Showing posts with label Advertisers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advertisers. Show all posts

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Why is the 18 to 49 demo so important?


The always informative Robert Seidman has written an article trying to explain a bit about the importance of the 18 to 49 demographic ratings to television networks. He discusses how he thinks this related to our beloved Moonlight being canceled. As we have discussed in lots of posts about ratings, the bottom line is money. You are not surprised, huh? Advertisers are willing to pay more to air commercials during shows that have a large demo share.

Many of you have been posting about Swingtown, and following its performance due to Nina Tassler's support of the program. As you will read, it is the main focus of Robert's piece.

Yellow highlights are my emphasis.


TV by the Numbers
CBS' Swingtown : Wanting to believe in Santa Claus
by Robert Seidman

SOMEDAY I may better understand the mechanics of the millennial mind. Until then I will wonder how shows like “Ghost Whisperer” keep going and a series like “Swingtown” fails to catch on. A period piece on CBS, “Swingtown” nears the end of its summer run with a dwindling audience despite all the elements that seemed to point to its potential for popularity. - Gina Belafonte in the New York Times’ piece,
Swingtown and the Heyday of Average.

I was excited to read the rest of the piece because I thought it was going to be a commentary on the state of broadcast network television programming and how shows are positioned and promoted for success. But it wasn’t. It was just gushing praise for the doomed CBS generational show, Swingtown.

I don’t think the mechanics of the millennial mind are why Ghost Whisperer is on the air and series like Swingtown don’t catch on, but rather the mechanics of the business. You can’t push a program to Friday night and blame it on the millennial generation. They are the least likely to be watching TV on Friday. But let’s face it, by the time CBS moved it to Fridays, it wasn’t hoping the show would catch on. It was merely, as they say in baseball, playing out the string.

CBS may dismiss the notion of needing to target to 18-49 year olds and 18-34 year olds, but it’s on CBS’ mind regardless of its public comments. The question is whether a show like Swingtown would appeal to anyone under the age of 40 or so. I don’t doubt that it would, but I think what’s really going on is this: shows have a very limited time to catch on with the 18-49 crowd. The networks aren’t willing to wait it out. Genre shows like
Moonlight get cancelled not because it didn’t have enough viewers, but because it didn’t have enough viewers who were 18-49 years old. If Moonlight had done 33% better in that category it would likely be back on in the fall.

It’s Not Ageism, It’s Supply and Demand

I feel obligated to write this disclaimer now anytime we right about age demographics. A lot of people cry foul at the age demos, but even though I am myself getting pretty aged, I don’t have a problem with it. Advertisers don’t want large 18-49 populations and 18-34 populations specifically because its where they want to hawk their products though in products specifically aimed at younger people that is certainly the case, as it should be. Advertisers want to reach these age demographics and are willing to pay more for them because they are far more scarce in the television world. Finding a show where you can find a large population of people in a specific age and gender are gold mines (think Grey’s Anatomy with women 18-34 and 18-49).

Reaching the 50 and over crowd is relatively easy. They watch a lot of TV, day and night, day in, day out. Availability is not scarce, and the advertisers have so many opportunities to reach that demographic in so many ways it’s less valuable to them. Because it’s harder to reach the younger demographics, it becomes more valuable to reach.


So What Was CBS Thinking?

I think CBS was believing in Santa Claus really. I understand it. It would be nice if there was a Santa Claus, the notion that such a thing could exist is very pleasing. The notion that because a show is good, and very creative and even interesting and different that just because of that it will succeed? That’s like believing in Santa Claus. Not just because of the millennial mind either but because of the nature of the way the business works these days.


A lot of the appeal of shows like Swingtown and Mad Men is just how well they nail the period they cover. I’ve yet to watch Swingtown, but I will give it a look after the Olympics and after I get caught up on Damages, Generation Kill and Weeds. But I trust the likes of Ms. Belafonte that Swingtown has captured the essence of the 1970s well. But who’s that aspect of the show going to appeal the most to? People who were alive in the 1970s! If you were even a young 18 in 1975, you’re over 50 now and outside of demos coveted by advertisers.

