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Most DVR Owners Are Recording Live Sports, Survey Says (cnet.com)

A new survey by Thuurz Sports, a company that works with TV providers to increase the size of sports viewing audiences, finds that 84.1 percent of DVR owners record live sports, many of them as a "backup" for when they might miss the end (or the beginning) or the game, and a majority (58 percent) to skip the ads. From a report on CNET: "Over the past decade, DVR viewing has undermined certain elements of the TV business. Reacting to this threat, sports TV executives have rightly focused on the genre's relative strength, calling sports programming 'DVR-proof'," says Brian Ring, the consultant who created the survey for Thuuz, in the press release. "Sports are best viewed live, but this survey highlights the fact that most fans with DVRs regularly use. Most TV shows and movies these days are available on-demand from various sources, but live events, particularly sports, are considered among the most "DVR-proof" since there's more value in seeing the result live.

5 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. The survey between the commercials. by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Sports are best viewed live..."

    "...live events, particularly sports, are considered among the most "DVR-proof" since there's more value in seeing the result live."

    Oh really? What this survey actually highlights is just how much we all fucking hate commercials, no matter what is on TV.

    Here's hoping the bullshit valuation driving obscene commercial costs shrinks to where it should be.

  2. Yes, I do. by bfwebster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I DVR virtually any sports event I'm interested in. If I'm watching "live", it lets me pause the game for whatever reason, then skip over ads until I catch up again. If I'm not that invested in the game, or if I have other things interfering with seeing it live, I'll record it, see what the final score is, then decide whether I want to actually watch it. The upside is that I can skip thru ads.

    --
    Bruce F. Webster (brucefwebster.com)
  3. Delayed start, live end by Aqualung812 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've not had a DVR for a couple of years now, but when I did, I would take a rough guess to start anywhere from 30-90 minutes late on the broadcast of whatever sportsball or racing I was watching.

    The goal was to skip every commercial, yet still end up live for the last 30-10 minutes.

    No spoiled results, and very few commercials in the last bit. Worked great.

    I also did with with shows with big reveals and lots of live views, like The Walking Dead. Those are a predictable 10 minute delay to catch up to live by the last commercial break.

    --
    Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
  4. Re: They just need to ad more advertisements by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Er...NASCAR is a commercial: essentially its racing billboards for national brands.

  5. Same credibility as a **IA-paid report by DCFusor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Really, this should be obvious. Outfit that sells stuff pays for a report that says they're being ripped off - likely inflated numbers - as a background to get legislation to tax DVR owners or whatever other skim they can easy-street or litigate from. "Look, we lose x-zillion bucks from every recorder". Sound familiar? Remember the "tax" on blank CD's and so forth, since "they can only be used to pirate"? This is how the big boys operate, we should have learned long ago.

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    Why guess when you can know? Measure!