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Google Ad Revenue To Top UK Broadcaster's

GoingTurbo writes, "By the end of the year advertisers in the UK will have spent more money advertising on Google than they did on the UK's Channel Four TV station. The article suggests we will see the slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting, and with it, the death of the great TV ads of the past. The article offers an alternative possibility for the future of television." From the article: "The US has been forced to contend with heinously patronizing and crude TV advertising for decades, but the UK's advertising industry has managed to create art out of the dirty act of selling. Some of the best short films of the last century have been television advertisements... Even if some of these make the transition... online, they'll lack the spectacle of their TV equivalent."

136 comments

  1. Who cares about channel four ads? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 0

    I want to know, did they factor in the advertisement spending on the BBC?

    1. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by user24 · · Score: 1

      you do know there is no paid advertising on the BBC, right?

    2. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Bob54321 · · Score: 1

      I think the GP was going for funny... However, I can understand your confusion given it really was not funny.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    3. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by thelost · · Score: 3, Informative
      Is that supposed to funny? Could I direct you here to the BBC's policy on advertising. to quote:

      The BBC is not permitted to carry advertising or sponsorship on its public services. This keeps them independent of commercial interests and ensures they can be run instead to serve the general public interest.
      --
      Promote Charity on Myspace, Show Your Colours!
    4. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by user24 · · Score: 1

      (offtopic)
      in actual fact though, the BBC do advertise, but only for their own services and products. I direct your attention to the 'radio times' adverts, 'gardeners world' adverts, adverts for new shows coming soon etc etc. I'd rather have adverts and not pay the license; the time between programs would stay about the same.

    5. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by h2g2bob · · Score: 1

      (even more offtopic)
      The BBC are probably bringing in advertising on bbcnews.com quite shortly for non-UK people. At the moment, most of the bill is funded by the propaganda, I mean, foreign office.

    6. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but then shows would get a lot longer as suddenly 15mins of commericals are added in to make a 45min show an hour long.

      I like having ads between shows, it serves as a usefull break to make a cup of tea or whatever. However I dislike ads within a show as it breaks the flow of the action and that would happen without the license fee.

    7. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by bri2000 · · Score: 1
      Despite the theory and the public service broadcasting rhetoric, not only does the BBC carry a huge amount of advertising for it's own products and services (every other song on the BBC radio stations will be broken by a 30 second trail for another radio/TV program, just as annoying over time as the ads on commercial radio - I swear if I hear the trail for Russell Brand's stand-up gig tonight one more time it's going through the window) but it also has a very lax attitiude towards product placement. A recent, notorious, example was "How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?" a bloody awful (I only know because my mum insisted on having it on while I was visiting) reality show to find a "normal" person to understudy for the role of Maria in a London stage revival of the Sound of Music which was nothing more than a 10 week advert for the production (complete with premium rate phone lines). And last night Newsnight, which I had thought was the last serious political new programme in the UK, was mostly taken up with a puff piece for Madonna.

      I wish the BBC would accept money for putting on shows like that, maybe then they could reduce the license fee.

    8. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by TommyMc · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I'd rather have adverts and not pay the license; the time between programs would stay about the same.

      How d'you figure that? Every channel advertises it's own programs either side of the adverts, and none of them less so than the bbc. Buy a dvd with a bbc produced show on it and see how long the half hour shows are (usually around 28 minutes), and then look at the ones that run at half an hour on channel 4 (the simpsons on the bbc was a twenty or twenty five minute show if memory serves).

      Go to the USA and watch tv, it's intolerable: the adverts are every two minutes (or feel like it). At least with the bbc the commercial channels are forced to regulate how often they break, for fear of pissing away viewers..

      Additionally if we lost the bbc to advertising we'd lose a hell of a lot more than just the time between programs. The license fee means that they are publically accountable (and therefore not to the highest bidder). It allows them to innovate (I direct your attention to all the innovative comedy programs it's produced in the last 30 years). The website is a fantastic, in depth resource. The Radio stations cater to all tastes, they have informed debaters, all sorts of music for all cultures and we're saved from the embarrassement that are Radio Adverts. There's a million reasons why the bbc is hugely beneficial to British culture: "Time between programs" is not one of the big ones.

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    9. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Alioth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The most telling thing: In the US, the Simpson's takes a half hour slot. When the Simpsons was on BBC2, they fit two episodes in a half hour slot.

      Typical US advertising for a half hour program goes:

      Ads
      Intro credits
      Ads
      Programme first half
      Ads
      Programme second half
      Ads
      Ending credits
      Ads

      Typical UK advertising on a half hour slot:

      Ads
      Intro credits
      Programme first half
      Ads
      Programme second half
      Ending credits
      Ads

      Generally, the ad breaks are shorter, too. When I lived in the US, I practically gave up watching TV because the advertising was so frequent, invasive - and especially car adverts - loud and obnoxious.

    10. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Chacham · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When the Simpsons was on BBC2, they fit two episodes in a half hour slot.

      In the words of Raplh Wiggum, "That's unpossible!".

      US shows of late take about 22 minutes (down from 25 some years back). Two 22 minutes episodes do not fit into a half-hour. So, either they snipped parts of the show (e.g. 1 min of intro, 2 min of credits, and 4 minutes randomly) or it wasn't in a half-hour.

    11. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some estimates suggest that the BBC could make £100m from advertising to non-UK viewers on the Web.

    12. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by Kijori · · Score: 1

      It was about 35 minutes, and they skipped the opening sequences and ran the entire credits in about 5 seconds, with no gap between the episodes - I assume they aren't allowed to skip the credits. The double-bills were also neither current nor consecutive episodes, so I would guess they chose the shortest they could.

    13. Re:Who cares about channel four ads? by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      I doubt they'd be allowed 15 minutes of commercials in an hour, certainly not on the main 2 channels. The 3 main commercial terrestrial channels are very heavily regulated when it comes to the amount of commercials they can air (though on things like movies, they can average them out, so you might get a lot of adverts at the beginning of a film and fewer near the end). Even the non-terrestrial channels have some regulation, which is why if you look closely at the 15 minutes of commercial time to pad out american programmes, a lot of those commercials are for other programmes and are not paid adverts. I would assume that a commercial BBC would be forced to live under the same rules.

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
  2. Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by GroinWeasel · · Score: 1

    "The article suggests we will see the slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting, and with it, the death of the great TV ads of the past"


    "the death of the great TV ads of the past"


    My god!

    How will we ever survive without the "great" TV ads of the past?!??!?