It doesn’t matter what the networks say publicly. Shows need to have at least moderate success among the under 50 crowd or they will fail. The leash isn’t typically long either. Shows need to score in the under 50 demos quickly. Swingtown started out OK out of the gate on Thursdays in that regard with modest success (at least for the summer) in the under 50 demographics, but then the show kept bleeding viewers.


A New Hope?

The networks actually do have the luxury of giving at least a show or two a longer leash. It’s not like the networks aren’t making money hand over fist as it is, or they wouldn’t mostly completely throw in the towel with the Friday night and Saturday night lineups. While shows like Moonlight and Jericho had a fairly sizable loyal fan base (both on the Internet and to some degree in terms of viewers) these shows struck out with the youthful demos, and they weren’t critically acclaimed.

I’m not going to fault Gina Belafonte for doing her part to save a show that she likes, I have seen several other TV critics who were digging Swingtown. I doubt in the case of Swingtown, it will make any difference whatsoever. We have two data points that suggest clearly CBS has already made up its mind on this show and is ready to move on:

It switched it to Fridays, giving Flashpoint the better Thursday night slot. Kiss of death.

It aired a *new* episode of Swingtown up against the Olympic opening ceremonies. While I’m sure not even NBC expected the stellar numbers the opening ceremonies drew, any programming executive at the other networks knew that the ceremonies would be the most-watched thing on television. That doesn’t explain why NBC Uni itself ran new episodes of Monk and Psych on USA network on Friday night, but still…

I don’t believe we need to wait for the formal announcement from CBS.

I don’t think critical praise is new hope for a show like Swingtown. Many viewers lament the “same old crap” that gets put on the air. Yay, another police, crime, lawyer, doctor procedural! I understand. But what works, works, and as long as it works, that’s likely just going to be the way it is.

A show like Swingtown needs to catch on, and catch on fast. That’s a circumstance that you’ll rarely see happen on broadcast network television, especially in the summer without a big budget for promotion.

At the end of the day, the best new hope for new, creative and different content is…cable.


http://tvbythenumbers.com/2008/08/10/cbs-swingtown-wanting-to-believe-in-santa-claus/4642

Friday, May 16, 2008

Advertisers from tonight's Moonlight episode


Here are a few of the advertisers who had commercials airing during tonight's episode of Moonlight ~ season finale, Sonata (#1x16).

Lean Cuisine
Metamucil
Remax.com
Ace Hardware
Capital One Credit Card Lab
Claritin
Lens Crafters
Fixodent
Chevy Malibu
PetsMart
Mytimetoquit.com
Honda Accord
Pizza Hut
McDonald's Southern Style Chicken Sandwich
Veramyst Nasal Spray
Kia Spectra & Sportage
Scrubbing Bubbles Action Scrubber
Olay
Home Depot ~ Behr Paint
Suave
Applebee's Restaurant

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Contact Moonlight advertisers about the show's cancelation


We have all been contacting the companies that advertise during Moonlight to say thanks. Now, we need to let them know how upset we are with CBS' decision to cancel our show. And, most importantly, that we will follow Moonlight no matter where it airs. Let the sponsors know we are loyal to companies that are loyal to Moonlight!

I'm reposting a list of the advertisers from Moonlight's last few episodes. My sweet friend, Diane, also has a marvelous list of sponsors with many addresses & phone numbers.

http://www.renewmoonlight.com/Sponsors.html

Keep up the good work of letting the advertisers know that they reach us by placing their commercials during Moonlight :)

Home Depot
Shedd's Spread Country Crock
Hyundai Sonata
Brawny Paper Towels
Kmart ~ Jaclyn Smith Women's Clothing Collection
Pizza Hut
Zales
Honda Accord & Pilot
Windex
Egg Beaters
Glad Ziplock Double Zipper Bags
Dannon Activia Yogurt
Quizno's Subs
Sears
Loreal Preference Hair Color
Pringles
Lowe's
Cotton Producers
Stein Mart
Jared Jewelry
Ford Fusion
Wendy's
Oreo Cookies
PetsMart
Lean Cuisine
Gatorade G2
Ace Hardware
Nissan Murano & Altima
Buick, Pontiac, GMC
Gardasil
Burlington Coat Factory
Jello
Miracle Grow Potting Mix
Kohl's
Redi Whip
Claritin
Kia Sportage
Red Lobster
Aciphex
Planter's Peanuts
Speed Racer Movie Premiere
Iams Dog Food
AT&T Wireless
Dell Computers
Apple iPhone
Saturn
Januvia (Merck)
Oil of Olay
Citi Cash Returns Bankcard

Monday, May 12, 2008

Thanking the companies that spend money advertising during Moonlight


I know that you have all been faithfully contacting the companies that advertise during Moonlight. Thank you! I'm reposting a list of the advertisers from Moonlight's last few episodes. We need to let them know how much we appreciate their support of our show..... now more than ever!

