Author Archives: Marshall Poison

Broadcast TV is Resembling Cable TV More and More

More TV – One thing I have noticed
is that broadcast TV is resembling cable TV more and more. More reruns,
more re-use.

The local NBC affiliate has a second station that reshows the
nightly news broadcasts on a different schedule, as well as re-showing other
of their locally produced content along side of various syndicated and paid
programming (including what amount to Today show re-runs form decades past).

The local FOX station shows reruns of Seahawks football games on a second
chanel (or was it the WB, which they also own) .

Now, I thought consumers were supposed to see some benefit from allowing companies to own more than
station in a given market (maybe no such promises were made), but I’m not
sure I see what the benefits are and how they justify using scarce RF spectrum
to save people the trouble of learning how to program their VCRs.

Slashdot | How Could TV Survive Without Commercials?

Slashdot | How Could TV Survive Without Commercials?

I was happy to run across this post on Slashdot. Wondering about what the future might hold for TV if technology like Tivo kills commercial television. It has sparked a major discussion, with more than 500 posts.

I have only started skimming them, but people make some good points and raise some intersting issues.

A few weeks ago, after this year’s emmy nominations were announced, I was thinking about what similarities their might be between HBO today, with its substantial slate of original programming, and the BBC (especially in their golden age, whenever that was). One of the comments on Slashdot got me thinking about it again

Both HBO and the BBC have the benefit of not having their revenue tied directly to their programming. HBO gets money from their subscribers, no matter what the subscribers actually watch. The BBC are major benificiaries of britan’s TV set tax, paid by TV set owners every year, regardless of what they watch.

HBO has to worry, in aggregate, about providing programming that attracts new subscribers and keeps existing subscribers, but they have considerable latitude in achieving this goal. In theory, one or two strong programs could satisfy most of their customers, leaving them with ample room to develop new shows.

What I thought was most striking is that HBO seems to be producing programming in a similar pattern to the BBC. Or rather, I should say, that some of HBOs programming patterns resemble the BBCs. Rather than booking 20-30 shows/ year (a very rough estimate) for a successful series like the Sopranos, HBO only books a dozen shows or so, allowing them to put more money into each episode. Beyond that a “season” of a show may not be produced every year. HBO, I think, is averaging over 14 months between each new season of the Sopranos. Then, rather than fill their schedule with first run programming, they repeat espisodes more often. In a given year, I would guess that a given episode of the Sopranos is probably shown 5-10 times, vs 1 or two times for a typical network drama like ER. This seems like a smart bet to me. I don’t have cable, or HBO, but I have been buying the Sopranos on DVD. I am quite happy to watch the episodes 2-3 times, which is more than I can say about most any network dramas.

I don’t know exactly what the BBC does, but it seems that many of the shows that make it to the US are on a similar model. This also creates the opportunity to create mini-series, a genere that has all but died on American TV.

Highlighting Searchterms on Blogpages

Mike’s Blog

Interesting, looks like webmasterworld.com extract the keyword from google’s referer url and highlight it.

Very cool idea!!!!!!!!

Canned Soybeans are VILE

Now I know why Soybeans aren’t a popular food for humans in their most natural form. Canned soybeans are vile. They are mooshy and bland and covered in gelatinous goo that doesn’t seem to liquefy when it gets warm.

I like tofu, I love cooked fresh soybeans, but I don’t think I’ll be trying to cook the dried beans.

My blogging for the last 6 months

My blogging for the last ~6 months can be found on http://www.livejournal.com/~geekfun and, more recently http://blogs.salon.com/0001108

I am back to using Blogger

I am back to using blogger, at least for now. I had been using Livejournal for a while, because I liked that it integrated audience comments, but the server can be slow and I just feel out of place there.

I used Userland’s radio on Blogs.salon.com for a while. I liked it, but right now, I don’t really feel like paying $40/year for it. Plus, Salon’s blog experiment seems to be dying off after an initial surge. I wish them well, and I may go back, but not right now.

So, for now, I am back to blogger. I have decided I don’t care all that much about comments right now. At some point, I’ll probably move to something else, but not right away.

Update: This post has been migrated from blogger, to Movable Type, to WordPress, where it currently lives.