NBC's Ingenious Solution To Ad Skipping And Low Ratings: More Embarrassingly Unfunny Product Placement

from the dead-cash-cows dept

We've already talked a lot about how the cable and broadcast industry's response to a changing TV landscape (ad skipping, dropping ratings, Internet video competition) is the ingenious one-two punch of mindlessly raising rates and making the viewing experience more annoying than ever. They've accomplished the latter in several ways, ranging from simply pushing more ads than ever before, or by even speeding up or editing popular programming to ensure more ads will fit in each viewing hour.

With ad skipping on the rise, ratings in free fall and lawsuits to stop ad skipping going nowhere fast, the broadcast industry's latest ingenious solution is to also start including more in-show product placement:
"Moments before climbing into bed with supermodel Christie Brinkley, Donny Deutsch turns to the camera and tells viewers that a certain brand of vodka is perfect for the occasion. The scene is from Deutsch’s new comedy series “Donny!” debuting next month on NBCUniversal’s USA Network. It’s the latest example of how TV shows, which have long avoided acknowledging product placement to their viewers, are becoming increasingly upfront about it, even turning it into a joke.
That sounds incredibly stupid to me, but maybe you had to be there. Now that consumers have more choices and improved ad skipping technology, they're making their preferences clear, whether that's Netflix or Dish's Hopper ad-skipping DVR. Adapting to competition is still a foreign concept to the cable and broadcast industry, which is why NBCUniversal execs apparently believe that including stupid references to products that erode the quality of your series is the height of "creativity," helping them better connect with Millennials:
"We see that happening at our company more and more often," (NBC U ad exec Linda) Yaccarino said during an Advertising Week panel in New York. "You have to acknowledge the challenges with ad-skipping and lapses in measurement and break out in a more creative way."..."Today's young people are hip to what we do for a living," (Donny) Deutsch said on stage during Advertising Week, which ended Oct. 1. "You've got to let them in on the joke."
Yeah, but hawking vodka just isn't funny. The real joke is that your valued young target audience is increasingly no longer watching your show on traditional TV to begin with, and you believe having stars peddle more hummus is the answer. Shoving more ads down the throats of your viewers isn't creative, it's desperate. And while advertisers may be willing to pay an estimated $300,000 per each placement, it's a band aid on a major gash in the hull of the industry's legacy cash cow. It's also telling that the broadcast industry's version of "creativity" and customer adaptation is bringing television advertising back full circle to the 1950s:


Of course, the solution for traditional cable and broadcasting isn't to find a way to shovel more ads into less space, it's to develop a better product and offer it in more convenient packages at a better price. Whether that's a fair position to be in is irrelevant. The cable and broadcast industry's traditional cash cow is dead. There's no turning back the dial. The answer now is in developing new models going forward that finally, after a generation, give consumers what they want. Sadly, that's going to mean having to (gasp) compete on price and probably make less money for a little while. But the alternative is letting companies like Netflix run away with the holy cash cow, leaving legacy cable a relic of a bygone era that could have adapted, but instead chose to stupidly keep making the same mistakes.
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Filed Under: ad skipping, product placement, tv
Companies: comcast, nbc universal


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  • icon
    That One Guy (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 8:12am

    "You know what I love?

    When a character in a fantasy or sci-fi book breaks the forth wall to address me as a reader, completely shattering the suspension of disbelief that allowed me to accept the impossible stuff that was going on before.

    Or how about when a movie makes sure to pause the action to remind you that you're not watching an amazing space battle, or a tension-filled chase or shootout, or an epic battle between two armies, but a handful of people pretending in front of a green-screen?

    Yes indeed, nothing makes me enjoy my entertainment more than the characters within it shattering the temporary illusion cast by the action and story, slapping me in the face with the fact that what I'm reading or watching isn't real, and is nothing more than words on a page or actors on a set."

    Said no one ever

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:22am

      Re: "You know what I love?

      ...Said Bertolt Brecht, actually.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Roger Strong (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:28am

      Re: "You know what I love?

      Oh, c'mon. Admit it: You'll remember that vodka the next time you're banging Christie Brinkley.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:48am

      Re: "You know what I love?

      "fourth"

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 10:20am

      Re: "You know what I love?

