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SOS – Save One Show

It’s TV bubble time over in the States at the moment; the time of year when the major TV Networks decide whether to renew thier shows for another season, or burst their bubble and stop them!

 Now, while some shows are completely safe and secure for yet another year, such as Grey’s Anatomy, Lost, 24, Ugly Betty etc – there are some equally as good shows which sadly may be facing the chop!

So, what can you do? Especially over in the UK? Well – E! Online for the 7th year running have set up a poll of all the possibily endangered shows, giving you the chance to vote for the one show you want to see saved and brought back next year for another season! The winner receives show-saving promotion in all three of their mediums—E! Online, E! News and the Vine. Plus, they will personally deliver your show-saving plea directly to the network execs of the winning show.

Now, before any of you say that online polls are pointless (most of which normally are), this one is different. Apparently they have successfully saved the winning show five out of the previous six previous years – which is pretty damn impressive. Also, as they are well established in the Media industry themselves, they have a wealth of credibiity which the network execs love!

So, get voting – the whole complete list can be found here at E! Online - So far over 600,000 votes have been counted and you only have until Friday 6th April to cast your vote!

As of Thursday 29th; the top five leading shows so far (in alpahbetical order) are;

Gilmore Girls
One Tree Hill
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip
Supernatural
Veronica Mars

So, as they are in alpahbetical order, any of those five maybe winning – but apparently the top two are neck and neck!

Hopefully you’ll make the right decision! *cough* Vote Studio 60! *cough*

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Broadcast Live

Broadcast Live

The tickets are booked, and so this June I’ll hopefully be attending Broadcast Live – an annual media industry event being held at Earls Court, London apparently being the only event of its kind. With over 300 exhibitors including the BBC, Sony, Apple and obviously more, hopefully it’ll be pretty cool and get to see some new technology and get some freebies!

Oh and of course – watch out for photos!

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Sky’s Agenda?

Well, it’s time for another television related post which I hav’t done in a while…

Currently being slightly pushed aside by the TV-Phone in debarkle which is currently going on in the media, the Sky and Virgin Media War is still in full swing. Now, since the war kicked off Sky have lead a very good advertising campaign… but… it does seem it is pretty mis-leading to consumers, and so, here’s a short little back story on it all;

First thing’s first the main ‘war’ started back in late 2006 when 17.9% of the troubled broadcaster ITV was put up for sale. Richard Branson (then NTL Telewest) was in the running to purchase the portion of the channel, to in turn make them a more strong media company, and have more strength to compete against Sky (which is more powerful and worth more than Virgin Media). But, at the last minute, Murdoch jumps into the boat and pays for the 17.9% stake of ITV and without any further negotiations, leaves Branson left with nothing in the ITV sale.

Now, at the time this was seen as very controversal – is it really in the interest of the general consumer that ITV is now mainly controlled by Murdoch and his empire? It’s something Ofcom are looking into at this moment in time, but it wasn’t very fair to Branson and Virgin Media.

Onto the more recent news; and for a reason which still seems a little mistifying, Murdoch’s wish seems to be for every Sky channel to be exclusive to Sky, (unless you pay more for premium channels such as Sky Sports & Sky Movies). Yes, earlier this month, when Virgin Media’s contract with Sky to carry thier range of basic channels on thier platform (Sky One, Two, Three, Travel, Travel Plus, News & Sports News) was due to run out and be up for renewal. Now, unlike what would be expected, such as the same price (or even a slight increase in carrage fees), Sky decided to plan to charge Virgin a higher amount than had previously been charging to NTL Telewest (now Virgin Media). This price was never fully disclosed, however Virgin seemed to believe it was high, too high for them to pay, and in a cascading effect, what Virgin customers would have to had paid in thier increased montly bills, especially with recent trends of falling viewers on Sky’s channels.

So, with Sky not wishing to lower thier new fee’s and Virgin not wishing to pay them as they were seen as a ‘rip-off’ to the consumer, we were at a stand off. So, a week later, the Sky channels were removed from the Virgin Media lineup, much at first to the apparent joy of Sky who proceeded to advertise nationwide about how Virgin willingly removed the channels, and so to try to persuade customers to move to Sky from Virgin to ‘Get Jack Back’ and Not to ‘Lose Lost’.

That was then, this is now, and it seem’s as though the strategy failed to pay off to any substantial amount. According to both parties, only a small amount of people switched to Sky, nothing to get excited over, and now Sky in turn have lost out on 3.3 million potential viewers to it’s channels which now don’t have access to them on Virgin Media. It seems also that Sky’s decision is now further causing problems; as mentioned on the BBC News wesbite, now key advertisers such as Cadbury’s and Honda are wanted advertising refunds from Sky due to thier quick removal of the channels from the platform. To them, they had paid for thier adverts to be seen by a certain amount of viewers, which was in turn automatically reduced when Sky removed the channel’s viewers from Virgin Media, which in turn could cost them upto £20million to recover from.

