April 26, 2024

Networks Go to Extremes to Promote New Shows for the Fall Season

A Headless Horseman stalked a Manhattan street to sell the new Fox series “Sleepy Hollow.” Eighties memorabilia surprised people if their surname just happened to be Goldberg to promote ABC’s new ’80s-era comedy called “The Goldbergs.” But even with such marketing efforts, executives say calling attention to the 12 new series due this week — or the total influx of 28 new shows on five networks over the next few weeks — has been anything but easy.

“It’s harder than ever,” said George Schweitzer, the president of the CBS Marketing Group, who has been trying to promote new network shows for more than two decades.

It is harder in part because the broadcast networks try what now seems to be a preposterous feat every September — introducing dozens of new series at the same time. The cable networks, which now win most of the accolades, focus on just one new show at a time.

The broadcast networks also have been challenged by a continuing decline in their ratings and because competition for leisure time is everywhere.

“It’s exhausting, and it’s expensive” to promote network programming, said Joe Earley, the chief operating officer of the Fox network.

None of the network executives interviewed for this article would cite specific figures for their fall marketing budgets, but the consensus is that hundreds of millions of dollars will be spent trying to lead viewers to the pleasures of “The Millers” on CBS, “Trophy Wife” on ABC, “Junior MasterChef ” on Fox and “Ironside” on NBC.

That estimate is especially true if the value of on-air citations is included. As Mr. Earley noted, “We can’t stop buying old media, like print and outdoor and radio, but we also need to buy whatever is the new mobile experience or the new digital network.”

The operative notion expressed by network marketing executives was: leave no stone unturned in the pursuit of promotional ideas. Mr. Earley expanded it, “We were down to pebbles, and we were looking into grains of sand we could turn over.”

Fox went to the old playbook, beginning the bulk of its new shows a week early. That means it had a mostly free shot last week to let viewers sample those shows. And the effort was rewarded. Three new Fox series did relatively well, the comedies, “Dads” and “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” and the drama “Sleepy Hollow.”

The latter was a full-court effort. Fox began promoting “Sleepy Hollow” in May, the day it was announced to advertisers in New York, and it never let up.

Fox set up a representation of the set in Madison Square Park in Manhattan. People could stage a pseudo fight with the Horseman, and Fox would turn it into an image they could send to friends. Actors in headless costumes visited multiple cities and even state fairs. Fox set up green-screen effects at affiliated stations so the local weather forecasters could do their reports “headless” on the night of the premiere.

“We even had Headless walking around Times Square the day of the premiere,” Mr. Earley said. (Over the long promotional period, he developed a first-name-basis relationship with the character.) For “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” a show set in a police precinct, Fox took over the Jay Street subway station and handed out free coffee and doughnuts. The two shows scored well in the areas networks follow before a new season: awareness and intent to view, as measured by Nielsen and other research organizations. Each network watches these figures closely throughout the summer, though they are, most agree, profoundly unreliable.

“When it looks good for our shows, we’re very happy,” Mr. Schweitzer said. “When it doesn’t go well, we say, ‘It’s not right.’ ”

Among the factors affecting awareness and intent to view are familiarity with stars and what is known as “title inflation.” People think they know something about a coming show by its title, even though they do not.

That was a risk on “Sleepy Hollow,” Mr. Earley said, because of what he called “literary awareness” and familiarity with the classic Disney cartoon. Unsurprisingly, the show with the best awareness and intent-to-view scores going into the season is “The Michael J. Fox Show” on NBC, because of the star’s strong personal appeal.

Similarly, “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,” ABC’s new drama, is riding into the season with huge anticipation because of its associations with comic books and movies.

In contrast, CBS’s new comedy “The Crazy Ones” did not break through based on its title, but when viewers were made aware that the show stars Robin Williams, the scores rose markedly.

Marla Provencio, executive vice president for marketing at ABC, said of the awareness studies: “It’s a tool rather than rule. We’ve had certain shows launch where the awareness and the intent weren’t that great. There are so many other things that are variables. Obviously your lead-in is a great variable. And in the terms of the way people view television these days, it’s a very hard thing.”