      Except the soon to be released Deadpool movie is about to do just that and it's exactly what fans want. So, yeah maybe that's the exception that proves the rule.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        That One Guy (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 6:56pm

        Re: Re: "You know what I love?

        Deadpool's main 'quirk' though is that he knows he's a character in a comic/movie, and has no problem addressing the audience, who expect as much from him. It works for a character like him, but for anyone else, it's just yanking the reader/watcher out of their suspension of disbelief and reminding them that what they're seeing isn't real.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Bamboo Harvester (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 10:50am

      Re: "You know what I love?

      So YOU'RE the guy that keeps arguing with the Narrator, eh? :)

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:00am

    Why that's genius, NBC!
    I'm sure the people using ad-skippers to skip ads won't just start skipping the television shows which are big ads, too!

    What's the turnaround rate on your pilot shows, NBC? I think it's like 5-10%, the lowest of any network. Just keep flinging crap at that wall, I'm sure some of it still stick with a cool refreshing smoke.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    r_rolo1 (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:03am

    Genius move

    Problem: people skip ads

    Solution: Put the ads inside the shows. People will never, ever, skip the entire show because they discover the thing is a huge infomercial, right? :D

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Ninja (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:23am

      Re: Genius move

      People will never, ever, skip the entire show because they discover the thing is a huge infomercial, right?

      TV Execs: YEEEESSSS!! *excited applause*

      Meanwhile the cash cow dies faster.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Andrew (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:07am

    Me and my kids just shout out 'product placement' every time we see something in a show/movie that looks like it. not only does it give them the awareness of what it is, but since it works by being innocuous, by loudly announcing it, it mostly takes away any marketable impact it has.
    They've gotten pretty good at it too!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
    identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:09am

    Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

    But I don't see Netflix -- or any other direct paying -- working, either, when piracy isn't suppressed. Already, anyone can rip Netflix content and pass it on to unlimited others.

    You're still looking at the whole problem in the prior moral milieu not in the new condition of unlimited piracy. If that's let become the norm, then it can't possibly work.

    You can't compete with free -- meaning against your own product that costs you money but can be enjoyed for free.

    Therefore, one must conclude that copyright is the practical system for ensuring supply of content, and is more important now that gadgets make copying easier than ever.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
      identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:18am

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      Like the prior "Copia" article, you're taking credit for the success of copyright industries in defending their content to mean that piracy can be unlimited yet production of content will go on. Actually, piracy has been limited -- higher than wanted, sure, but limited.

      With this piece, you rule out another source of income for producers, while jeering "Whether that's a fair position to be in is irrelevant." -- Actually, it's totally relevant, makes content possible in first place. Copyright IS the FAIR compromise that's been worked out.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Ninja (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:37am

        Re: Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

        Like the prior "Copia" article, you're taking credit for the success of copyright industries in defending their content to mean that piracy can be unlimited yet production of content will go on.

        You lack fundamental reading comprehension. Severely. It shows with supporting data and evidence that anti-piracy efforts had very limited reach. The availability of legal, affordable and easy-to-use services did tackle piracy by a large margin.

        Actually, piracy has been limited -- higher than wanted, sure, but limited.

        Actually no. You only see the tip of the iceberg in the data. Taking me as an example, I often download tons of stuff my friends, relatives ask me. The offline trade is much bigger than your petty industry can even imagine. And you can do absolutely nothing about it. Which is why said legal, affordable and easy to use services are so important, they tacke even that offline piracy.

        Actually, it's totally relevant, makes content possible in first place.

        No. It's been proven that content does not need copyright to be created and, in fact, copyright may be actually a burden that prevents creation. The internet enabled creation of awesome content. Youtube, Kickstarter, online distribution systems along with more affordable technology is what enables more output, not copyright. The great majority of new stuff I see nowadays is there DESPITE copyright.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Vladlagg (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 10:59am

        Re: Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

        Corn Flakes
        http://imgur.com/VE2jVGx
        Don't forget about the 80's.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:27am

        Re: Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

        Copyrights best and brightest, right here boys and girls.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:27am

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      But copyright doesn't prevent piracy, so your conclusion doesn't fit your premise. More copyright restrictions seem to drive more piracy. Ergo, copyright is a contributing factor to some piracy.

