Posted on 02/22/2015 4:02:09 PM PST by SamAdams76
With YouTube to watch, Instagram pictures to take and Facebook, Snapchat and other social media platforms to explore, a generation of young Americans that used to turn to television for entertainment is finding its fix elsewhere. They are watching on-demand services, such as Netflix and Hulu and the BBC iPlayer but turning off linear TV, or tuning in at a set time on a set channel. This migration has been gradual but is starting to show up in the quarterly results of some of the worlds biggest media companies and investors are beginning to notice.
(Excerpt) Read more at ft.com ...
Some are already fighting back. You need to be subscribed to a cable service to stream their shows on demand. Fox news has some special setup within hulu, that if you want to watch some past episodes, it checks your cable/internet service for the TV/internet bundle like FIOS or U-verse.
CBS is going to a subscription model similar to netflix. I dont’ know if it will expand past CBS’s own holdings, but it just may.
Others may wait and see what happens to CBS but I think it will go over and the big 3 ... CBS, NBC and ABC will have a joint venture similar to netflix.
Meanwhile, the streaming providers are now creating their own content with much better quality than broadcast TV. Might even surpass the cable channels which have very good quality material themselves.
This will have the good and unintentional side-effect of lowering the influence of the Hollywood and New York entertainment elite.
I haven’t watched more than a couple of minutes at most of any TV sports since the 80s and really don’t care at all. Give me ME, BBCA, and TCM for channels.
For the most part, I watch Youtube or stuff on DVD and very little network.
After 8 years of no cable TV (internet only), and 4 years of AppleTV & Netflix, I finally relented to my wife’s demands to see the Winter Olympics “the normal way” and switched providers (to get the network drop point moved in the house for free) and got standard cable TV. All we’ve subsequently watched is a few hours a month of The Bachelor[ette], House Hunters et al, and the Super Bowl. 6 months later, the price just jumped >$60/mo. I’ll be dropping into the AT&T store and cutting that service - _again_.
AND I’ll be bugging them about 7Mbps service when 25Mbps is the legal minimum for “broadband” (as of a couple weeks ago, the FCC changed the definition).
I’m with you there. I don’t go to sporting events either, mostly because of the uncomfortable seats, obnoxious crowds, blasting audio, and partly because I’ve ran into some so called friends from TV production land who make really good side money that never deemed me worthy of being in the club, no matter how much I did or how well I did things including running a department by myself at times.
Personally, I stopped watching Fox News even when I had cable. Didn’t miss it much at all. No longer think of it and find it annoying if I am anywhere it is on.
I'm using closed captioning more and more because of that. One tv has it one all the time. I'd have it on the living room tv if the family would let me. Of the hundred channels, we watch less than half a dozen. Tonight, nothing is on. Last night, nothing was on. A growing trend.
We, the wife and I, were paying close to three thousand dollars a year for tv, internet, and phone. In our new contract we threw out some things and are paying substantially less.
There is nothing new with sexual perverts wanting to pervert children. It’s an ancient practice.
I’m using closed captioning more and more because of that.
Me, too. But that pulls you out of the story into the real world. Sort of ruins the magic.
Also, what’s with those ads (for other shows on the same channel) that pop up on the bottom. They take up 1/4 of the screen and move! Sometimes the ads pop up right at the height of action and actually startle me. Just dumb.
“characters mumble so it is difficult to make out what they said”
And talk so fast. I have trouble with so many female voices being shrill and fast.
I start craving “no talking” and a nice action instrumental to calm by nerves.
Fox News, free.
Tons of shows, and movies, no commercials and free! Scroll down...
Great links!
I don’t care much for Hulu or Crackle or similar kinds of sources that imbed commercials, via ROKU.
Nearly every time I have tried to watch something, it jams—after one of the commercial breaks. I try to restart, and it goes back to the very beginning. I try to move it ahead, and it replays commercials and then reverts back to the beginning or just jams and stops.
Thanks, enjoy!
Thank you! Bookmarked both!
We really like the Ooma. Yes, it’s VoIP. We stayed with comcast, preferring to drop the voice and cable and, instead, getting higher speed internet with them. It is working well, so far. We own the Ooma set, and we bought our own modem, so we won’t pay a rental to Comcast.
I think they will eventually have to completely change their money model from $/second air time to $/x # of viewers. Then bill for the actual viewers for the time frame the commercials are running - with 3rd party verification from the website trackers it would be fairly clean. Difficulty will be agreeing on what an individual view is worth to the advertiser - it’ll be less than today, by how much will be the fight.
I’m also really hoping for more competition in broadband internet - I really only have one option in my area and that’s time warner. If I didn’t have to have them for hi speed intent I would definitely switch.
It’s been 6 years since I turned in the cable box and I don’t miss it at all.
I have the internet, a Roku device and Netflix. What else would I need?
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