TV priorities
Ever wonder why TV stations show so much cheap crap, cut good shows to ribbons to fit more, and screw around with the screening times and dates?
This is why:
A friend told me about the time he and a lot of people from a science fiction club took a petition to channel 9 to protest about their appalling treatment of science fiction shows. The security guard refused to let them pass, so my friend went to a phone and rang someone in charge to let them know the security guard wouldn't let them in to deliver important viewer feedback to the station. The executive was not impressed. His reply was curt. "Look, we have enough problems running a TV station without worrying about what the viewers want" and hung up.
People often joke about TV stations not caring about their viewers. Well, guess what... it's actually true.
This is why:
A friend told me about the time he and a lot of people from a science fiction club took a petition to channel 9 to protest about their appalling treatment of science fiction shows. The security guard refused to let them pass, so my friend went to a phone and rang someone in charge to let them know the security guard wouldn't let them in to deliver important viewer feedback to the station. The executive was not impressed. His reply was curt. "Look, we have enough problems running a TV station without worrying about what the viewers want" and hung up.
People often joke about TV stations not caring about their viewers. Well, guess what... it's actually true.
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I believe they are gradually putting themselves out of business. It won't be noticeable for a little while yet. It will appear to happen suddenly, but I think it has already begun.
It is a bit like the passenger pigeon. It was an incredibly plentiful bird. Flocks of them numbered in their millions. They darkened the sky when they flew over. If anybody warned that people were going to render them extinct people would have laughed. But they no longer live. We did kill them off.
The TV stations don't care about their viewers. The idea that they will lose all their audience seems absurd to them, but watch over the next decade or two. It will happen... mark my words. They are building up a great store of antipathy in their viewers. When the next technology comes along everybody will switch to that in the space of just a year or two and the gigantic TV networks will become unimportant quite suddenly.
What technology could possibly do that?
Why, distribution over the net of course. It has already begun in a small way. Expect to see it hot up in the next few years. First mpeg compression opened up the way. More recently DivX compression made it leap forward. Next, watch what happens when machinima hits full stride.