J
John-Summers
Guest
I drive 45 minutes home from work every day and punch around to a variety of stations and formats, so this could be anyone at any station. I'm not going to say who in particular I heard.
Yesterday I punched into an announcer with no interest in his voice rendering the night's TV grid. "Tonight at 8 on NBC it's...then at 8:30 it's...followed by (whatever) at 9..." It was like a 60 second "live" commercial. Actually it was longer. Then he went into a stop set. He told me nothing about the shows, just that they were going to be on. It almost sounds like some idiot consultant told him that he had to do this because people are interested in what is on TV.
Memo to consultants: People are not interested in this. They know when their favorite shows are on and don't care what else in on. If they're like me, they watch them on Hulu anyway, on their own time. And why tell people to watch TV anyway. Isn't TV "competition?"
I mention this because I hear this all the time, on morning shows and afternoon shows, a bland rendering of the TV grid. I've always heard that if you don't have something interesting, entertaining or informative to say (and face it, often you don't) you should keep it brief, shut up and play the music or get into your stop set.
Going back to my question: When did someone decide that this is "content," and why?
Yesterday I punched into an announcer with no interest in his voice rendering the night's TV grid. "Tonight at 8 on NBC it's...then at 8:30 it's...followed by (whatever) at 9..." It was like a 60 second "live" commercial. Actually it was longer. Then he went into a stop set. He told me nothing about the shows, just that they were going to be on. It almost sounds like some idiot consultant told him that he had to do this because people are interested in what is on TV.
Memo to consultants: People are not interested in this. They know when their favorite shows are on and don't care what else in on. If they're like me, they watch them on Hulu anyway, on their own time. And why tell people to watch TV anyway. Isn't TV "competition?"
I mention this because I hear this all the time, on morning shows and afternoon shows, a bland rendering of the TV grid. I've always heard that if you don't have something interesting, entertaining or informative to say (and face it, often you don't) you should keep it brief, shut up and play the music or get into your stop set.
Going back to my question: When did someone decide that this is "content," and why?