    1. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by Epeeist · · Score: 1

      Right title - think of "Creature Comforts"

    2. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by mooreBS · · Score: 1

      I'll give a big AMEN to that! I'm so sick of television advertising in the US. There's just no substance to it. The commercials we're forced to suffer through (no tivo here) do little to convince me to try new products or services.

      The worst, however, are the cheesy locally made or made by the cable company commercials. Good grief people, if you're going to make your own ads find someone who knows what they're doing to help you. If there was a way to pick up my TV and wring it out every time I see one of these I'd have my own cheese factory.

    3. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      The problem is those terrible ads help pay for shows like Stargate: Atlantis and Battlestar Galactica. Will these shows be able to get made without television ads? Who knows. Although I do have my doubts on the ability to have them shown on television. Unless they do so for free (or close enough) as a form of advertisement.

    4. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by itsdapead · · Score: 1
      Right title - think of "Creature Comforts"

      I'm pretty sure the original short predated the gas adverts - although its probably the gas adverts that enabled most people to see them. I'm sure advertising work does a lot to support outfits like Aardman.

      Maybe the web will kill off all the crass adverts that everybody ignores (so that people can ignore them on the web instead) and just leave the nicely made subtle and ironic ones (+5 wishful thinking).

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    5. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by risk+one · · Score: 1
      The article suggests we will see the slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting, and with it, the death of the great TV ads of the past

      That's crumbelievable!

    6. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Which is a bit of a problem - although the creature comfort ads were very popular and won awards, they were a failure for a simple reason.

      Everyone thought the electricity ads were for British Gas!

    7. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      I'm sure that will be the case, because the web has shown time and time again that it is all about nicely made subtlety and irony.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    8. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by Valacosa · · Score: 1

      I submit that the "great TV ads" were the ones that are a pleasure to watch, not the ones that cost a lot of money.

      Here's to advertisers who have a sense of humour!

      --
      "Live as if you'll die tomorrow." Ridiculous. You could die later today.
    9. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      HBO have funded some highly regarded programmes, albeit somewhat not to everyone's taste. I'm sure that the science fiction fans would be a group who was willing to pay a subscription for their TV shows.

    10. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by 4iedBandit · · Score: 1
      The problem is those terrible ads help pay for shows like Stargate: Atlantis and Battlestar Galactica. Will these shows be able to get made without television ads? Who knows.

      Well I was happy when I discovered the current season of SG-1 was available from iTunes. Put aside any DRM opinions, I paid $40 to have have the season automatically downloaded to my computer as episodes come out. I also did the same for Atlantis. (I did not buy Galactica because I personally think it sucks, but that's my opinion.) I watch episodes commercial free and I don't have to wait the year or two for the seasons to come out on DVD.

      Now, if SG-1 draws 4 million viewers (I'm pulling that number out of my butt) and all of those viewers subscribed to a season, that would be 160 million dollars. Is that enough to produce a show like that for a season? Given an episode costs 1 million (another number I'm pulling out of my butt), that's roughly 20-25 million to produce a season. Seems there's profit to be had there...without needing advertising...

      I know there's a whole mindset to overcome in the industry (We can't do it any other way because we've always done it this way...), but if it were me producing shows I'd be all over this.

      Times change, technologies change. Companies that embrace and deliver are going to be riding the crest of a very big wave.

      --
      "The avalanch has already started, it is too late for the pebbles to vote." -Kosh
    11. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by itsdapead · · Score: 1
      Which is a bit of a problem - although the creature comfort ads were very popular and won awards, they were a failure for a simple reason. Everyone thought the electricity ads were for British Gas!

      Well, back in those days when you got gas from the gas board and electricity from the electricity board (Ok, they'd been de-nationalised but it was a while before there was any real choice) - I never did see the point for ads for gas and electricity. Were you expected to think "Oh, nice parrot - I think I'll turn up the heater" or "Hey, that panther likes to be warm - I'll rip out my gas boiler and put in storage heaters [1]"?

      [1] Note for Americans and other aliens: storage heaters are a wonderful energy efficient device that use cut-price overnight electricity to heat up a pile of bricks overnight so that your house is like an oven first thing in the morning and freezing cold by the time you get home from work (or, for a sterotypical /. reader, get out of bed). They save electricity because, sooner or later, you rip them out and put in a gas boiler.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    12. Re:Lions and tigers and bears; oh my! by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      Next step - getting the bloody things available in the UK. I don't mind paying $20 for a season of SG-1.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  3. Death of television? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article suggests we will see the slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting

    Good riddance. To both the utter crap you spawned and the big pricks you enriched.

    1. Re:Death of television? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Shouldn't you be out somewhere being smug and self-righteous in a coffee house or something?

    2. Re:Death of television? by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Now, now. No need to be nasty to yourself.

    3. Re:Death of television? by stunt_penguin · · Score: 1

      Maybe the coffee house has WiFi :D

      --
      When the posters fear their moderators, there is tyranny; when the moderators fears the posters, there is liberty.
  4. Advertising for everyone by cucucu · · Score: 1

    The greatness of Google's advertising program is that they are good for any budget.
    Just as the PC meant a computer for everyone, Google means everyone can advertise.
    So the interesting question is not whether people are spending more on Internet advertising, but whether businesses are spending less on TV.

    I, for my part, hope that the answer is yes.
    TV is mass media in its worst form, and targets the lowest common denominator.

    1. Re:Advertising for everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >TV is mass media in its worst form, and targets the lowest common denominator.
      Like those who confuse "greatest common factor" with "lowest common denominator"?

    2. Re:Advertising for everyone by daeg · · Score: 1

      As someone in TV, I can tell you wholeheartedly that no, they are not. Our advertising projection and target for the next fiscal year is higher than last year -- but so are online projections (by a factor close to double). We're seeing more advertising clients that want to advertise both on TV and online for higher.

      Local businesses are advertising less on the cheap, fringe stations and seem to be going back to the larger, more dominant stations even if they are more expensive per second of airtime.

    3. Re:Advertising for everyone by ronanbear · · Score: 1

      Google advertising is great for people who are looking for something.

      TV is still king when it comes to certain companies where brand strength is critical. Companies like Coca-cola or Pepsi don't really advertise much online. That's starting a little with Google Videos and coming down the line for YouTube.

      Adsense doesn't do much for a product that doesn't have anything to offer online. Sure there's potential there to do things like start delivering McDonalds (or any local restaurant) ads to people shortly before their lunch break. It hasn't happened yet. There's still no substitute for the power of TV ads. That's one of the main reasons why google are buying into YouTube. TV is changing, Google are hoping that this will put them in pole position.

