On Wed, Feb 2, 2011 at 18:04, Kevin M. <[email protected]> wrote:
> I can't imagine the Chat Show will grow its audience by doing this. I
> can imagine the show crashing and burning, as its live audience never
> seems to exceed much more than about 1,000 people.

I applaud KP's aims, but I think they're going to run into the same
buzzsaw of Economics 101 that has hit most of the news organizations
that have tried to put up paywalls: Why pay for "good" when you can
get "decent" for free? The only two organizations that seem to have
been able to make it work are the Wall Street Journal and Financial
Times, and I assume that in both of those cases it comes down to being
seen as an investment rather than a purchase. Last I heard any
speculation,  the estimate based on revenues was that The Times (of
London, owned by News Corp) had less than 100,000 people paying for
web access, plus some number who get the web site for free with their
subscription to the dead-tree version.

I was a regular viewer, if not exactly loyal (I'd skip every third
episode or so because I wasn't interested in the guest), and I'm one
of those people that he's losing. Between the podcasts I subscribe to,
the TV shows I set to record on DVR, and Netflix, I'm just a little
bit beyond the upper limits of how much time and mental bandwidth I
have to take all of this content in, and it's all automagically
delivered by services that don't charge me based on usage, so I don't
consider it worthwhile to expend the money and effort to go to buy
something on a show-by-show basis.

-- 
David J. Lynch
[email protected]

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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