What Bothers Me Most TV Station, TV Listings Websites ALL OUTDATED in long Time Emergencies
We have had quite a few emergencies effecting programming in a dozen or more TV markets in the past 2 years. Mostly these have been hurricanes but also in some snow storms and other emergencies of this nature.
TV stations of course preempt schedules which is fine. In Hurricane Katrina for example most could not even watch the stations anyway. Most were either out of the market anyway due to evacuating and if they were in the markets they had no electricity to watch TV anyway. But some parts of most markets where a hurricane hits are only moderately affected. They still have power, can still watch the stations, and have little damage around them though tthey are within an hours drive of someplace badly affected.
The problem I see is that station websites are usually obsolete and include regular programming schedules rather than the preemptions airing. These websites are constantly being worked on so news can be seen on them. So why cant a station submit their schedule of programming.
Hypothetical situation:
Say a severe storm hits Tampa. CBS 10 WTSP goes to extra coverage 4 dyas before with news 5 or 10 minutes longer and 5 minute updates every hour...put that on the website and send the schedule to Yahoo TV and ZapZit, TV Guide, etc.
Then 48 hours before wall to wall coverage occurs over Channel 10. Then the storm hits and power stays on at the stations. Say its a Thursday and by 8 PM things are back to normal enough to resume programming. But they have an extra 30 minute newscast going to Midnight. At Midnight they run Letterman, 1 AM LAte late Show, 2 AM Young & The Restless, 3 AM as The World Turns, 4 AM whatever 4 PM syndicated show they missed, but no Guiding light or Bold & Beautiful. They should list their shows on schedule.
But chances are regular programming would be indicated on the station websites and on the TV listing web pages.
In New Orleans and Baton Rouge it took a week to reflect changes in the listings. Houston still shows on station websites that regular shows are airing as listed but I know different.
So why can't stations keep viewers in the loop through their websites? They update news constantly.
We have had quite a few emergencies effecting programming in a dozen or more TV markets in the past 2 years. Mostly these have been hurricanes but also in some snow storms and other emergencies of this nature.
TV stations of course preempt schedules which is fine. In Hurricane Katrina for example most could not even watch the stations anyway. Most were either out of the market anyway due to evacuating and if they were in the markets they had no electricity to watch TV anyway. But some parts of most markets where a hurricane hits are only moderately affected. They still have power, can still watch the stations, and have little damage around them though tthey are within an hours drive of someplace badly affected.
The problem I see is that station websites are usually obsolete and include regular programming schedules rather than the preemptions airing. These websites are constantly being worked on so news can be seen on them. So why cant a station submit their schedule of programming.
Hypothetical situation:
Say a severe storm hits Tampa. CBS 10 WTSP goes to extra coverage 4 dyas before with news 5 or 10 minutes longer and 5 minute updates every hour...put that on the website and send the schedule to Yahoo TV and ZapZit, TV Guide, etc.
Then 48 hours before wall to wall coverage occurs over Channel 10. Then the storm hits and power stays on at the stations. Say its a Thursday and by 8 PM things are back to normal enough to resume programming. But they have an extra 30 minute newscast going to Midnight. At Midnight they run Letterman, 1 AM LAte late Show, 2 AM Young & The Restless, 3 AM as The World Turns, 4 AM whatever 4 PM syndicated show they missed, but no Guiding light or Bold & Beautiful. They should list their shows on schedule.
But chances are regular programming would be indicated on the station websites and on the TV listing web pages.
In New Orleans and Baton Rouge it took a week to reflect changes in the listings. Houston still shows on station websites that regular shows are airing as listed but I know different.
So why can't stations keep viewers in the loop through their websites? They update news constantly.