2012 TV and Radio News Staffing and Profitability Survey

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From RTDNA on July 10 – 

The latest RTDNA/Hofstra University Annual Survey found that TV news staffing soared in 2011 – adding 1,131 jobs – to reach total full time employment of 27,653.

That’s a gain of 4.3% over last year and the highest average full time TV news staff ever.  However, overall, it puts 2011 in second place for total TV news employment.  First place is still held by year 2000.  The average station newsroom employment then was lower than today, but more stations originated local news.

 

Read the full post on RTDNA

Confidence in TV news at all-time low

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Photo credit: chrisinplymouth (Creative Commons)

By DYLAN BYERS on Politico, July 10 – 

Americans’ confidence in television news has hit an all-time low, according to a new survey by Gallup.

Twenty-one percent of the 1,004 adults polled said they had “a great deal” or “a lot” of confidence in television news media, continuing a steady decline from the 46 percent who expressed confidence in television media in 1993.

Meanwhile, just 25 percent of those polled expressed confidence in newspapers, the second-lowest rating since 1973 and less than half of the 51-percent peak in 1979.

 

Read the full article on Politico

 

 

DirecTV could deploy ad skip technology

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By Liana B. Baker and Yinka Adegoke on Reuters, June 12 – 

DirecTV Group (DTV.O), the largest U.S. satellite TV operator, could deploy technology that would enable its millions of subscribers to automatically skip television advertising, its top executive said on Monday.

Mike White, chief executive of DirecTV, said his company bought rights to the technology from a company called Replay TV nearly five years ago but has not seen any need to make it available to customers.

Read the full post on Reuters

Tracking Viewers From TV to Computer to Smartphone

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By STUART ELLIOTT on The New York Times, June 11 – 

A consortium of media owners, advertisers and media agencies says it is pleased with the results of two pilot tests, commissioned more than a year ago, that are intended to help improve and modernize the way video viewership habits are measured — all the better to cash in on those new habits.

The consortium, which was formed in 2009 and is known as the Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement, or CIMM, on Tuesday is to present  the results of the tests, conducted separately by two big media measurement firms, Arbitron and comScore.

Read the full post on The New York Times

Why ‘Advanced’ TV Ads Haven’t Spawned a Marketing Utopia

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By  on AdAge, April 16 – 

That I live in a city (New York) where 54% of residents are car-free means chances are good that I don’t own a vehicle. The odds increase with my address in Manhattan, a borough where by some counts about 75% go without wheels, and positively soar in my parking spot-desolate ZIP code.

The author sees lots of TV ads for cars — in Manhattan.

So it’s a safe bet that all the auto ads dominating commercial pods I see nightly aren’t safe bets at all. Despite being nowhere near a sales funnel that might eventually deposit me behind the wheel, I am besieged by car and car-related pitches. I see Lincoln pitchman John Slattery more often than I see my friends, and the Jay-Z flourish announcing that Chrysler 300 spot loops endlessly in my mind. Don’t even get me started on Progressive ‘s Flo and the Geico Gecko.

Read the full post on AdAge

 

How People Watch TV, Online and Off

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By Eric Schonfeld on TechCrunch, Jan. 8, 2011 – 

“At this point, video is just a regular part of the web. But how is it gaining on regular TV watching. Just in terms of audience reach, Nielsen estimates that almost 145 million people watch video online in the U.S., compared to about 290 million who watch traditional TV. So the penetration of online video is already about half of the overall TV-watching population.

Yet for all the video people watch on the web, it is still a tiny fraction of how much they watch on TV in terms of time spent. In a report put out yesterday on the State of the Media summarizing 2011 data, Nielsen estimates Americans spend an average of 32 hours and 47 minutes a week watching traditional TV. They only spend an average of 3 hours and 58 minutes a week on the Internet, and only 27 minutes a week watching video online. All those billions of videos watched online still only represent 1.4 percent of the time spent watching traditional TV.”

Read the full article on TechCrunch

Comment on an upcoming FCC rule change for broadcasters

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The FCC is currently accepting opinions on a proposed rule change that would require TV broadcasters to post political advertising information from their network on their website. Currently, broadcasters are only required to have a physical file documenting the advertising that politicians have paid for on their channel. The new ruling would require this information to be posted online for everyone to access.

The deadline for comments is January 17.

Comment on the proposed rule change here:  http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/upload/display?z=xkixg  (Enter proceeding number 00-168)

View current comments here: http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/comment_search/input?z=gjx0v  (Enter proceeding number 00-168)

Read an article related to the ruling on the CJR site: http://www.cjr.org/swing_states_project/local_tv_news_meet_the_internet.php

 

 

From WSJ: Twitter Looks to TV, Media Partnerships for Growth

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By Amir Efrati on WSJ, Nov. 8 2011 

Twitter is becoming a big star on TV–and now the online-messaging service wants to shine even brighter.

A growing number of TV shows such as Fox’s “Glee” and PBS’s “Nova” regularly direct their viewers to Twitter in order to view and broadcast short messages, called tweets, about the shows.

Some live shows, such as NBC’s “The Voice,” take it a step further by displaying tweets by viewers on the air, thanks to companies such as Mass Relevance, which helps find the most relevant tweets. The TV appearances have helped Twitter increase its active user base, which stands at more than 100 million people worldwide.

On Monday, Twitter announced that Mass Relevance and another Twitter-analysis company, Crimson Hexagon, now have unfettered access to the more than 250 million tweets broadcast on Twitter every day so that they can directly work on such partnerships with media firms without Twitter’s help.

Read the full post on the Wall Street Journal website

 

Book Review – Show Sold Separately: Promos, Spoilers, and Other Media Paratexts

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Show Sold Separately: Promos, Spoilers, and Other Media Paratexts. Jonathan Gray. New York: New York University Press, 2010. 247 pp.

What do a Star Trek lunchbox, a child playing with a Buzz Lightyear action figure, and a water cooler conversation about last night’s Colbert Report have in common? According to Jonathan Gray in Show Sold Separately, these are all media paratexts. More than merely extensions of a central media text, Gray argues these paratexts are all equally vital to cultural and individual meaning-making. Gray, an associate professor of media and cultural studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has explored these issues throughout much of his career, most notably in his book Watching with The Simpsons: Television, Parody, and Intertextuality. What sets Show Sold Separately apart from his previous works is the assertion that media and cultural studies need to step away from the emphasis on close readings of primary texts and instead focus on what he labels “off-screen studies.” This form of study, he argues, can best be accomplished through examining the constitutive role of paratexts in creating a mediated experience that breaks up the notion of a central or primary text.  [Read more...]

For First Time in 9 Years, All Three Evening Newscasts Grow Viewership

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By Chris Ariens on TVNewser, Sept. 20, 2011 – The three network evening newscasts have been in a downward trend since the days of Tom BrokawPeter Jennings and Dan Rather. But for the first time since the 2001-02 season, all the three evening newscasts saw an increase in Total Viewers year-over-year.

Compared to the 2009-2010 season during the just completed 2010-11 season:

Read the full article on TVNewser