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To: capt. norm

I think what Fox (Ailes) said was that the ads were already booked and priced before the event (I’m guessing Fox convinced the advertisers to hang in there because they were ‘working’ with Trump to get him to appear - that’s the reason for the three Ailes phone calls to Trump).

So, Fox managed to keep the scheduled spots by wangling until show time and got their money. Where it WILL definitely hurt them is in any future scheduled debate, if any, because the advertisers will demand cheaper rates.

It really all boils down not to how many viewers did last night’s debate get in comparison to the others, because that’s an indicator of what Fox can get away with as to ad pricing.


59 posted on 01/29/2016 3:23:41 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Gaffer
I worked in television for 30+ years, and that ain't how it works. Simply put: todays ratings translate to ad rates they can or can't charge.

Advertisers do not like being fooled. The Fox sales dept. will have a tough time keeping or getting a decent rate from now on..some advertisers may never return...."fool me once". This was a small scale disaster for them.

I have been there and done that and I know what they're going thru.

79 posted on 01/29/2016 7:40:42 AM PST by capt. norm (If you can't make them see the light, let them feel the heat!)
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