Only 39 Percent of Viewers Choose Live TV As Their Default Option, Says Study (deadline.com) 96
According to a new study by Hub Entertainment Research, viewers are increasingly defaulting to on-demand sources like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Hulu instead of live TV. The study found that only 39% of viewers tune into live programming from a traditional pay-TV provider, down from 47% last year. On-demand sources, collectively, were the first choice for 48% of viewers. Deadline reports: For viewers aged 18-34, the pattern is more stark -- only about a quarter (26%) of the demo lists live TV as a default, compared with 35% a year ago. One clear influence on consumer behavior is the increase in TV sources -- the average person has 4.5 distinct sources to choose from (including linear TV, DVR, VOD, Netflix, etc.). That number is up from 3.7 in 2014. Among viewers 18-34, the number is higher, at 5.1 sources -- plus, Hub found that fully 50% of 18-34-year-olds subscribe to at least two of the "big three" SVOD services, Netflix, Amazon or Hulu. Even older generations accustomed to the "clicker" have turned away from live TV as a default. About 56% of viewers 55 and older listed live as their first choice, but that's down from 66% a year ago.
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Woah, its like all the trolls just reached critical mass and started imploding upon themselves into a singularity!
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Damn! I guess he told us. I don't even think I've reached that level of jackassery.
Commercials (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Commercials (Score:4)
This is truth. I don't mind ads. Some ads I even like to see. I don't even mind a certain level of targeting. I would much rather see ads about computer hardware than ads about vaginal cream.
I draw the damn line when the ad is a video that auto plays, that I can cut the fuck off, and chases me down the damn screen.
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people with Ad Blockers get blocked completely
If necessary, ad blockers can be stealthy and download all the ads. Maybe even "render" them, but blanked over.
Unlimited wireless too? (Score:2)
Anonymous Coward wrote:
Call up your local ISP and ask for the "I'm a cheap bastard"(*) internet plan. /mo.
The speed will suck, but it'll be unlimited for like $10 or $20
(They're all required by law to offer it, but only cheap bastards use it.)
Are even satellite and cellular ISPs required to offer unmetered service? Because many less populated areas are outside the service footprint of fiber, cable, and DSL, particularly areas where farmers have to upload big files to a crop consultant.
Re:Commercials (Score:5, Interesting)
Same. The Reader View trick seems to work against many of them though.
View a page, adblocker notice pops up being annoying as shit. Reload page, press F9 ( Firefox ) and the page is loaded into Reader View.
Content becomes readable, no ads. No blocking notice. YMMV, doesn't work on all sites.
Those that it doesn't work on, I simply skip.
Those sites that are known for blocking I skip completely by default.
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Try a different website.
And get dinged for not reading TFA (Score:2)
Once the majority of featured articles on the front page of Slashdot at any given time use adblock detection, it'll become less practical to just "Try a different website."
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The vast majority of content is available elsewhere. If a site is restricting your access when you use an ad blocker, don't use that site. With very few exceptions (/. being one), the commentary simply isn't worth the effort of reading. (And /. is declining towards that standard as the UID count pushes towards 10^7.)
Re:Commercials (Score:5, Insightful)
No lie there.
Once advertisements in magazines exceeded the number of articles or information I wanted to read, I ceased all of my subscriptions. ( years ago mind you )
I've actually blocked entire TV networks ( I'm looking at you FX ) because of their advertising methods. Early in the show, the ratio of show to commercials favors the show. However, the longer the show runs, the less you get to see in one segment before the next set of commercials ( which, maddeningly, are the same GD commercials over and Over and OVER again ) breaks in. By the end of the show, you're lucky to get 5-7 minutes of show without a commercial break.
Fuck that. Program it out.
You're right though. We're seeing the same shit happen with the net and excessive advertising will be its demise.
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I haven't watched network TV since YouTube, Netflix and Hulu became available.
Before YouTube Red / Premium, I used adblock. But, once it they offered a no-ad subscription... I went for it.
Same here. Paying for Youtube Red so that I don't have to see their fucking adverts, I don't give a fuck about their "youtube originals" content
The problem is, they're not paying their content producers enough for them to not also show their own adverts embedded as part of the fucking video so I can't skip it
Every time Linus Sebastian interrupts his own show (Linus Tech Tips) to tell me about Tunnelbear or some other shit, I feel like punching him in the face
I wish I'd never heard of Patreon either
Although
I've been using Tivo since 2000 (Score:5, Informative)
FF, rewinding, and saving programs are necessary. Watching a 60 minute show in 40 minutes makes a huge difference. Skipping over a boring segment and saving another 10 to 20 minutes saves even more time.
Oh, and pausing at boobs on TV. That's killer.
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Oh, and pausing at boobs on TV. That's killer.
It was what got me watching Survivor again.
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Skipping over a boring segment
Since the rise in reality shows, its been a bit more than 10 to 20 mins here. Some might say the entire genre.
