is better than repression. It fosters innovation, it fosters risk-taking, it fosters individual responsibility.Try telling the millions of Americans without health insurance "capitalism benefits ordinary people". Ideal capitalism is just that: every bit the idealist utopia communism was.
But capitalism does, right? (Sorry, couldn't resist.)Life does not hand everyone everything they want gift wrapped.
And all that adds up to a hill of beans because none of them are true competitors. The regional sports networks aren't really national like ESPN, despite FSN's best efforts, and many of them are not as regional as they try to be. (Why isn't FSN a bigger national player, if only for things like Final Score? You would think they'd have a trump card ESPN doesn't in local sports.) Except in college sports, each specialized channel specializes in one sport and is the only channel specialized to that sport, allowing ESPN to effectively divide and conquer. And ALL the specialized channels have disappointing distribution on digital tiers where they attract less attention. Or have you not heard of what's happened with putting NFL games on NFL Network? (Speed is the closest thing I can think of to an exception.)Every major city I know of has a regional sports network in addition to the ESPN family, and there are specialized channels for the NFL, NBA, NHL (next year, baseball too), golf, tennis, the Fox college sports and soccer channels and others.I will admit that having CNN, MSNBC AND Fox in the news business is a net good over having one news channel, and ditto having Disney, Nick and Cartoon Network over one tween-centered network (even if kids and older teens have been abandoned as all three channels chase the tween dollar). Ditto the HBO, Showtime and Starz families over one movie channel. And it would be a lot better if we had three big sports channels instead of just ESPN being able to dictate the sports pulse.
It's the same vacuum. With the possible exception that the previous network cleared the path and may have created the audience. I sometimes wonder if you think that audience tastes exist in a vacuum and networks are created, shift their aim, and fold solely in response to audience demand, as opposed to possibly shifting audience tastes. Did MTV cater to a pre-existing music video audience? I don't think so....But whenever a specialized network like TV Land chases the dollar, it reduces competition in the field they leave behind. That's not good for your beloved capitalism. When it leaves an outright vacuum, often that vacuum is filled by a network with less penetration, less audience, and less marketing muscle.
If no one enters a field in the first place, is that a better vacuum in your scenario?
I admit that I hadn't seen your sig, but you didn't answer the question (which I'm not going to press). And I assumed you were for the Republicans because of your small-government views, not your free-market views.Your beloved Republican party, the party of small government since Reagan, just spent eight years causing the size of government to balloon and getting us bogged down in a costly war in Iraq. I'm very curious to find out who you're voting for in 2008.
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Faulty assumptions on your part. I am not a registered Republican and do not consider any party to be 'beloved.' As my signature might suggest, I do not support the Iraq war; nor do I support deficit spending or government intrustions in private matters. Contrary to what you seem to assume about me based on your statement, support of free markets is not the provinceof just one party.
My point was support for small government isn't "the province of just one party". At this point, it's the province of no party, except maybe the Libertarians.
I'm not saying we should legislate it (although it should be noted that three news organizations hailed as being among the best in the business, including right here at Radio-Info, and miles ahead of the CNN-MSNBC-Fox trio I mentioned earlier, are PBS, BBC, and CBC... all government owned - government-controlled media is only bad in dictatorships and countries without at least a concept of free speech). I'm saying that the fact that no one has pursued that substantial audience, and succeeded on a level not even reaching the CNN-MSNBC-Fox level, but even merely resulting in people having heard of it, is a failure of capitalism. I'm pointing out problems without suggesting solutions.And in a free market society, you (or anyone) are (is) free to pursue that substantial audience if that is what you care to do. Religious broadcasters are one example of having the freedom to pursue a different type of business model (regardless of what you, I or anyone thinks of the content itself). There is no law preventing anyone from offering the programming you advocate. I would like to have it too, but I recognize that freedom, a pesky little concept called the First Ammendment, means it cannot be legislated upon a free enterprise.Maybe most people want fluff, but there is a SUBSTANTIAL group of citizens who want real news (including people who think they want fluff until they are introduced to real news) and world news.
I would, but I'm not a businessman. (And perhaps the problem is that businessmen don't want the American people to hear real news.) That said, I may do just that in the future, but on the Internet. Which probably already exists somewhere.I mentioned before that three news networks are better than one, but when none of them target the substantial hard news crowd - and the same holds in local markets where there are FOUR news operations and they're almost always virtually the same - that's not enough. And it leaves the hard news crowd saying "There must be a better way."
Then offer it. In all seriousness, go for it. Show the fluff operations what they're missing, and before you can blink you'll have more hard news from more sources.
And this is the billion dollar question of all of human history. No matter what we choose - even if we choose an amorphous mass of corporations - we still leave it in the hands of human beings who have proven incapable of governing themselves in any way. Which effectively means we've proven incapable of being properly governed by anyone, even benevolent aliens (or God), since part of what history has shown is that we don't like being governed at all.Capitalism's biggest - perhaps root - problem is that it chases what's popular - not what's best.