      Not to mention that the existence of copyright makes piracy possible. If copyright didn't exist, then piracy wouldn't be piracy.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Ninja (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:30am

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      But I don't see Netflix -- or any other direct paying -- working, either, when piracy isn't suppressed. Already, anyone can rip Netflix content and pass it on to unlimited others.

      Go see a doctor then. Content was always easily available and Netflix slashed piracy. And they recognize their competition in that front. But there is another competitor that will cause much more damage than piracy ever will: the MAFIAA itself with its greed charging unreasonable rates for their content. Which is why Netflix decided to start producing their own stuff. The only err Netflix is making here is that they are not making said content available for other platforms as well.

      If that's let become the norm, then it can't possibly work.


      It is the norm for years now. And it's still working. Because piracy also act as an enabler and free advertising.

      Therefore, one must conclude that copyright is the practical system for ensuring supply of content, and is more important now that gadgets make copying easier than ever.

      Water extinguished the fire. Therefore one must conclude that throwing gasoline in the fire is the best way to extinguish it. (At least this conclusion seems more reasonable than yours)

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:35am

        Re: Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

        >The only err Netflix is making here is that they are not making said content available for other platforms as well.

        The flipside is that Netflix also operates in a way that is closest to if we had ala carte pricing for TV. Sub when your new shows are on, unsub when there's nothing you want to watch. Meanwhile if you have tradition TV, you always have to pay for the garbage the folks at NBC and the like put out.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      jupiterkansas (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:36am

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      Netflix isn't working? Well, you're wrong.

      More copyright will fix this? Again, you're absolutely wrong.

      Nevermind that copyright has absolutely nothing to do with any of this.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:26am

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      Or one may conclude you are old ad deluded.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      JMT (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 2:55pm

      Re: Advertising supported radio and television has always been on verge of collapse.

      "But I don't see Netflix -- or any other direct paying -- working, either, when piracy isn't suppressed."

      You mean you can't see the thing that's actually happening right in front of you?

      From anyone else such a stupid assertion would surprise me. You, not so much.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    That Anonymous Coward (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:13am

    More horrible fallout from copyright, they still hold the rights to this IP and just keep recycling it over and over. Won't someone think of the industry and slash copyright to 10 years and make room for new ideas and save us from the groundhogs day of everything old is new again?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    An-other-onymous, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:20am

    Well, that's going to work in other regions:

    http://www.ias.org.uk/Alcohol-knowledge-centre/Marketing/Factsheets/Alcohol-advertising-in-t he-European-Union.aspx

    Stand by for a slew of badly dubbed/CGI'd sections inserted for the local market

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:19am

      Re:

      This is the one argument I have against product placement.

      Think about it: anyone remember a futuristic movie that featured Taco Bell? That reference has become part of western culture now.

      The trick is to place products without advertising the product -- show the space aliens having a good time drinking Absolut while scarfing packets of M&Ms. Let the branding show, just like it does in real life. Do like Demolition Man and have some fun with brands in the future. Throw in a few product placements that you don't get paid for if none of the competition for that market is willing to pay, but keep the rest limited to paid placement.

      In short, make TV a bit more like real life in those ways.

      And to solve the region issues:
      green-screen all the products, CGI in the branding after the fact. If you aren't allowed to show alcohol in some region, just slap a rootbeer label on the beer, slap Evian on the vodka, etc. These days, this should be really easy to do. As an added bonus for the video syndicates, they've just achieved legally enforced regional lock-in.

      Just don't devolve into 1950's style endorsements like podcasts are starting to do these days.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 1:02pm

        Re: Re:

        Connie Willis wrote a book called Remake set in the future in which the main character works for Hollywood studios doing CGI bowdlerizing by replacing alcohol and cigarettes with less controversial products.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:25am

    Going "back full circle to the 1950s" might be a huge improvement. 1950s television started out with very few commercial breaks. With only 40 minutes of actual show left per hour, modern day cable TV has just about reached the upper limits of commercial breaks. There was simply no where left to go other than immersive advertising, which have anyway been a mainstay of many cable tv shows for years.

