And another thing, are you insinuating that there's a poster on an internet messageboard who has a morality double standard? #who-woulda-thunk-it
Yes. You. Now give it up. You've already lost.
And another thing, are you insinuating that there's a poster on an internet messageboard who has a morality double standard? #who-woulda-thunk-it
Yes. You. Now give it up. You've already lost.
Ahhh, the ol' "I know you are, but what am I" response.
Your disposition belies your mentality.
The more successful you are at playing the game, the stronger you'll defend the game.
Not exactly. The game is the game. Our clients accept the numbers from what they feel is an unbiased source, so we live with it.
You've just confirmed what I wrote.
Though once again, you're obsessed with "feelings" instead of "thoughts". That's very revealing about how your mind works.
You obviously are reading what you want to read, not what is actually there. If "feelings" bothers you, you can replace is with this:
Our clients accept the numbers from what they THINK is an unbiased source, so we live with it.
Better?
Or how about this:
Our clients accept the numbers from what they KNOW is an unbiased source, so we live with it.
Think is correct. Know is not.
So, you're agreeing that the ratings game is fixed,
Sure it is. Either David or I can produce piles of data that will PROVE their numbers are factually correct. Both David & I have flown to the Arbitron headquarters to actually LOOK at diaries written by listeners. We have seen the untouched words from actual people. So as scientists (and yes I am a scientist), we can say that we KNOW it is an unbiased source.
Depends on what you mean by "fixed." Because the people at Arbitron/Nielsen have absolutely no reason to fake or make up numbers. They get paid regardless of the results.
It proves that you rely on it being accurate whether it is or not. And as long as no one else questions it, it will never be challenged.
Who said anything about "faking"? They came up with a system that their customers accept. They get paid regardless of whether the numbers are genuinely accurate or not. They have no real competitors, so whatever they sell, their customers either buy or do without.
Tom is not beating anyone.
Look at it this way. If you have a thermometer that isn't accurate, producing piles of temperature readings taken with that inaccurate thermometer do not prove it is correct. It proves that you rely on it being accurate whether it is or not. And as long as no one else questions it, it will never be challenged.
Who said anything about "faking"? They came up with a system that their customers accept.
They get paid regardless of whether the numbers are genuinely accurate or not. They have no real competitors, so whatever they sell, their customers either buy or do without.
Exactly. Pandora was using the same misinformation to say it's beating local radio, and it's not.
A bit different - Pandora has 2 BILLION listening hours per month. Does it exactly translate? No. But it's a bit foolish to assume they aren't a real player.
Tom is just throwing out the biggest number he has, which isn't very impressive in the digital world.
For a podcast they're not bad. Someone estimated a cume of about 15,000. That's not bad if they're paying to listen.
Even if he charged only 99 cents per month, that would still translate into $180K per year. Better than most major market non-drivetime gigs.