      --
      the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
  5. Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by thelost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The roll out of Tivo solutions in the UK have not been nearly as popular as in America. I have noticed since the launch of Tivo in the US it has got to the point where it is culturally referenced in films, tv, media, everywhere - in other words it's practically reached Hoover standard.

    The reasons why DVR solutions are of course more complex then the point I am making here, but I would argue one of the reasons is that we have two terrestrial channels that have no adverts (bbc1 and bbc2) and three (ITV1, Channel 4 and Channel 5) which we grumble about, but honestly aren't that invasive - compared to American television.

    With the advent of digital tv we actually have access to a great many more channels, but for the most part all the bbc channels are ad free - it's what we pay a tv license for.

    --
    Promote Charity on Myspace, Show Your Colours!
    1. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by thelost · · Score: 1

      *The reasons why DVR solutions are not popular in the UK is of course more complex then the point I am making here, but I would argue one of the reasons is that we have two terrestrial channels that have no adverts (bbc1 and bbc2) and three (ITV1, Channel 4 and Channel 5) which we grumble about, but honestly aren't that invasive - compared to American television.

      added to note an error in what I previously wrote. Damn I wish slashdot had a 2 minute edit feature like digg, it's about the only place they get one over on here

      --
      Promote Charity on Myspace, Show Your Colours!
    2. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by benb · · Score: 1

      > for the most part all the bbc channels are ad free - it's what we pay a tv license for.

      Be glad about it. In Germany, we pay forced license fees for ARD and ZDF (public TV stations), but they do have ads and, what's worse, product placement, and a lot of their content is crap (folk music to copies of commercial TV formats), not like BBC.

    3. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by ronanbear · · Score: 1

      Tivo did a deal with Sky. They're known as SKY+ in the UK.

      There are other PVRs out there for Freeview/analogue users but the strength of Tivo was its ability to record based on a TV guide.

      Since the market for these DVRs is fragmented there hasn't been such a push for people to buy a PVR.

      PVRs are about a whole lot more than just ad free TV. They're great for watching sports where you can replay live TV.

      --
      the more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the pipe
    4. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by Skrynesaver · · Score: 1
      I don't live in the UK, and consequently don't pay your license fee, owever I do receive the 4 BBC chanels for adults on satelite and consequently I would have assumed the reason no one bothers with a Tivo is that the channels with ads (ITV Channel 4 and all the total drivel) aren't worth watching. Whereas the above 4 plus the 2 for kids plus all the regional variations of BBC (That can be fun, working out why certain history progs aren't shown in Scotland or NI) are brilliant telly.

      The States on the other hand manages to make what is already the least watchable telly on the planet un-viewable with ads, or did when I was over there anyway.

      --
      "Linux is for noobs"-The new MS fud strategy
    5. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by TractorBarry · · Score: 1

      > two terrestrial channels that have no adverts (bbc1 and bbc2)

      That's funny the BBC channels I (very) occasionally watch are full of advertising for other BBC products.

      Not to mention all the product placement.

      --
      Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
    6. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by RealSurreal · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Tivo did a deal with Sky. They're known as SKY+ in the UK."

      Got a reference for that? Cause I got one that says you're wrong : http://www.garysargent.co.uk/tivo/TIVOvsSKY.htm

    7. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sky+ hasn't got anything to do with Tivo. It's a joint venture bewteen NDS (majority owned by News corp), Pace and somebody else who I forget.

    8. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      If what you are saying is correct, then the primary reason for DVR/TiVo/etc is removing commercials, not recording shows to watch them on our time. That would mean that commercials are so hated that the industry really needs to re-think even making them at all.

      I, personally, am more interested in not having to be in front of an appliance at a certain time of day/night. For instance, last night I watched Bones as it was being aired, but then decided that I was too tired to watch Lost (one of my favorite shows) and I went to bed, secure in the knowledge that it would be there for me tomorrow. (today)

      Do I skip commercials if I had the option? Absolutely. Did I get a DVR for that purpose? No.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    9. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      Surely you also get Sci-Fi, Cartoon Network, Comedy Central, History Channel, Discovery, etc. etc. Channels 2-13 are only good for prime time and sports here and forget the weekends... drivel and bad reruns of crappy sitcoms.

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    10. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by iainl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The BBC has as much advertising for what else is on TV this week as any other channel during the breaks between programmes. The real difference is that they don't break off immediately after the opening credit sequence, and strictly, literally every 5 minutes after that, to advertise stuff DURING the show.

      Thanks the the fact that most stuff on the BBC is going to be shown on some other, ad-funded channel at some point, shows are an odd number of minutes long. So they fill the 2 mins between shows with stuff; I can't say I'm that bothered by it myself.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    11. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by iainl · · Score: 1

      I've you've got digital TV then yes, you get all those things and more besides. We mostly don't feel the need to watch them, however - the viewing figures are miniscule, since most of it is done better by the BBC and without adverts during the show.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    12. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by mikeydb · · Score: 1

      Not popular but aside from SKY+, the cable co's have their own specific boxes that they can supply for an extra monthly charge, or if you're a freeviewer there are loads of different boxes, most notable are the boxes by HUMAX and DIGIFUSSION, combining dual tuners with hard disk storage and provide an EPG that users can use to select the programme they wish to store for future viewing. TIVO died in the UK, mostly due to it charging upwards of £10 a month (~$20) for use of an epg that had to be downloaded via a telephone line, not great value if you could only receive five analogue channels.

    13. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      TiVo did make a deal with Sky, but Sky+ is different. TiVo did a deal with Sky where Sky looked after the subscriber management (and still do), and Sky were involved in the (badly done) marketing of TiVo in the UK. If you have a UK TiVo and watch the start up animation you'll noticed at the end a "recommened" by Sky on the right hand side of the TiVo home page while the little TiVo man swings by which is from this time. However Sky had their own system in the works (namely Sky+) which came out about a year later and doesn't share anything at all with TiVo. The biggest problem for TiVo was that Sky never really marketed TiVo right (though I actually ascribe this to incompetence rather than malice, as their Sky+ marketing was almost identical to the TiVo marketing, which I think explains the slow take up of Sky+ as well).

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
    14. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by LupusCanis · · Score: 1

      Sky+ is QUITE popular, but, as Sky is not even the most popular satellite television provider and not everyone with Sky has Sky+...

    15. Re:Tivo like solutions not popular in UK by Steven_Lunn · · Score: 1

      Or the TopField freeview receiver. Twin-tuner, hard disk recording, loads of space, pause and rewind live TV, Picture in Picture, and very quiet due to there being no fan. Excellent machine - been very pleased with mine. Unfortunately no automatic commercial removal, but it's quick to FF past them all. Or edit them out once the programme has been recorded.