    Or how about a return to 1950s style tobacco sponshorships? Tobacco companies were the best-paying advertisers ever; too bad their product was lethal.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEx44ETP8Ac

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:33am

      Re:

      I'd just prefer realism. I wouldn't mind products being visible in shows, but presented realistically. On the first season of Elementary when Sherlock makes a show of magnetically snapping together his new Microsoft tablet and keyboard, it was obnoxious rather than natural.

      If characters talk about advertised products, they'll never do so in an honest way that normal people would. They will never admit that a competing product is better in some aspect like someone in real life would.

      "Yeah, I prefer the taste of Coke to Pepsi, but Pepsi has zero calories and uses natural sugar instead of high fructose corn syrup and I got the case on sale at Albertsons this week."

      I just can't see a shows writers inserting that kind of real world dialogue.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Bamboo Harvester (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 10:56am

      Re:

      "Or how about a return to 1950s style tobacco sponshorships?"

      What, you don't smoke Morely's?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Wendy Cockcroft, 9 Oct 2015 @ 7:48am

        Re: Re:

        In James Bond films the camera would linger over screens with the Sony logo on them. If they make the product placement fairly unobtrusive or maybe have a Pulp Fiction-esque banter about brands, that might work.

        Cheeseburger Royale, anyone?

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:37am

    I don't see any harm in NBC pushing this to see how far they can get. There's a glut of great television being made right now and if NBC is having a hard time competing, they need to find something that generates enough income or start slashing their spending.

    Since NBC is an OTA broadcaster, I wonder what the limits are as far as FCC regulation goes. If they push it too far, they should eventually risk losing their spectrum. Some channels have been pretty obnoxious with animated advertising overlays on the bottom third.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 9:55am

    This is a little off-topic, but is an interesting bit of trivia I just picked up. One thing Seinfeld was noteworthy for was the use of real world products on the show. Candy alone makes for a long list: Twix, Chunky, Junior Mints, Chuckles, PEZ, Jujyfruits, Oh Henry, Twinkies, Drake's. Then you've got Snapple, Entenmann's, Oreos, Today Sponge, Chrysler, the various cereals you can see in Jerry's cabinet, etc., etc.

    Most of the time these brands were integral to some pretty big plot points. I had always assumed it was product placement, but according to the writers that wasn't the case. They either used a real product because they thought it sounded funnier, or it was a bid to get those companies to send them free stuff. Apparently, the companies rarely did so.

    If TV shows could work in the products as effortlessly as Seinfeld did, I think it could work. It's hard to imagine that happening, though.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:40am

      Re: (AC @0955)

      A similar statement could be made about the movie Close Encounters Of The Third Kind. One scene had a semi truck whose trailer was emblazoned with "Piggly Wiggly". I thought that funny at the time. Years later I found out there was actually a grocery store chain called Piggly Wiggly. Since they were not in my area I had no idea such a chain existed!

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Nick (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:03am

    As long as the product placement is subtle (no, having a future Will Smith have an odd desire to wear "vintage" Nike shoes isn't subtle) and not blatant, I don't care if that is the funding model. Have the characters drink a coke (you don't need the label perfectly 100% turned to the camera, guys, nobody drinks like THAT) if you want. During the conversation in the store, have them throw a Doritoes bag in the cart, ok.

    Dont do this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AE2iqbWp-ag

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:10am

      Re:

      As an easily impressed upon youth when I watched that movie, I'll have you know they were vintage Converse shoes. I hate that the advertising model is even effective, regardless of the effects it has on viewership.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      nasch (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 12:28pm

      Re:

      The weird thing is, this example would have been so easy to do well. Or at least better.

      Hey, you want a Grey Goose?
      Sure, I love Grey Goose!
      Great! (pours two from the bottle)

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Zonker, 8 Oct 2015 @ 3:15pm

      Re:

      About the only thing I still remember from the 1980's movie "The Gods Must Be Crazy" was the tribal bushman's quest to throw away an empty Coka-Cola bottle from the beginning to the end.

      It can work if you place it well into the storyline and the product has a genuine reason to be there.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:16am

    Pulling a Mencia right away eh?

