Traditional TV Pressure Groups Losing Ground

by Wayne Friedman
TVWatch

Monday, Aug 7, 2006 12:30 PM ET

http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=46484


WILL THE PLETHORA OF NEW digital platforms make TV pressure groups 
obsolete? Maybe not. But, in the wake of more entertainment choices, 
advertisers certainly are not scared to publicly talk back to those who 
seemingly position themselves as the arbiters of TV morality.

Two advertisers, Toyota Motor Sales and DaimlerChrysler, basically told one 
prominent TV pressure group, the Parents Television Council, where to go, 
in reference to recent media buys on FX's "Rescue Me."

"Rescue Me," with rough language and drama about New York City 
firefighters, targets adults. PTC says there are kid viewers too, and has 
Nielsen data to back that up.

The reality is, you could do this exercise with virtually any TV 
show--broadcast, cable, syndication, pay-cable. You could show some kids 
watching everything - perhaps just one. In that regard, you would need to 
take off all shows, like "Two and A Half Men," "The Sopranos" and "Lost."

Networks will defend themselves by saying 90 percent or 70 percent of its 
audiences for specific adult-language shows comes from adults. And that 
makes sense for its advertisers. Toyota and Chrysler would be wasting their 
money if 70 percent of the audience were 12-year-old boys and girls.

TV pressure groups think these shows wouldn't exist without these topnotch 
TV advertisers. They've actually got it backwards. Audiences already exist 
for established shows like "Rescue Me." In this fractionalized video and TV 
age, advertisers like to see proof of performance. Otherwise, why bother?

TV pressure groups are in the business of finding TV shows to protest. Then 
they ask for money because they are protecting people from the evils of 
entertainments. To tout their businesses, they love to make crazy claims 
that they force advertisers from specific shows. In fact, by the time any 
of them see the spot, those advertisers may already be gone--and not 
because of any pressure. Media plans are as such that advertisers don't buy 
all time in all shows all year round. They go in and out of shows, as their 
plans--and budgets--allow.

Case in point: The PTC sent a letter asking Chrysler to pull ads from 
"Rescue Me." Chrysler's brands Dodge and Jeep had advertised during the 
show, but aren't in those shows for their near-term media plans. Still, the 
company hinted it could start up again.

"We do this not with the intent to offend but with an appreciation for 
diversity in consumer viewing preferences," wrote a Chrysler spokesman to 
the PTC, according to Advertising Age. "It is also important to remember 
the American consumer has the ability to turn on or off TV shows, as do PTC 
members."

Or turn off his TV, and turn on Google or YouTube. In a vast and 
multiplying democratic entertainment world, users, advertisers, parents, 
children, and TV producers have tens of thousand of choices for video content.

TV decency laws are surely gaining strength. But advertisers and users have 
other places to turn to. And that means TV pressure groups will have 
pneumatically less air.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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