  6. I dont believe in the death of TV by Ksempac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First the kind of advertising you get on the web is very different from the one you get on a TV.

    Usually what you get on the Web is : Video Games, Movies, IT solution, Websites... Things people who surf are interested in.

    And you get on TV : Food, Detergent, Soap, Cars, ... Things a whole family needs on a day-to-day basis.

    Additionnally, TV got some help from the web : Now everytime a major TV serie come out, there is a dedicated website to create a buzz and provide some informations to get more people in front of their TV (Lost comes in mind).

    1. Re:I dont believe in the death of TV by Thansal · · Score: 1

      Now that is not 10% accurate.

      The fun thing about advertising on the internet is that what you look at is what you see in advertisments. It is much easier to target adds when you are on a gardening website (http://www.gardenweb.com/ refresh it a couple times and look at what comes up, I doubt you will see adds for tech gadgets or pr0n) then if you are watching a sitcom.

      Yes, it used to be the case where you almost entierly had techies and computer savie people on the internet. With the popularity of broadband, and the old "easy" ISPs (think AOL, pop a CD in and "WOW, I have the internet!") the internet is growing in divversity.

      --
      Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
    2. Re:I dont believe in the death of TV by Thansal · · Score: 1

      100%

      Hit preview before you submit....

      --
      Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
    3. Re:I dont believe in the death of TV by cyrax256 · · Score: 1

      And you get on TV : Food, Detergent, Soap, Cars, ... Things a whole family needs on a day-to-day basis.

      Beer!!! Don't forget beer, a crucial family need... Yeah... 8-)

  7. Thats the reason for french google? by William+Robinson · · Score: 1
    By the end of the year advertisers in the UK will have spent more money advertising on Google than they did on the UK's Channel Four TV station.

    No wonder french president Jacques Chirac has plans for a European search engine called "Quaero".

    1. Re:Thats the reason for french google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Quaero" Is that "cairo" or "queero"?

    2. Re:Thats the reason for french google? by nametaken · · Score: 1


      I didn't know about this Quaero engine.

      That article says it's being built by companies and such, but is it an actual government project?

      That just seems weird to me. I know if the US Gov. tried to put together something to topple Google, everyone would be screaming about government bias and such. If it is a French Gov. project, isn't anyone worried about that? I'd have to think people would be a little naive to think that any particular government was above tinkering in their own interest.

  8. USA! USA! USA! by TopShelf · · Score: 1

    The US has been forced to contend with heinously patronizing and crude TV advertising for decades, but the UK's advertising industry has managed to create art out of the dirty act of selling.

    What do this snaggle-toothed limey think he's doing, slandering our great American advertising industry? There is indeed a cream that rises to the top of the business, raising TV commercials above the mere act of shilling.

    --
    Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  9. Priorities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    um HELLOOOOooo?

    First prost!?

  10. Best films - get real!! by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    The dearth of opportunity to get short films exhibited could explain why Cnet hasn't seen so many.

    http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=short+film+festiv al&meta=cr%3DcountryUK%7CcountryGB

    The one I work seen plenty of attendance growth in the last few years.

    YouTube et. al. are all well and good but there's something about a few beers in the bar with the filmmakers, crew and appreciative audience you just can't get with a download.

    $200,000 per minute does price plenty of folk out of the market for TV advertising.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  11. As tick followed tock followed tick followed tock by ISoldMyLowIdOnEbay · · Score: 1

    I can't comment on current adverts as I'm a Mythtv'er, but the article is right, there were some creative ads in the UK. The Guinness ones come to mind.

    However, the majority were total mind sucking crap, which is why I don't watch them any more.

    But do I see Gooogle ads? Nope. Adblocked. I think online adverts are more easily blocked than TV ads (especially when we factor in product placement), so although Google do well now, things could change very quickly.

  12. Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by mgblst · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Some of the best short films of the last century have been television advertisements... Even if some of these make the transition... online, they'll lack the spectacle of their TV equivalent."
     
    What a load of rubbish. Art, indeed. Yes, the high art that is Car Insurance adds and refinancing company adds - I swear, 50% of adds on UK tv consist of these two "products". A nodding dog, a red car... has art really become this?

    1. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 1

      A nodding dog, a red car... has art really become this?

      You know when an advert is art when someone makes a Dance Remix of it

    2. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      At least you don't have to deal with CRAZY GIDEON and his low low prices on Big Screen TVs ;-p I'm tellin you he's CRAAAAAAAZZZYYYYY! though he does have some hot east-euro-trash lookin' strippers standing around looking bored....

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    3. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What a load of rubbish. Art, indeed. Yes, the high art that is Car Insurance adds and refinancing company adds - I swear, 50% of adds on UK tv consist of these two "products". A nodding dog, a red car... has art really become this?"

      Ohhhhhh Yes.

    4. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by iainl · · Score: 1

      Have you been watching digital-only channels again? Because that's certainly the case there.

      Back on the real channels we still get the likes of the Bravia, Guinness and Honda adverts. It's all down to the perceived demographic of the crap you're watching, really.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    5. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but we do have to deal with the Crazy Frog. :(:(:(

    6. Re:Has this guy ever watched UK TV? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      What a load of rubbish. Art, indeed. Yes, the high art that is Car Insurance adds and refinancing company adds - I swear, 50% of adds on UK tv consist of these two "products". A nodding dog, a red car... has art really become this?
      You forgot all the bastard sofa ads, what is up with this country, do people really replace their living room furniture that often?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  13. Wrong. by Headcase88 · · Score: 1
    Even if some of these make the transition... online, they'll lack the spectacle of their TV equivalent."
    Wrong. On the Internet, you generally have the option of avoiding video ads. Any video ad on the Internet will therefore have to be more spectacular than ever to make people actually choose to watch it and tell their friends about it.
    --
    "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
  14. Son, please. by captnitro · · Score: 1
    The article suggests we will see the slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting, and with it, the death of the great TV ads of the past. The article offers an alternative possibility for the future of television.


    And I'd suggest then that the article is wrong. How about, I don't know, just MORE ADS EVERYWHERE, all the time? Television isn't going anywhere, but it is losing its monopoly on moving images in the home. So the shifting around is going to be natural. That doesn't mean moving images will stop being ad-supported and suddenly everybody will throw away their HDTVs in favor of the 5-inch Youtube player.