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And still the question stands: by whose judgement do we determine what's "best?" The FCC? Some new government agency? You? Me? Popular vote? Is that power you want to cede to the government?
The funny thing is, if everyone were properly educated, any method of governance would work like a charm. Unless cartoonist Scott Adams is right and intelligence is irrelevant to democracy since people will disagree no matter what. In which case we're really screwed.
How about the capitalism-socialism mix in place in Europe, or the capitalism-communism blend in place in China (as much as their economic development is pretty much more because of the sheer size of their population than anything else)?Give some credit to the founding fathers. The system of checks and balances, while as noted is not perfect, has helped put a check on unfettered mob rule. Perfect? No. Does it take too long to correct flaws sometimes? Yes.There's a reason there are no true direct democracies in the world today: mob rule almost always leads to folly if not worse. Unfortunately, capitalism is essentially mob rule with politics isolated from it. There must be a better way.
Among all of the flawed systems, though, I'll take capitalism over socialism and communism. Care to share your preference?
The system of checks and balances has helped put a check on unfettered mob rule, but over the last century plus it has been slowly dissolved and the country has moved in the opposite direction, with the effect that the president is effectively an elected king, incumbent congressmen basically get rubber-stamped back to Washington every two years, and the Supreme Court is filled with activist judges on both sides of the aisle instead of people who know their job is to interpret, not impose their interpretation on the Constitution.
Morgan Wick said:But capitalism does, right? (Sorry, couldn't resist.)Life does not hand everyone everything they want gift wrapped.
Morgan Wick said:And all that adds up to a hill of beans because none of them are true competitors.
The regional sports networks aren't really national like ESPN, despite FSN's best efforts, and many of them are not as regional as they try to be. (Why isn't FSN a bigger national player, if only for things like Final Score? You would think they'd have a trump card ESPN doesn't in local sports.) Except in college sports, each specialized channel specializes in one sport and is the only channel specialized to that sport, allowing ESPN to effectively divide and conquer. And ALL the specialized channels have disappointing distribution on digital tiers where they attract less attention. Or have you not heard of what's happened with putting NFL games on NFL Network? (Speed is the closest thing I can think of to an exception.)
Morgan Wick said:It's the same vacuum. With the possible exception that the previous network cleared the path and may have created the audience. I sometimes wonder if you think that audience tastes exist in a vacuum and networks are created, shift their aim, and fold solely in response to audience demand, as opposed to possibly shifting audience tastes. Did MTV cater to a pre-existing music video audience? I don't think so.
Morgan Wick said:In the 70s and 80s, when MTV was formed, "narrowcasting" was the buzzword in cable. It's... not anymore. I think the main problem some people have with what's happened to TV Land is that it's virtually indistinguishable from a gazillion other channels, and it's not alone (MTV is one of these gazillion other channels). How is that not entering an oversaturated field?
Morgan Wick said:I admit that I hadn't seen your sig, but you didn't answer the question (which I'm not going to press). And I assumed you were for the Republicans because of your small-government views, not your free-market views.
My point was support for small government isn't "the province of just one party". At this point, it's the province of no party, except maybe the Libertarians.
Morgan Wick said:I'm not saying we should legislate it (although it should be noted that three news organizations hailed as being among the best in the business, including right here at Radio-Info, and miles ahead of the CNN-MSNBC-Fox trio I mentioned earlier, are PBS, BBC, and CBC... all government owned - government-controlled media is only bad in dictatorships and countries without at least a concept of free speech). I'm saying that the fact that no one has pursued that substantial audience, and succeeded on a level not even reaching the CNN-MSNBC-Fox level, but even merely resulting in people having heard of it, is a failure of capitalism. I'm pointing out problems without suggesting solutions.
Morgan Wick said:I mentioned before that three news networks are better than one, but when none of them target the substantial hard news crowd - and the same holds in local markets where there are FOUR news operations and they're almost always virtually the same - that's not enough. And it leaves the hard news crowd saying "There must be a better way."
Morgan Wick said:The system of checks and balances has helped put a check on unfettered mob rule, but over the last century plus it has been slowly dissolved and the country has moved in the opposite direction, with the effect that the president is effectively an elected king, incumbent congressmen basically get rubber-stamped back to Washington every two years, and the Supreme Court is filled with activist judges on both sides of the aisle instead of people who know their job is to interpret, not impose their interpretation on the Constitution.
whitfm said:Wow. I just hope that they keep the channel focused on WEATHER and keep from Hollywood-izing the channel. Would not be surprised to see a Weather Channel tie-in with the next natural disaster movie from Universal. Or heck, maybe a weather-based reality show. Don't put it past NBC to do it.