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>"I've been using Tivo since 2000. FF, rewinding, and saving programs are necessary. "
Me too. Been doing it since the first TiVo came out. I can't stand commercials and the lack of control. I also can't imagine watching any other way. It is even MORE convenient that streaming because it doesn't require a live Internet connection to play it, all actions are instant and smooth, I can even look frame-by-frame, and it starts at full res (no "ramping up and down" depending on bandwidth or checking). Plu
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Only boobs? What about other stuff? :P
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They throw up the 'no-fast forwarding' warning on the on-demand programs, but I have yet to find one where ff or 30-second skip button doesn't work. When I had U-verse, they really meant it and it was a huge pain to ff on-demand. God forbid your DVR misses the last
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Tech changed (Score:3)
A large part of this is due to the fact that the switch over to ATSC, there was a lot of confusion. Most people think that OTA TV doesn't even exist anymore now that analog TV is gone. My peers, even tech ones, are shocked to find out that I have a network attached ATSC tuner for my house and can stream live TV on every device in my house from it.
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Was there no promotion of digital terrestrial TV in the USA? Here in the UK there was a big push under the "Freeview" brand - tens of channels (including a few HD). Works well, if you like TV - I don't watch much TV (either live or streamed), but my parents do, and it's good enough that they cancelled their pay TV subscription.
Sure there was promotion and they even subsidized converter boxes but the broadcast footprint was so much smaller that to 2/3rd of the potential viewers, it was all lies.
as a coincidence... (Score:2, Insightful)
As a complete coincidence, according to the last census, people in the US age 45 and over account for 39.4 percent of the population. Expect the percentage of "live TV" viewers to drop almost directly as people born in 1975 and earlier age and drop off the end.
In other words, watching "live tv" is largely an old person's pastime. What I choose to call "the TV tray generation".[1] And it's dying out.
[1] Yes, I know 45 to 85 or thereabouts can arguably be called two generations. Work with me here.
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As a complete coincidence, according to the last census, people in the US age 45 and over account for 39.4 percent of the population. Expect the percentage of "live TV" viewers to drop almost directly as people born in 1975 and earlier age and drop off the end.
In other words, watching "live tv" is largely an old person's pastime. What I choose to call "the TV tray generation".[1] And it's dying out.
[1] Yes, I know 45 to 85 or thereabouts can arguably be called two generations. Work with me here.
See, I think the question's wording is going to alter the calculus in one form or another.
I've got more friends who will actively sit-down-and-expressly-watch a TV show on Netflix than they will watch it on the actual cable channel when it broadcasts. At the same time, many of those same people leave NCIS reruns or HGTV running in the background just to add a little noise to their apartment. I'm not saying the TV tray generation didn't do passive TV watching at all, but I think the lack of both streaming se
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As a complete coincidence, according to the last census, people in the US age 45 and over account for 39.4 percent of the population. Expect the percentage of "live TV" viewers to drop almost directly as people born in 1975 and earlier age and drop off the end.
In other words, watching "live tv" is largely an old person's pastime. What I choose to call "the TV tray generation".[1] And it's dying out.
[1] Yes, I know 45 to 85 or thereabouts can arguably be called two generations. Work with me here.
See, I think the question's wording is going to alter the calculus in one form or another.
I've got more friends who will actively sit-down-and-expressly-watch a TV show on Netflix than they will watch it on the actual cable channel when it broadcasts. At the same time, many of those same people leave NCIS reruns or HGTV running in the background just to add a little noise to their apartment. I'm not saying the TV tray generation didn't do passive TV watching at all, but I think the lack of both streaming services as an alternative and internet services competing for attention (as well as generally-better radio content for 'apartment noise') factors in pretty heavily. I think it's similarly possible that Boomers and X-ers might be more willing to call apartment noise "TV watching", while millennials and Gen-Z might limit that term only to sitting down and explicitly watching a particular show.
I think you have a point, and this is difficult to accurately categorize. I've seen examples of leaving the TV on for "background noise", so you're on to something there. (I personally hate this -- if I'm going to watch TV I'll sit down and watch it -- I saw Lion (2016) last night, and Please Stand By (2017) a week ago, otherwise haven't seen much of anything... oh, and one time-shifted episode of The Expanse around Tuesday (I'm way behind). And then I'll get up and turn it off and do something else, be
When your roommate is a parent (Score:2)
The most recent economic recovery hasn't resulted in a lot of wage growth. Thus economic circumstances have forced a lot of late Xers and millennials to move back in with parents, exposing them to a baby boomer's TV tray habits.
I don't always watch TV but when I do... (Score:3)
Even when I do watch TV it is very rarely live. Usually I watch off my DVR, after the fact so I can FF thru the commercials.
Why waste time watching live TV (Score:2)
Live TV picture quality is too bad to watch it... (Score:2)