    TV ads will die when they decide the Superbowl thing isn't working out any more. Convergence is a double edged sword: your technologies are getting in bed together, and so will your advertising. More importantly, it means the diversification of advertising - there is not One True Way that a company must get its name out there. It may be via text ads next to an online video or it may be via a 30-second spot, but either way, the article is predicting ultimately fewer ads. I don't think so. I think it means more ads. More ads on TV, online, in your e-mail, cereal. A big fat OS X logo branded onto my chicken. Lightspeed underwear.

    "Only on TV and radio, and in magazines, and movies, and at ballgames, and on buses, and milk cartons, and T-shirts, and bananas, and written in the sky. But not in dreams, no sirree."
  15. Alien Bladerunner by hachete · · Score: 1

    That's right, Ridley Scott started out in adverts. So, no chance of a repeat there then, as advertising and music videos kept "british cinema" alive for many years.

    --
    Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  16. Let us all mourn by krell · · Score: 1

    "the death of the great TV ads of the past"

    Let us all mourn the death of great TV ads. Surely something to be missed, along with the previous passing of the Spanish Inquisition, the bubonic plague, the Iron Maiden, and having boiling oil poured on you from cathedral tops by irate bellringers.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
    1. Re:Let us all mourn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why single out Iron Maiden? I thought they had some good songs - 'Bring Your Daughter To The Slaughter' was even a UK no. 1!

  17. UK and US television are very differient animals. by Gray · · Score: 1

    It's worth keeping in mind that television in the UK has a very different flavor then in the US. Firstly, the country is geographically smaller, so it's all national. There are no local affiliates. Channel Four is literally channel 4 on the dial for the whole country.

    Secondly, the top stations (BBC1 and BBC2) have no ads what so ever, they are funded by a per household tv tax. Only somewhat 'new' channels like Four have ads and they are often regarded as somewhat 'tacky'. Maybe I'm missing something, but all I ever seen to see on UK tv is ads for car insurance and ring tones.

    Bottom line is a lot less gets spent on TV advertising compared to the US. My benchmark would be, Google owns advertising once movie studios are spending more on google then on tv.

  18. Bullshit. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

    This type of thinking assumes that *everyone* is plugged into their computers and the Interweb. But this just isn't so. There are and will always be large numbers of people that use the computer very little or not at all.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:Bullshit. by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      True, but they're not the people advertisers want to reach. The people that advertisers are willing to spend big bucks to reach are increasingly more likely to be found online and not in front of the TV.

      Though I never understand while it's always an either/or when it comes to these things (either you're watching TV or you're surfing the web) - surely you can have the TV on and surf the web at the same time.

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
  19. Is this true? by Thansal · · Score: 1
    The US has been forced to contend with heinously patronizing and crude TV advertising for decades, but the UK's advertising industry has managed to create art out of the dirty act of selling. Some of the best short films of the last century have been television advertisements


    I, being an American, have never watched TV in another country (watchign TV when traveling, for anythign other then pure news, seems silly to me). Are the commercials in the UK actualy good and worth watching? Commercials are one of the reasons I nolonger watch TV, that and the fact that most TV sucks horribly.

    So, tell me, are these commercials really that good? (or is this just FUD?)
    --
    Do Or Do Not, There Is No Spoon, There Is Only Zuul. Everything in the above post is probably opinion.
    1. Re:Is this true? by Stimpack · · Score: 1

      FUD. I am forced to record everything and watch it later, adverts have killed live UK TV for me. On the rare occasion there is a funny advert, it ceases to be funny on repeat viewings and by the 20th viewing you are tearing your eyes out.

    2. Re:Is this true? by RahoulB · · Score: 1

      they used to be pretty good.

      the carling black label ones (very funny beer ads), the levi's spaceman ad (all those levi's ones were good but i presume they were international), even bloody shake and vac (which most people in their thirties still know all the words to, despite being over twenty years ago).

      you could ALWAYS tell immediately if it was a british ad, an american one or (the lowest of the low) a european one, simply from the quality.

      i've not seen an ad on the TV for about ten years that has made me go 'wow', but it did used to happen.

    3. Re:Is this true? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      No, I haven't seen American Ads and if they truly do elevate their British cousins to the status of "great art" then I really hope I never do.

      There are perhaps a couple of ads a year which are amusing, the first time you see them, but in the main they're just a nuisance and quite likely indistinguishable from American Ads. Having said that some of the most irritating are those for cosmetic products with the stupid, inane, catchphrase stuck on the end of some insipid dross showing women using the product and the massive impact shiny hair has had on their vapid lives. These seem to me to have been transferred directly from American TV and you do have my sympathy if you have to put up with even more of them than we do.

    4. Re:Is this true? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      The last Carling one I liked was the guy stranded on the island with his mate the crab, that was funny when I first saw it.

      European Ads: Ferrero Roche ? If so say no more.

    5. Re:Is this true? by ultrasound · · Score: 1

      In a way. There have been some _great_ adverts for products such as Hamlet cigars, Guiness, Cinzano, Smash, Yellow pages, John Smiths etc. Some of these are classics that everyone remembers even 20 years after the advert was shown. There are also some dismal adverts, however I think that the advertisers recognize that producing a quality ad that people remember and talk about is worth the money, particularly for products where the brand is more important than the absolute quality of the product.

    6. Re:Is this true? by randomalias · · Score: 1
      There's always that honda ad:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2VCfOC69jc

      or the banned xbox one:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uu8456pVSLI

    7. Re:Is this true? by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Most commercials in the UK are utter shite. However, unlike in the US (where ALL commercials are utter shite - I lived in Houston for 7 years, so yes - I've seen them), there are the gems that make you stop fast forwarding the video - or stop you channel surfing.

      Take for example the contrast between car ads in the US - where they are almost uniformly loud, in your face, and obnoxious - with a recent Honda Civic ad in the UK: http://tvadverts.blogspot.com/2006/01/honda-civic- choir.html .

      Indeed - it's on YouTube too (get it before the DMCA does) : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s22N8ZLPEaY - although it's not as effective as a poor quality YouTube video. It's fantastic on a hi-fi stereo system like I have hooked up to my satellite receiver.

    8. Re:Is this true? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      What was the advert with that kung fu fighting bear in it, I think it was some kind of fish related product, that was funny even on the 2nd and 3rd viewings.

    9. Re:Is this true? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      John West's Salmon. Pure Ad genius.

      To be a fair TV ads in the past were often very good. The quality has however declined with the popularity of digital TV and even the ads that are good tend to be overplayed very quickly now.

    10. Re:Is this true? by laddiebuck · · Score: 1

      I'm not British, but see a list of Greatest Television Advertisements in the UK...