Last fall, one show seemed to be exploding in terms of awareness and intent to view: an ABC drama called “666 Park Avenue.” It disappeared quickly. On the other side, CBS had a show in 2000 with a tiny awareness score. It wound up being a multibillion-dollar franchise called “C.S.I.”

As difficult as it is to break through the clutter of the new fall shows, some opportunities have arisen. Mr. Earley cited the DVR, first seen as a threat, now — along with video on demand, and digital sites like Netflix — a boon, offering a chance for shows to survive as alternative choices. “You don’t have to be someone’s favorite,” Mr. Earley said. “You can be the second favorite.”

And then there is social media. Marketers are experimenting with how to use such sites to increase awareness of shows, fuel word of mouth and even promote shows during broadcasts.

Ms. Provencio said, “We have no metrics for the social space, but you can’t tell me, with the way Twitter worked for ‘Scandal,’ that there isn’t a correlation to the fact that ratings went up once the Twitter-fest happened.” “Scandal,” an ABC drama, exploded in the ratings midway through last season after it became the talk of Twitter.

The effectiveness of all of the efforts to appeal to viewers will begin to be measured when the bulk of the shows finally arrive this week.

As Mr. Schweitzer put it: “We get this stuff on the air, and then the viewer tells us. They’ll tell us starting Monday.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/23/business/media/networks-go-to-extremes-to-promote-new-shows-for-the-fall-season.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Court Upholds Ruling on Dish Network’s ‘Hopper’

The ruling by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s ruling last fall and lent further support to Dish as it markets the Hopper, a digital video recorder that comes with the ad-skipping feature, which has the potential to undermine the television advertising business. The Fox network, which sought the initial injunction and then appealed, said it was disappointed by the second loss in court and would “review all of our options.”

Fox’s parent company, 21st Century Fox, and the parents of CBS and NBC sued Dish after the distributor came out with the Hopper’s feature, called Auto-Hop, more than a year ago. Dish quickly countersued. With the injunctions now refused twice, the case may move to trial.

Unlike most digital video recorders, which require users to manually bypass ads, Auto-Hop skips right past all the ads in a show without any user involvement. It’s as if the ads are erased, though for legal reasons they are not. When combined with another Hopper feature that automatically records all of the prime-time shows on ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC, Auto-Hop is a godsend for some Dish customers.

Analysts said that Wednesday’s affirmation of a November district court ruling could compel other distributors to try adopting similar ad-skipping functionality. But at the moment none have, so Dish can continue to promote the Hopper as a reason to subscribe to its service instead of its competitors.

“This decision is a victory for American consumers, and we are proud to have stood by their side in this important fight over the fundamental rights of consumer choice and control,” Dish’s executive vice president and general counsel, R. Stanton Dodge, said in a statement.

Fox’s statement pointed out that “the bar to secure a preliminary injunction is very high.”

Rejecting Dish’s positioning, it said, “This is not about consumer choice or advances in technology. It is about a company devising an unlicensed, unauthorized service that clearly infringes our copyrights and violates our contract.”

In his ruling on Wednesday, Judge Sidney Thomas of the Ninth Circuit seemed skeptical of Fox’s copyright infringement claims, citing the Supreme Court ruling in the Sony Betamax case, which held that home recordings of shows were not infringements on copyright. The judge was more open to Fox’s argument that Auto-Hop breached Dish’s distribution contract with Fox, but was not persuaded to issue an injunction.

“It seems increasingly clear that the absolute control over all uses of their works that content owners such as Fox want is increasingly slipping through their fingers,” said Glynn S. Lunney, a Tulane University law school professor who has been closely following the Hopper case.

“While copyright never gave them absolute control, when copying and distribution technologies were large, expensive and bulky, as they were for most of copyright’s history, copyright could give content owners considerable control over where and how their content was distributed to consumers,” Mr. Lunney added. “As copying and distribution technologies have gone digital, consumers, not the content owners, are increasingly in charge of where and how they experience content. It’s hard to know where this sea change will lead us, but Dish’s victory is one more sign of consumers’ new authority over copyrighted works.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/25/business/media/court-upholds-ruling-on-dish-networks-hopper.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Olbermann to Return to TV, Anchoring Postseason Baseball

Turner Sports announced on Wednesday that it had reached a deal with Mr. Olbermann to host its studio coverage of postseason Major League Baseball in the fall.

