This is a clip of NBC boss Jeff Zucker being interviewed at the All Things D conference. He talks about Hulu, iTunes, NBC's woes, and how the industry has changed over the years. (This is highlights from the interview - full report here.)
wall street journal-related stories
This is approximately the 57th "Katie Couric is doing badly in the ratings and will probably will fired or quit her job at CBS" story that has surfaced in the past year, but since it's The Wall Street Journal, perhaps he has a little more gravitas to it?
Possibly.
The newspaper is reporting that "CBS executives" and "people close to Couric" say that she will probably leave her job as anchor of The CBS Evening News well before her contract is up in 2011. She might even leave in early 2009, right after the current Presidential election is over.
Continue reading Katie Couric will probably leave CBS early (maybe, possibly, maybe not)
In case you missed it, Jon made a very special appearance on The Colbert Report Tuesday night. The situation is already a bit confusing, and Jon's explanation of it didn't help much. Actually, don't even think about it too much. Just focus on the fact that Jon is a very tiny man. What he lacks in height, he makes up with well-played self-deprecation.Continue reading A Daily Show: January 30, 2008
I wasn't a Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood kid; I was a Sesame Street kid. I know that many kids watched both, but I never did. I probably saw every single episode of Sesame Street in the late '60s and early '70s, but I've only watched a handful of Mr. Rogers episodes over the years. And some of those I watched as an adult to see what I missed.
Still, I have to disagree a bit with this article at The Wall Street Journal Online. It pretty much says that Mr. Rogers is to blame for the attitudes that young adults have today and the entitlement they feel. The article uses examples from colleges (students asking for extra points and time for assignments) and from psychologists (kids shouldn't call adults by their first names).
Some of this advice is dead-on, but I think they're blaming the wrong people.
Continue reading You're screwed up, and it's all Mr. Rogers' fault
My, my, my... It looks as if ABC is thinking of spinning off Grey's Anatomy, and they're thinking of using my favorite actor on the show to star in it.
Over the weekend, the Wall Street Journal wrote an article pondering the demise of The O.C. It lost 26% of its audience when season two started up. Then 15% more disappeared (myself included) for season three. And, now in season four, The O.C. lost a whopping 39% of its crucial, age 18-49 viewers from last season. It's in so much trouble that the network has even launched an online effort to save the show. (Or gauge viewer interest)Continue reading What has happened to The O.C.?
As a Verizon DSL customer, I've been eagerly anticipating to the arrival of their FiOS service to my neighborhood, mainly for the super-fast 15 Mbps download speed on their broadband serivce. But FiOS will also give customers the opportunity to get TV service, even though the jury's still out on whether it provides better value than the "evil" cable providers Verison is trying to defeat. But there's potential that the new service will bring something that neither cable nor satellite can provide: grainy videos of old commercials and teenagers getting hit in the groin.Continue reading Verizon wants to offer YouTube on-demand via FiOS?
It turns out, coming back for an eleventh season isn't such a great thing for the cast and crew of 7th Heaven. According to this article (credited to a Wall Street Journal writer), The CW has the veteran show on a shoestring budget. When The CW brought it back from the dead last spring, CBS Paramount Television, the company that produces the show, cut salaries across the board for actors, producers and writers. CBS also ordered editing to be done in six days rather than seven and it cut all nighttime shoots, which can get expensive. Thanks to all the cost cutting, The CW pays between $1.4 and $1.8 million per episode, compared to the $3 million that WB paid to air each episode. That price is 70% below what most networks pay for an hour-long show.Continue reading Renewal pretty much sucks for 7th Heaven
When I received the preview screeners for the new fall pilots earlier this summer, I resisted every request from friends to lend them out, copy the discs, or upload the contents. My feeling, and the feeling amongst everyone here at TVS, is that the networks are doing us a favor by sending these; why betray their trust by creating a Torrent of a show and distributing it?
This is a first: according to this Wall Street Journal article, Warner Brothers will allow local stations that buy the syndicated reruns of Two and a Half Men to stream the reruns on their web site. The episodes that will be streamed are the ones that aired on the channel the previous week. This may start a trend, as syndicators may start offering episodes of other shows -- the article said "think Friends and Seinfeld" -- for streaming. You know, because those shows are so hard to find as it is.
Have you ever taken a long trip on an
airplane and thought to yourself, "This is far too comfortable!" Well, you're in luck because Airbus is
pitching the idea of creating some new
standing seats (the pasenger would essentially be harnessed onto a padded board). If you've ever wanted to travel
the world the same way as an airplane's tray tables or Hannibal Lecter, write to Airbus and let them know how you feel.Continue reading The Daily Show: April 26, 2006
I suspected that Rupert Murdoch was bluffing when
he said he didn't think there was a future for video on the internet. According to the Wall
Street Journal, FOX just inked a six-year deal with its 187 affiliates to play reruns on the internet. The agreement
allows FOX to make 60% of its schedule available online the morning after it airs.
I had no I idea that the Freakonomics guys had a blog,
but apparently they do. Good thing I found it though, because it directed me to this interesting Wall Street
Journal article about how economists, who study game shows to examine how people make risky financial
decisions, absolutely love studying the show Deal or No Deal. Why? Because the decisions are pure
risk/reward decisions, not influenced by game-playing skill or trivia knowledge like on shows such as Jeopardy!
and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. They've not only studied the American version, but versions from
around the world, as well. They'll get more of a chance to study without translation when Deal comes back
after the Olympics.
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