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How do you like that, DVRs didn’t kill the television business after all
  • 2 Comments
by Nicholas Deleon on November 3, 2009

Grunge vintage television

Here’s a story I first heard on Figure 4 Daily last night while farming for mageweave (no, I’m not lying): not only have DVRs not ruined the TV businesses, as we had been led to believe for so many years, but it turns out that the delayed viewings, and more accurate ratings, have given the networks exactly what they’ve always wanted. That, of course, is the opportunity to squeeze more money out of their advertisers.

Some history: television networks had sued ReplayTV, once Tivo’s direct competitor before people even knew what “DVR” stood for, in 2001 because they felt its DVRs would let people skip commercials. There was also “share” function, which is bonkers considering the state of broadband in 2001.

The point is that the television networks hated DVRs since they thought people would record all this content (for free!), then skip the commercials. If people skipped the commercials then advertisers would become sad, and no longer hand over millions of dollars to the television networks for the privilege of airing commercials during The Office or some other hunk of junk.

Nielsen then stepped in and changed the way it measures viewership to include DVR viewings. The thing is, when you examine the data it turns out that people totally don’t skip commercials while watching DVR’d content.

TV, research shows, is still primarily a passive medium, That is, you’re sitting on your couch just watching. You’re not picking up your remote control to change the channel, you’re not pressing fast-forward to skip any commercials. TV = sitting down and not lifting a finger, it seems.

So the television networks were freaking out over nothing. Now they can turn to their advertisers: “See, even more people watch this junk then we ever thought! Pay us, please.”

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  • Well that certainly doesn’t count for everyone. I absolutely skip commercials every time I watch recorded programs.

    Even if Im home and could watch the program live I let it record and then watch it so that I do not have to watch useless commercials.

  • I skip commercials as well. If home I let the program record for 25…for an hour program, then I start watching it.

    One way the networks can fix this is if they make all programs on demand. Meaning changing they’re whole system. Instead of us waiting to watch Heroes at 9pm on NBC we can just go to NBC on our set top boxes and pick Heroes. They can make it so we have to watch the commercials by doing this and making it so you can’t record the programs. Change the whole business model of how we view television and we’ll watch the commercials. Sure it’ll cost a lot to convert stations but they don’t want us to skip commercials so maybe it’ll be worth it for them.

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