    11. Re:Is this true? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my favourite UK ad, perhaps 10 years back: a car screaming down winding twisty roads at the base of an erupting volcano. Seriously gorgeous girl and boyfriend get out and have a blazing row about her driving... All handheld shaky camera work, gusts of wind blowing her hair and random crap in all directions, car plastered with volcanic ash: behind them the side of the volcano has just collapsed and a pyroclastic cloud is all set to sandblast them to cooked bones. "If you think you can drive any better, you do it!". They swap seats, car doors slam and car screeches away, barely outrunning the cloud. "and another thing, look at the paintwork..." "Well, I'm not cleaning it!"
      Hilarious. It must have been advertising the car: no idea what make it was.

    12. Re:Is this true? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Are the commercials in the UK actualy good and worth watching?
      No. The only advantage of the UK ads over the US ones is that advert breaks are shorter and less frequent, and even that only applies to the main channels. Channels like UK Gold (popular repeats) are only bearable if you record them and skip through the ads.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  20. Incidentally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone else wait with baited breath for the Clover butter ads to come on? There's something really compelling about a black man weeping into his corn-on-the-cob. Art indeed!

  21. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by mochan_s · · Score: 1

    When the UK has the BBC (which broadcasts Dr. Who to Glastonbury (the only things from the UK I watch)), I doubt there is much advertising on TV in the UK.

    The BBC news site http://news.bbc.co.uk/ is the best website for new since it DOES NOT HAVE ADS.

    On the flip side though, even Dr. Who is really tacky and barely barely worth watching. All good really good high-budget TV series are from the US with the TV advertisment model.

    Some of the Channel 4 stuff I've watched always gave me the impression that UK didn't have ads for small things like soap, pens, candy etc. It's ads for cars, banks and Scotland.

  22. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by Smauler · · Score: 1

    Channel Four is literally channel 4 on the dial for the whole country.

    Never heard of S4C? Also, try using the "now and next" pages on teletext sometime - you'll be suprised how often most of it just says "regional variations".

  23. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by TractorBarry · · Score: 1

    > Secondly, the top stations (BBC1 and BBC2) have no ads what so ever

    Really ? So what do you call all those little 30 second slots they keep having which are blatantly advertising BBC products then ?

    --
    Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
  24. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by RahoulB · · Score: 1

    one major difference between the two, that Channel 4 has done tons to eradicate, is the frequency of the ads.

    In the past, a half hour show would have one ad break. A one hour show would have two or three.

    Now, on C4, any American show (they don't seem to do it with the British ones) will have an ad break as soon as the titles finish and then another every couple of minutes later.

  25. Part of the reason by grahamsz · · Score: 1

    Is that we dont have local TV channels. The smallest adversting market is probably "Scotland" which is still 5 million people spead out over a country.

    If you run a car dealership then you can't afford to run TV ads because you'll be targetting people who live many hours away from you.

    Most of the particularly distasteful US commercials are more small businesses. I think people like Geico and Apple have pretty clever ads.

    1. Re:Part of the reason by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Having lived in the US from the mid 90s until 2002, I can tell you for certain the worst adverts are from car dealers. They are all uniformly loud and obnoxious, and involve the owner of the dealership SHOUTING his message, followed by slogans like "Prices driven down" in a loud echoy voice. They are truly appalling. Mind you, the corporate ads by car companies in the US aren't much better than the dealership ones - mostly, they are corny, and over-rely on country and western music (especially pick up truck ads). There is NOTHING that comes even close to the Honda Civic choir ad on US television. Nothing.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s22N8ZLPEaY - the full 2 minute ad that Honda ran in the UK.

    2. Re:Part of the reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God that advert was the most annoying I have ever seen!

      Also, the BBC advertise all the time, just a bit more subltley. Ever day on the Breakfast news theres a advert for a film or somthing similar, dressed up as a story. The most recent was a story on Saw 3 claiming it had made people faint because it was so scary!

    3. Re:Part of the reason by nametaken · · Score: 1


      There are plenty of large company ads that make me laugh out loud, and I like to think I'm not a complete dolt. You're certainly right about the local car dealer ads though. They are most certainly the bottom of the barrel and account for way too much ad time.

      I saw that Honda commercial you're talking about once before. It is certainly cool... but we do, occasionally, get really creative marketing on TV here. I think we can agree that genius is pretty rare anywhere you go.

    4. Re:Part of the reason by RexxFiend · · Score: 1

      actually we in scotland have somethiung called micro regions. They can target each transmitter with different ads. Funky huh?
      Of course you would expect the inventors of the telly to be a bit more advanced...

      (ducks)

      --

      A crash reduces
      Your expensive computer
      to a simple stone.
    5. Re:Part of the reason by grahamsz · · Score: 1

      Hmmm I grew up in Scotland and have never observed that. I know the beeb can target relatively small regions, but they dont really carry advertising. It seemed very unusual to see any commercial for a business that wasn't national.

    6. Re:Part of the reason by RexxFiend · · Score: 1

      I think it's a relatively new thing but I remember moving from Dunfermline to Glasgow to go to uni (a few years ago) and noticing a difference in the adverts - there were regional variations even then. I think they are just more granular now.

      --

      A crash reduces
      Your expensive computer
      to a simple stone.
  26. who cares about tv... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when you got sites like http://alloftv.net/ :)

  27. Barrier to entry and the "Long Tail" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This seems entirely reasonable considering that there are a lot more companies with $100 advertising budjets than there are with multi-thousand dollar budjets. (Substiture euro or pound if you wish). With the lower barrier to entry there are a lot more firms advertising and they are advertising to a targeted market so they are getting better return on their investment. The car advertisements are the mass market TV ads, The plumbers, and florists, and tailors, and E-bay, and local shops are the long tail that advertises on google.

  28. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by LordSnooty · · Score: 1
    but all I ever seen to see on UK tv is ads for car insurance and ring tones.
    Outside of primetime this is correct. The reason is simple, not enough people watch TV outside of primetime any more to justify the spend by the big companies. The airtime is soaked up by these insurers & loan sharks who will spend the vast majority of their marketing budget on TV ads. Similarly, Channel Four is possibly the third most popular channel in the UK. They have always commanded smaller audiences than commercial rivals like ITV (however this is changing). I'm not sure we can draw such grand conclusions from this news. TV audiences have been dwindling in the UK for over 10 years. Partly due to fragmentation by satellite, partly to do with increased nighttime economy, partly to do with people surfing the net instead. But to hail it as a great day for Google is a bit much. There are many reasons why ad revenue is falling for UK TV stations.
  29. The ads by CopaceticOpus · · Score: 1
    1. Re:The ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Power of Dreams Ad. produced for Honda UK in the last year, featuring the voice of Andy Williams singing whilst a hairy looking chap drives some of Honda's equipment produced over the last 40 or more years in beautiful locations, has to be one of the best adverts of recent times.

