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Watched "The Sixth Sense" on commercial TV last night.
Viewing (dis)pleasure:
9 1/2 minutes of film
7 minutes of ad (nauseum)
Rinse and Repeat
Recommendation:
45 seconds of film
30 seconds of ad (nauseum)
Rinse and Repeat
Perhaps this?
http://www.halfbake...cial_20TV_20Station all - commercial tv station [snarfyguy, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
ReplayTV
http://www.replaytv...ytv5000/default.asp automatically skips commercials [krelnik, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
Network Tries to Foil Ad Skipping (NY Times)
http://www.nytimes....5062&partner=GOOGLE New cable network building its entire program format around the idea that everyone is skipping the ads [krelnik, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
[link]
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One word: CA BLE. I guess you already got that though. There's a couple of movie channels in the 90s which never show commercials. But if that was on Superstation, man, I feel your pain. |
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I recommend not watching The Sixth Sense, but that's just me.
Maybe they could just flash words at the bottom of the screen the entire movie, subliminally convincing you to drink Coke and update your life insurance coverage. |
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I love my ReplayTV DVR. The Commercial Advance feature quite nicely solves this problem, just don't watch anything "live." |
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These other options/devices are known to exist - the idea proposes a seesaw battle between publicity for bite-size pieces and bite-size pieces of published film. |
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Learn to love your commercials. They are after all the way of life we're defending against the no-art crowd from round Tora Bora way. |
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Yes, Jamie Kellner of Turner Broadcasting said that. The premise of the accusation is that you get TV for free because of advertising. This is ironic because all of the stations that Turner owns are distributed by cable/satellite. With this type of distribution, there is a per-subscriber fee that is bundled into your cable/satellite bill that goes straight back to Turner (usually a few pennies per subscriber per month per channel). So Kellner's channels are never free. |
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//maximum...in any one hour is 12 minutes// |
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Wow, we would love that here in the U.S. The big networks are up to about 16 minutes per hour now. This has gradually increased over the years, back in the 1960's about 9 minutes per hour was more common, which means that reruns of classic shows are usually horribly cut-up to fit the current standard. |
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And yet they look for more, so there are product placements within shows, end-credit sequences removed or edited so that a promo can be edged in, and on-screen "banner ads" at various spots during sports events. It is truly getting ridiculous. |
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And they wonder why we look for ways to avoid ads? |
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It's a psychological "arms race". The target markets are fragmented, consumers are much more canny and sophisticated than they were. Certain "highly desireable" buyer groups can be VERY hard to reach .... |
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//The big networks are up to about 16 minutes per hour now// More than that when big flicks air. For example - using the 7:9.5 ratio shown in the Sixth Sense broadcast, *Behold!* 25 1/2 minutes of Commercials aired for every 34 1/2 minutes of film. |
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watch Memento with ads. that would really do your head in. |
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Po, I did. Was kind of getting the Ins and Outs at the same time. Man I'm so glad that movie made no sense to your either. |
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