bial ball past the 10/9 Central line. (And yes, by this point, it
>> would take a lot of concessions to have their affiliates give back the
>> hour.)
>>
>> *From:* tvor...@googlegroups.com [mailto:tvor...@googlegroups.com] *On
>> Behalf Of *PGage
>> *Sent:* Sunday,
Gage
> *Sent:* Sunday, August 28, 2022 9:15
> *To:* tvornottv@googlegroups.com
> *Subject:* Re: [TV orNotTV] NBC Considering Giving 10 p.m. Back to
> Affiliates
>
> I don’t disagree with you; giving up on 10:00 pm would be a public
> admission that the days of broadcast televisi
tvornottv@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NBC Considering Giving 10 p.m. Back to Affiliates I
don’t disagree with you; giving up on 10:00 pm would be a public admission that
the days of broadcast television being the primary mass media in the US are
over. I’m just saying tha
> [mailto:tvornottv@googlegroups.com <mailto:tvornottv@googlegroups.com>] On
> Behalf Of PGage
> Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2022 9:15
> To: tvornottv@googlegroups.com <mailto:tvornottv@googlegroups.com>
> Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NBC Considering Giving 10 p.m. Back to A
] On Behalf
Of PGage
Sent: Sunday, August 28, 2022 9:15
To: tvornottv@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [TV orNotTV] NBC Considering Giving 10 p.m. Back to Affiliates
I don’t disagree with you; giving up on 10:00 pm would be a public admission
that the days of broadcast television being the primary mass
This week, NBC did run the first episode of the new Peacock series "The
Resort" after the "America's Got Talent" result show, the best platform the
network can offer during the summer (just ask the producers of the
"Password" reboot). I'm sure they ended the show with "if you want to know
what
I don’t disagree with you; giving up on 10:00 pm would be a public
admission that the days of broadcast television being the primary mass
media in the US are over. I’m just saying that, even so, it would not be a
worse move than programming the Jay Leno show every weeknight at 10:00 pm.
On Sun,
This move would surely highlight the beginning of the end of network
television. Sure, NBC saves some money on not having to produce five hours
of television a week, but they're basically saying that they can't make
anything worth watching any more for those five hours.
In the short term, maybe
In all of the years we’ve had this list, we’ve noticed that network ratings
continually fall and somehow the advertising industry still puts up the
same amount of money, or more, to reach the dwindling number of viewers. I
can see this being NBC trying to get ahead of an advertising crash.
An odd
I'm sure there's less than zero chance that the affiliates would accept a 7:30
prime-time start (especially if they have long-term contracts for the
syndicated programming they're running at that time - even if it's not "Wheel"
or "Jeopardy!").
But NBC doesn't seem to be in the business of
If there are affiliates running "Wheel of Fortune" at 7:30, they may
complain that it's not a 10 p.m. show (and that's still a thing, although
its stablemate "Jeopardy!" seems to have taken over its ratings position).
However, "Password" is doing surprisingly well at 10 p.m., although that
could
This is certainly a much less bad idea than making 10:00 the Leno hour,
which cratered the value of three separate time slots (10:00 pm Primetime,
affiliate 11:00 pm news, and 11:35 talk show).
As of 2017 (last period I could find data for, see
“More local ad revenue? Yes, please!”
The question becomes, do the local My-CW-Fox newscasts powered by NBC at 10
shift to 11 or get simulcast?
Sent from my iPhone
> On Aug 26, 2022, at 16:16, Kevin M. wrote:
>
>
> NBC… taking a bad idea and making it worse!
>
>> On Fri, Aug 26, 2022 at
NBC… taking a bad idea and making it worse!
On Fri, Aug 26, 2022 at 12:28 PM Mark Jeffries
wrote:
> If it happens, it would not be until next fall, and it seems like they
> would want the affils to do an hour of local news at 10 p.m., since they
> are considering moving up Fallon and Meyers 35
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