      Such an emotional piece. Can't remember if the UK advertising agency responsible for it won an award or not, but they damn well should have.

      http://youtube.com/watch?v=chx3w8TV_go
      http://84.40.3.165/

    2. Re:The ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This honda advert is fantastic :

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9o9Sr_vw5I

  30. as pete so rightfully said... by Connie_Lingus · · Score: 1

    ..."meet the new boss, same as the old boss"

    --
    never bring a twinkie to a food fight.
  31. "slow erosion" already well underway by anothy · · Score: 1

    i've never paid for cable or satellite. the service has just never seemed to offer me any value: while there's some decent content, it's overwhelmed by noise, and i'm not willing to schedule my life around the box. today, i watch several programs regularly, however.

    take, for example, Lost, Jericho, and Heroes. three different networks, prime-time big-money shows, and each of their networks distributes the latest episode online for free. sure, it's in some stupid flash player, which diminishes the experience (prevents portability, inhibits replay, and - particularly the ABC player - can be buggy), but that's a huge shift in outlook on the part of the major networks from even two years ago. the official distributions contain commercials, but that's a trade-off well worth it (ABC's model is particularly nice: watch 'em once, then scroll around however you want, including watching the whole show straight through without interruption). i have no idea what the user population of these sorts of services are today, but i strongly believe they'll continue to grow.

    then there's DVD series. i've watched far more "television" shows via DVD in the past year than i have off broadcast+cable+satellite in the past five (like i said, i don't have "television" in the normal sense). there's some unanswered questions about this as an model in itself - how do you know which shows to watch? where's the up-front production money come from? - but, again, that model seriously diminishes the "need" for "traditional" television. and i'm certainly not alone on this front: this is a very big market already.

    and this is just the officially sanctioned means. if i remember correctly, ABC lets you watch back episodes through their player, NBC not; bittorrent to the rescue. eztv even specializes in exactly this sort of television content shifting.

    then there's iTunes. their pricing model is informative. personally, i think it's too high: i've bought some short movies, but wouldn't pay that much for a television show/season. however, when you look at what people actually pay for cable/satallite - which can easily top $100/month - it's actually not a bad deal, by the numbers. if the quality was higher, i might be inclined to get, say, Lost and Battlestar Galactica this way; alternately, if the current product was available for, say, $20-25/season.

    the "slow erosion of traditional television broadcasting" is already upon us, and is only going to accelerate with increased broadband adoption and data rates. and good riddance.

    --

    i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
  32. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by aristolochene · · Score: 0

    "It's worth keeping in mind that television in the UK has a very different flavor then in the US. Firstly, the country is geographically smaller, so it's all national. There are no local affiliates. Channel Four is literally channel 4 on the dial for the whole country."

    Wrong.

    BBC and ITV channels are split into regions. You have BBC Wales, BBC, BBC Scotland and BBC N. Ireland. Each of those is sub-divided for local news, etc.

    "Secondly, the top stations (BBC1 and BBC2) have no ads what so ever, they are funded by a per household tv tax"

    Wrong. BBC1 and ITV1 are the two most popular channels.

    "Only somewhat 'new' channels like Four have ads and they are often regarded as somewhat 'tacky'. Maybe I'm missing something,"

    Partially wrong. C4 is moderatley tacky (but does show a lot of art-film, etc.) Channel <i>5</i> on the other hand is pure drivel. Channel 4 started in 1982. Making it of a similr vintage to MTV. Harldy 'new'.

    "but all I ever seen to see on UK tv is ads for car insurance and ring tones"

    Wrong. You are, of course, forgetting ads for home refinance.

    C- overall. See me after class.

    --
    echo $SIGNATURE
  33. Wrong Crowd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anywhere outside the US, you'd be modded funny. In the US, you'd be modded "whut thuh faaaaack is he talkin 'bout".

  34. ethics? by TommyMc · · Score: 1
    there are the gems that make you stop fast forwarding the video - or stop you channel surfing.

    In a way i PREFER ads to be really bad. I can go make a cup of tea, maybe give that book i'm reading another chance to hook me. Granted, i could do this with "great" ads too, but if i am sucked in to watching them at least if they're rubbish i can fall back onto a vague sense of self superiority to smirk my way through them. Good adverts are..insidious. Advertising is a huge business, there's tons of Psychological studies on what sort of adverts will appeal to what market etc.: my girlfriend learnt all about them at University. At least if an advert is just "buy this cooker" I can just mumble "no, i don't need a fucking cooker, you knob" to myself..

    My problem stems from the frequency of the breaks, not the quality. I even watched "100 Greatest Adverts" on Channel 4.

    Well, 5 minutes of it.

    --
    Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
  35. Revenue from advertising? by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

    They may be spending more with Google than broadcast advertising, but which one is generating more bottom line revenue? And which one has the bigger ratio?

    I think I've mentioned before, this sort of data is a lot like the Addys (ad award like Grammys) which are issued based on peer review rather than effectiveness. Who cares if the ad is really great - if it didn't cause anyone to go purchase the product or service what good is it as an ad?

    I tell you who has the most effective advertising campaign right now and that's Google. They've apparently stolen broadcast advertising's market in the UK.

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  36. Recent Great British Ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  37. The Age of Persuasion by crush · · Score: 1

    Terry O'Reilly and The Age of Persuasion is an excellent radio program about advertising. O'Reilly tracks the evolution of advertising into the internet age and talks about the implicit bargain that there has always been between advertisers and audience: that the audience gets something of value in return for the message, and how this is in danger of being broken in some internet models (popups etc) and has been broken (by e.g. highway billboards which most advertising professionals loathe) in the past.

    Well worth a listen, produced to a very high standard, good writing, entertaining anecdotes.

  38. Not to mention Relevance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TV commercials that are actually relevant and interesting to *me* are nearly non-existant. I don't buy feminine hygene products, I don't buy baby diapers, I don't buy new cars (much less a new one each week). My computers are built from parts, so no use for ads from Dell etc. Go, Google!

  39. Dated ana.lysis by mihalis · · Score: 1

    The US has been forced to contend with heinously patronizing and crude TV advertising for decades

    As someone who used to live in the UK and now lives in the US I'd say this is a very dated view. It was true, perhaps even as little as 10 years ago, but now it's a bit misleading.