Keep up the good work of letting the advertisers know that they reach us by placing their commercials during Moonlight :)

Home Depot
Shedd's Spread Country Crock
Hyundai Sonata
Brawny Paper Towels
Kmart ~ Jaclyn Smith Women's Clothing Collection
Pizza Hut
Zales
Honda Accord & Pilot
Windex
Egg Beaters
Glad Ziplock Double Zipper Bags
Dannon Activia Yogurt
Quizno's Subs
Sears
Loreal Preference Hair Color
Pringles
Lowe's
Cotton Producers
Stein Mart
Jared Jewelry
Ford Fusion
Wendy's
Oreo Cookies
PetsMart
Lean Cuisine
Gatorade G2
Ace Hardware
Nissan Murano & Altima
Buick, Pontiac, GMC
Gardasil
Burlington Coat Factory
Jello
Miracle Grow Potting Mix
Kohl's
Redi Whip
Claritin
Kia Sportage
Red Lobster
Aciphex
Planter's Peanuts
Speed Racer Movie Premiere
Iams Dog Food
AT&T Wireless
Dell Computers
Apple iPhone
Saturn
Januvia (Merck)
Oil of Olay
Citi Cash Returns Bankcard

Saturday, February 9, 2008

A few companies that advertise during Moonlight


I've heard that networks & corporations like to make money. ;> Let the companies that advertise during Moonlight know how much we appreciate them selecting our show! This is a quick list of a few I wrote down during last night's broadcast. I'll be glad when Valentine's Day is over cuz all the heart shaped necklace commercials are making me crazy! hahaha.....

Kay Jewelers
Stouffer's
Cover Girl Lash Blast
Fiber Choice
Olive Garden
Lens Crafters
RE/MAX Realtors
Pringle's Select
Chevy Malibu
Nasonex
AT&T Wireless
Zales
Hallmark Gold Crown Stores
Dr. Scholl's
Glad Force Flex Garbage Bags
Hyundai Santa Fe
Gone Baby Gone Movie DVD Release
Citi
Nissan Murano
Scrubbing Bubbles Action Scrubber (S.C. Johnson)

Monday, February 4, 2008

Thanking the companies that advertise during Moonlight


We need to thank all the companies that continue to pay to advertise during Moonlight! Here are a few of our great advertisers that I managed to write down during last Friday's episode.

Zales
Bayer Aspirin
Verizon Wireless
The Brave One ~ Jodie Foster ~ Movie DVD Release
Ford Focus
Pizza Hut
South Beach Living
Crest Pro Health Night Toothpaste
Turbo Tax
Ryobi Tools
Disney Snow Buddies Movie DVD
V8 VFusion
Glade Scented Oil Candles
Cox Digital Cable Bundle
Prilosec
LL Bean
Buick Vehicles
Kate Hudson & Matthew McConaughey's new film Fool's Gold

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Contact and thank the companies that advertise on Moonlight

Another important way to support Moonlight is by contacting and thanking the companies that pay CBS big bucks to advertise during the show. The long list below is just a few that I managed to quickly write down during Sleeping Beauty. Let them know how much we appreciate them selecting our show for their ads, that you like their product, or you are now a new customer and so on. Of course, only write and call if you really do like, use &/or plan to use what they are selling.

Honda
Kohl's
Energizer Batteries
KFC
Dove Chocolate (Mars)
Dodge
Ameritrade
Aussie Hair Products (Procter & Gamble) ~ Appropriate for them to be advertising on Alex's show, right? *wink*
Zales
Dyson
Toshiba HD DVD
JC Penney
Nissan
Wal-Mart
Circuit City
Progresso Soup
Burlington Coat Factory
Tim Burton & Johnny Depp's new fim ~ Sweeney Todd (DreamWorks Pictures & Warner Bros)