Now, it isn’t fully all about Sky vs. Virgin Media. In February Sky announced plans to remove Sky’s channels from Freeview from early this summer, again losing a potential massive audience. Sky News has been flourishing since on Freeview and has been giving BBC News 24 a real run for it’s money. Sky Three (since replacing Sky Travel) has also been sucessful amongst viewers, and with the removal from Freeview, this will only hit thier viewing figures, and in turn advertising revenue hard. Thier new plan is to offer Sky programming for a price on the platform on Top-Up TV, but this move hasn’t been welcomed by other broadcasters such as the BBC, ITV (strangely) and Channel 4, and nevertheless, has to be approved by Ofcom in the next few weeks, who in turn may reject the plans.

So, is it all going to pay off for them? It does seem a little rocky at this moment. The whole Virgin Media debate doesn’t seem to have produced much for Sky, and because of Sky’s tactics in the whole matter, and how it seems as though from the start they were trying to make Virgin Media pull out of the contract by offering such a high deal, it does beg the question if Sky’s plan worked.

In many ways it doesn’t;
Not many people switched from Virgin Media to Sky, even though of thier expensive nationwide advertising campaign
Loss of a potential 3.3million viewers to the Sky channels, which inevitably will hit ratings hard
Advertising refunds from companies which could result in hefty payouts.

Sky’s aquisition of ITV late last year also seems to be on a knife edge as Ofcom along with the Office of Fair Trading look into the matter, and how thier plans for Freeview has to also go through Ofcom, many believe thier plans will be rejected.

We can only wait and see, but for sure, this won’t be the end of the Mudoch’s and Sky! With thier worldwide media corporation, they won’t be going anywhere too soon, but nevertheless, they can’t be in thier ideal situation right now.

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The Ori, a group of ascended beings who through evolution became pure energy to form a higher level of existence of our own along with their Priors who have been dispatched to Earth…

…Now, at this point you’re either thinking… ‘What the hell is this guy on?’ – or you know what I’m on about – either way – they’re in Stargate SG1… a formidable enemy who plan to take control over the Milky Way by either making everyone pray to their religion Origin to give them power or destroy all non-believers.

They go about this by despatching Priors (believers who are given god-like powers) to worlds who either convert the world to Origin, or destroy them, one of which you can see below…

Prior

Now, after rustling through the various websites on my daily rounds today, one namely being the BBC News site, I came across this photo of Clint Eastwood…

Clint a Prior?

Has Clint been prior-ised?!?!

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HD on ‘Freeview’ – let Tony know!

Digital TV – Freeview – whatever you want to call it, we’re all getting it if we like it or not. From 2008 the UK is switching off the old analogue services (BBC1, BBC2, ITV1, Channel 4, Channel 5) and making television digital, so everyone will have the standard digital channels currently available on Freeview as standard television. Wherever you live, even if you can’t receive such services now, you will be able to by the time your region ‘turns digital’ – anytime between 2008 to 2012.

But, nothing is ever simple. A quick run down on how digital television works, is that there are several ‘multiplexes’, technically it is where digital TV can mix, and broadcast half a dozen television channels in the space of one ‘old’ analogue channel, as well as radio and interactive content; this is the reason why digital tv can hold so many more channels. However, there is a limit of how many there are, and currently, all space on these multiplexes are completely full, so no new television channels can join (without one leaving before hand of course).

In 2012 when the country goes completely digital though, there will be five ‘empty’ multiplexes (each one which was used for the current ‘old’ analogue channels). The potential here is that a whole host of new television channels could then join again. However, this is entirely upto the government and Ofcom (the broadcasting regulator) as it could seem to them that these spare channels could be sold off to the likes of mobile phone companies and such for a healthy price – leaving digital television without extra space.

It’s not just more television channels though which is at stake however, but also high definition television (HDTV) would also be held back. HDTV takes up lots more space than current standard definition channels (SDTV), and so needs more space to broadcast – hence why none currently exist on Freeview, only on cable and satellite (where space is less of an issue). With HDTV being the ‘future’ of TV, its worthwhile to think that it should be available on Freeview in some state rather than only on premium rate subscription services like Sky.

There is an official government petition online at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/openhdtv/ which I urge you all to sign, which is letting Tony know that the extra space which will be made avaliable come 2012 is better off being used to provide more television channels, and HDTV on Freeview, rather than being sold off to companies – with the aim of trying to keep Britain as the world leader in broadcasting, and not fall behind the likes of America and Australia where HDTV is taking off much faster than in the UK, and where these type of services are already being rolled out.

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