Fuck you Comcast ass holes.
My internet is free.![]()
Fuck you Comcast ass holes.
My internet is free.![]()
regarding crunchyroll they seem to be more legitimate about it now sharing a percentage with the production team or who the fuck ever gets paid for the rights to the series(Kind of like youtube in a way i would imagine) . Which is why they are aloud to post the most popular anime online 1 hour after streaming with subs and not have to worry about any legal issues or so i've read somewhere. But as with the internet you never know what has been twisted and fabricated even by the leading news teams ect.
That it would, which is why ratings corporations frequently operate several surveys simultaneously. When the networks say the "ratings are in", that just means one of the surveys going on has closed or has simply passed a point where data is collected. There's probably 4-5 different survey groups going right now in various stages of completion. There's also more than one company handling ratings and some major networks even operate their own, frequently bundled it with its "test audience" markets. Nielson just happens to be the "king" of the ratings game and happens to be the one advertisers pay most attention to. Which is why the all important ratings are often erroneously called "Nielson ratings", even though sometimes they're simply ratings taken from test audiences or something similar and aren't the actual "Nielson ratings" that determine ad revenue. I might be mistaken but I believe that a new survey ends approximately every month with a new group picked up in its place with Nielson's model.
Viewer letters and the like are important (and have successfully gotten things back on the air before), but it could just as easily be dismissed as a vocal minority unless you're receiving exactly as many letters as you'd need viewers for the show to be profitable. And even then, if no one wants to buy ads because of a poor Nielson position previously, you might have a hard time funding it. Unless it was winning a lot of awards, but that's a whole other kettle of fish.
So in short, there's constant surveys by a bunch of different people, but in the end the people who decide what is profitable KNOW that they're the ones who make shows profitable because they have people asking about what they watch. And for the most part, they're picked out by Nielson, because that's the big one and the one ad corporations care about. A good Nielson rating = high ad revenue = profitable show. Low Nielson rating = poor ad revenue = bomb.
Pay TV is one of the weird exceptions. Apparently you're voluntarily entering into some contract where they provide you X show/channel/movie and you get to watch it. A direct contract where the terms are clear. It's like the difference between having someone peeking through your windows and telling someone to look into your house if they'll give you 5 bucks.
Or something.
Laws are weird and incredibly stupid sometimes.![]()
That makes sense. Thing about adult swim is i swear 60% of there ads are for the show that's coming on air later of there own. Which is just crazy shit to be honest. But i see how.
The people tuning in is a factor. I think it would be a nice job being one of the Nielsen test group members.
I personally believe that it should be okay to make rating off that as long as legal names arn't used.
But thats from the same guy who think each tv channel should just be online and you subscribe to each channel for a certain price and have very few if no ad's since you are paying for only that channel for the month. Because it is wierd that you have to pay for tv channels like spike and disney if you never plan to use them.
Spose needs to learn to EDH.
There is a difference between ignorance and stupidity ignorant people can be taught
stupid people need to be shot.
It fills up an unpopular time-slot which probably doesn't get much ad revenue anyway. Plus the shows running on it are produced for next to nothing. I highly doubt they're spending even a tenth of what the average "prime-time" show's budget is. And that's how they manage to work out fine. When you don't spend much money on making the shows, you don't need the kind of numbers required to keep a big name show on the air. And the lack of people buying up ads lets them promote the shows on AS later, making sure they hook whatever audience they happen to have. Anyone who's familiar with regional programming is very familiar with "filler ads" that exist to pad out the run time to a half hour.![]()
It's not much of a job. A relative of mine was involved in a survey with a Canadian ratings group a few years back. My memory isn't perfect, but I believe they got like $10 a month off their cable bill while it was going on, and a grand total of $40 for 3 months of monitoring. Unfortunately, being selected isn't an excuse to quit your job and watch TV all day.![]()