That means Mr. Olbermann will be on the air for the Turner channel TBS for much of October. TBS has the rights to the two wild-card playoff games in each league, and all four of the division series, as well as the National League Championship Series. (The World Series will again be broadcast on the Fox network.)

The news was first reported by The Hollywood Reporter.

David Levy, the president of sports distribution for Turner, did not disclose terms of the deal, or its length, but said the network’s goal was to have the studio show with Mr. Olbermann “last a long time.” In the studio role for Turner, Mr. Olbermann will be teamed with the Hall of Fame relief pitcher Dennis Eckersley, though Mr. Levy said the network expected to add to its studio team.

Mr. Olbermann has a long background in sports, including a recent stint on NBC as a host of its studio introduction to “Sunday Night Football.” It was his work as an anchor on ESPN’s “SportsCenter” in the 1990s that introduced him to many television viewers.

But he became best known for his tenure as the host of the MSNBC program “Countdown,” which at one point was the highest-rated cable news show not on the Fox News Channel. His eight-year run at that network ended in acrimony, as have many of Mr. Olbermann’s previous assignments on television.

Most recently, he was the main anchor for the Current TV network, which fired him only a year after he had joined. Both sides sued, and in March they came to a settlement whose terms were not disclosed.

In the telephone news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Olbermann made several joking references to his mercurial career in television, noting that this deal really only amounts to one month of work on Turner. “If you go through the 37 pages of my résumé, you will notice that every one of my jobs has lasted at least one month, so I’m covered no matter what the eventuality is.”

That one month of work means that Mr. Olbermann has 11 months free and he said that he would be “open to pursuing other things, of course.” But he added: “Planning on it? No. Need to? Fortunately not. Whatever else might be out there just could not be as compelling as this.”

He recalled that his first television job was with the Turner company 30 years ago as a sports anchor for newscasts on TBS, when it was a local station in Atlanta. During his first newscast, he said, a mistake with the teleprompter made his entire script flash by in eight seconds, “which I think was a precursor to my entire career.”

Mr. Levy deflected questions about any reluctance in hiring Mr. Olbermann given his contentious relations with past employers, saying, “We think he’s going to be an incredible asset to our company.” He added, “I do believe it is going to work.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/06/business/media/olbermann-to-return-to-tv-anchoring-postseason-baseball.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: ‘The Following’ on Fox Opens With Good Ratings

After a dismal fall, the Fox network finally got some good news Monday with the premiere of its highest-profile project of the year, “The Following.” Initial ratings for the intense, hyperviolent drama were solid, especially on a tough competitive night.

In the overnight ratings — which could be slightly adjusted later Tuesday — “The Following” averaged 10.38 million viewers and a 3.1 rating in the 18- to 49-year-old audience that Fox used for most of its advertising sales.

Both numbers represent an enormous improvement over the previous occupant of the Monday 9 p.m. time period. That series, “The Mob Doctor,” has been canceled. The drama trailed only CBS’s two comedies in that hour, “2 Broke Girls’ and “Mike and Molly,” in both overall audience and 18-to-49 rating.

That means “The Following” was able to beat two established reality shows, “The Biggest Loser” on NBC and “The Bachelor” on ABC, both of which reached season highs Monday night.

Perhaps the best news for Fox was that the audience in the 18-to-49 category grew slightly in the second half-hour of “The Following,” which usually indicates that the viewers who tried it liked it.

Fox, which has put an enormous and costly marketing effort behind “The Following,” also heavily promoted the show as one that a viewer should record on a DVR so it can be watched later. That may mean the series will get a strong bump when delayed rating numbers begin to arrive in three days.

Fox executives, who have acknowledged they have much riding on “The Following,” had expressed concern that some backlash against the show’s graphic violence could hinder its chances.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/22/the-following-on-fox-opens-with-good-ratings/?partner=rss&emc=rss