    There is quite a bit of wit, subtlety, humor, even dare I say it art in the best US TV advertising these days. In fact when I visit the UK I often find adverts who seem to have abandoned those things for straight out absurdity, inconsequentiality and contrived crudeness as an attention getter, so it feels like the US is currently in a more sophisticated phase of advertising than the UK. I do realise that contrived crudeness can be seen as even more sophisticated - like the crudeness is post-modern or satirical, but men in plastic orange suits slapping people (Tango adverts) really undermine any idea that the US is far behind the US in wit in adverts these days. Many of the "dumb" adverts are now done in a "yeah, we know" manner - the assumption is the viewer gets a chuckle because he's in on what a dumb joke it is e.g. the "Magic Fridge" beer commercial, one of my favourites.

    In other news, the US now has airbags in its cars, good tea, relatively much more expensive gas, fuel-injected engines and a comparative lack of plaid polyester suits, sideburns and huge-collar leather jackets. Who knew?

    1. Re:Dated ana.lysis by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      It was true, perhaps even as little as 10 years ago, but now it's a bit misleading [...] men in plastic orange suits slapping people (Tango adverts) really undermine any idea that the US is far behind

      I'm confused here. You've Been Tangoed was fifteen years ago. I was at primary school at the time. Everyone came in the day after that ad first aired and started slapping people in the face at random...

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:Dated ana.lysis by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      started slapping people in the face at random...

      Unfortunately, slapping people at random was burned into the brains of the infants and small children of the time, so now we get happy slapping teenagers.

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
  40. The future of ads by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

    I suppose the future of ads will be the viral ones like Carlton's Big Ad, which was a successful viral campaign on the Internet before it hit television, even though it was made for TV.

    --
    proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
  41. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Outside of primetime this is correct. The reason is simple, not enough people watch TV outside of primetime any more to justify the spend by the big companies.

    This is very true. Before ITV replaced its late night programming with gambling shows earlier this year, it was noticeable that there were no paid adverts. The ads were all for ITV's digital channels and daytime shows.

  42. I'll give you a few by everphilski · · Score: 1

    the Trunk Monkey

    The Honda ads where the people looked like their cars

    (YouTube 'em. I don't have access at work)

  43. it's not about ads by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 1

    It's about watching TV when it's right for you, not when the broadcasters want you to.

    Even if I couldn't skip ads I still wouldn't be without a TiVo.

    Because it catches all my shows I want to watch and then I can watch them when I get home.

    I don't even have kids, but I don't see how families could get by without a PVR. What happens when you're watching a show live and your baby starts crying?

    There are many shows I watch that I barely know when they're on. They're on when I get home and feel like watching them. Maybe that's 9P, maybe it's the next morning at 8:30A.

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  44. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by Gray · · Score: 1

    Okay, you got me on some technicalities, as you can tell I don't actually live in the UK, anymore. Had something to do with the British sense of humor I think.... C- is too kind.

    Since it's the internet....

    Although there is admittedly some regional content, you have no idea the used car sales pitches you are bring spared. There is nothing akin the to US affiliate system in the UK.

    I was too lazy to lookup what the top stations actually are. Point about TV tax was what mattered. Most Americans are very surprised that this is how things work across the pond.

    BBC One has been going since 1936, 70 years vs. 24. To anyone over 35, that is somewhat new.

    You got me on home finance.

    The general idea is, well in the US TV advertising is top dog, it has never been as big a deal in the UK. Do you disagree?

  45. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by DanBrusca · · Score: 1

    Your comment that there are ad breaks on Channel 4 'every couple of minutes' is innaccurate.

    OFCOM stipulate that on channels 3 to 5, no more than 1 ad break is permitted in a scheduled broadcast of up to 44 minutes, 2 breaks in a broadcast up to 59 minutes and 3 in a broadcast up to 89 minutes. Furthermore, there must be at least 20 minutes between internal breaks, a slight reduction in this time being permitted if it aids continuity.

    So, your typical US drama on Channel 4 will have a maximum of 3 ad breaks.

  46. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by gsslay · · Score: 1
    t's worth keeping in mind that television in the UK has a very different flavor then in the US.

    Correct.

    Firstly, the country is geographically smaller, so it's all national. There are no local affiliates. Channel Four is literally channel 4 on the dial for the whole country.

    WRONG. There are local variations for most of the main "terrestrial" channels.

    Secondly, the top stations (BBC1 and BBC2) have no ads what so ever, they are funded by a per household tv tax.

    WRONG. BBC2 is a minority channel.

    Only somewhat 'new' channels like Four have ads and they are often regarded as somewhat 'tacky'.

    WRONG. ITV, the main commercial TV network has been broadcasting (with adverts) for over 50 years.

    Maybe I'm missing something, but all I ever seen to see on UK tv is ads for car insurance and ring tones.

    Hmmm, kind of depends what your viewing habits are.

  47. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 1

    You're correct as to ad-break frequency (so 3 breaks is the maximum in a 1-hour show), but Channel 4 does seem to have moved to often having a US-style "post titles break" within the first ten minutes. It's not necessarily a bad idea if whoeever designed the show intended there to be a break at that point - what would be a bad idea would be too long / too frequent breaks.

  48. Nicole... by Insipid+Trunculance · · Score: 1



    ?????

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  49. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by StressedEd · · Score: 1
    ..Dr. Who is really tacky..

    I suspect that is vaguely deliberate...... If you ever saw the originals you'd probably understand why. If they over modernised it there would be a massive backlash. No seriously.. Death on the streets, arson, massive - widespread public unrest.....

    Sounds like a case for The Doctor....

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  50. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by RahoulB · · Score: 1

    i bow to your superior knowledge. still pisses me off though. and i've normally turned off by then.

  51. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

    But they only ever do that on american shows, where the break (thanks to american ad patterns) naturally is. I prefer this to how they used to break american programmes at "british" times, where the breaks would be in the dumbest places.

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  52. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

    I would hardly call C4 "new" - it's 24 years old today (it started on November 2, 1982). Even five is almost 10 years old now.

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  53. GOOD AND BAD by ICT+learner · · Score: 1

    I think the loss of adds and tv would be a shame but it had to happen. In time its going to be replaced by something bigger and better. People will soon have to find a new way of advertising.

  54. Re:UK and US television are very differient animal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    High-budget != good

    Whoever tells you that channels like Ch4 are "tacky" has never watched stuff like Low Winter Sun -- which , while lacking special effects and not scifi (which guarantees that it won't appear in IRC channels)... was a fucking excellent, gritty mini-series.

    Most Americans seem to judge UK TV by what appears on eztz torrent channels. We don't do much SF or stuff that is IRC-bait.