I’m a little angry with TV networks. They keep making fun, well-produced
shows and then cancelling them once I get interested. This is nothing short of
emotional abuse and it needs to stop. But why is this happening? I know people
are watching the shows, but their ratings are pathetic. So I decided to do some
research. Here is what I found:
There is a guy named Nielsen, well at least there was.
(Actually I don’t know if he was a real person, but that point is moot.) Since
the 1950s a company called Nielsen has been installing monitoring boxes in a
small percentage of people’s home, watching what they watch, and then saying
this is an accurate survey of what the American people care about. This has
become the industry standard of judging how well a show does, and they are the
only company doing it. So if Nielsen says no one is watching your show, it is
taken as gospel and the network cancels it. This would make sense except that…
NEILSEN is a dirt liar! They claim to have an accurate
depiction of what Americans are watching, but this isn’t true. What’s worse is
that everyone knows it. Lets take a look at the data:
How the system works: From what I could find, Nielsen tracks
around 20,000 households (approx. 0.0002% of American households according to
the last census). Here is the interesting part: They track DVR usage
differently than live TV. So lets say you want to watch two shows that are on
at the same time, so you DVR one of them. If you don’t watch it the same day,
your numbers are not counted right away. Then when you do watch it, you fast forward through the commercials (like all good Americans with a DVR
would do). You are counted as watching the show, but your show is docked points
because you didn’t watch the commercials.
Ratings are about the ads not the views: The networks want people to watch
the shows, because they make money off the ads. If a show has a lot of views,
but they are all skipping the ads (Fast forwarding on DVR, or changing the
channel) the shows C3 rating drops, and it gets cancelled.
Then we come to the internet. A large percentage of people
under 35 are ditching cable. It’s simply cheaper to watch TV on Hulu or a
variety of other online services. Nielsen does keep track of online viewers,
but there is a catch:
1) People usually have to wait to see the shows on Hulu.
Nielsen only keeps track for 7 days, so all of those shows that make you wait a
week to see the online broadcast don’t really count the online views. If you
wait to watch your show till the weekend, you probably won’t be counted either because
most studios go off the number from the day after the TV broadcast. Since the online world is designed to work
around your schedule, it isn’t fast enough for Nielsen and is marginalized.
2) When you watch a show online, you don’t see the same
commercials. Because of this online views are counted separately, and their
voice doesn’t count for much. For example, a show that 9 million online views
and 1 million TV views doesn’t count as much as a show with 2 million TV
watchers.
It basically boils down to this: Since technology is moving
fast than our ability to track it, shows that appeal to technologically savvy
people are handicapped. This explains why shows featuring spoiled rich kids are
doing well, and shows with a plot line are on the verge of extinction.
1 comment:
This is a great post!!! I've gotten into too many good shows that end up canceled. :(
Post a Comment