    And this joke is old. Off the top of my head I know one of the first few 30 Rock episodes did this with Snapple as a running joke in the episode. At least when they do it on Archer with Glenngoolie Scotch, the joke isn't covering up the actual product placement so it's actually humorous and not groan inducing making me dislike a product.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Median Wilfred, 8 Oct 2015 @ 11:29am

    Metaphor Mash-up

    it's a band aid on a major gash in the hull of the industry's legacy cash cow

    Pirates just hate it when the Masnicator masticates metaphors. Medical, nautical, agricultural and IT metaphors all smashed together in one swell sentence that speaks truth to power. I give it 4 thumbs up!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      nasch (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 12:33pm

      Re: Metaphor Mash-up

      it's a Band-Aid(TM) on a major gash in the hull of the industry's legacy cash cow

      See, that's how you do product placement.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 12:19pm

    Popchips

    If you want to see product-placement done right, keep an eye out for PopChips. Their PR agency gets them placed in tons of sitcoms - but they are rarely overt about it. Usually it is in the background, often the bag is half-obscured. You might not even know it is popchips unless are familiar with the bags. They have done a ton of placement on The Big Bang Theory where the bag is just unobtrusively laying on the table in a lunch scene and nobody even touches it.

    The guy running their PR agency is a giant in the field, but he's low key too. If you aren't in the business you've probably never heard of this company much less his name.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Glenn, 8 Oct 2015 @ 1:22pm

    When you realize that TV shows exist as nothing but filler for the time between commercials, you should also realize that none of them are worth watching anyway. TV isn't worth watching unless your goal is to inundate your brain with mostly mindless eye-candy (or maybe there's something on PBS).

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Rekrul, 8 Oct 2015 @ 3:03pm

    People ad-skip in TV shows for many of the same reasons they use ad-blockers on the net. There are too many damn ads and too many annoying ones. Back in the 70s and 80s, I didn't mind commercial breaks because they were short. I have a copy of a TV show that was recorded back in 1978 and it probably has a grand total of 10 minutes of commercials. Today, the average "hour" show has 17-18 minutes of commercials. Maybe someone should file a false advertising complaint with the FTC.

    As for product placement; I don't mind if they show real products in shows or movies. What I don't like is when they compose the scene specifically to draw attention to the product. If one character offers a friend a soda and then tosses them a can of Pepsi, that's fine, but don't stop the scene so that the characters can gush about how good Pepsi is.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 9 Oct 2015 @ 7:18am

      Re:

      " What I don't like is when they compose the scene specifically to draw attention to the product."

      A million times this. I've seen product placement that isn't product placement as much as "bring the momentum of the show to a screeching halt and have the actors perform a little minicommercial in the middle of it".

      There is literally no faster way to get me to just stop watching the show altogether.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 3:22pm

    I guess this means The Truman Show is somewhat prophetic when it comes to product placement in tv?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      John Fenderson (profile), 9 Oct 2015 @ 7:21am

      Re:

      Not prophetic, backward-looking. The Truman Show was parodying the old style of advertising that was common on TV and radio in the '50s and earlier.

      This whole "new and creative" thing that is happening now is neither. It's very old and not creative at all, since it's just returning to its roots.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 3:27pm

    Carson called this network Nothing But Crap way back in 1980.

    He was right. Now we clearly see that their shitcoms are nothing more than a roomful of monkeys writing remakes of Mac & Me.

    And to think they didn't even enlist Paul Rudd for the pilot.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 3:54pm

    there was a time when we had no cable subscriptions and it was okay to see the ads it helped pay the bills.
    but now paying for a cable package pays for your content and tv shows , and ad revenue is all about greed.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    John85851 (profile), 8 Oct 2015 @ 4:30pm

    What's the ROI?

    I'd like to know what the return on investment is for these kinds of ads?
    If a vodka company spends $300,000 to get the lead actor to mention their product, how many sales does this create? Are there viewers who think "If that guy drinks the vodka, I should also?" Does that really happen in 2015?

    On the other hand, how much ill-will does it create when so many people say a product placement like this will take them out of the story? How long will it be until people are talking about show for its product placement instead of the characters and plot?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 8 Oct 2015 @ 5:24pm

      Re: What's the ROI?

      Product placements aimed at children tend to be particularly effective at altering their spending habits. In the 1982 film E.T., Hershey spent one million dollars and profited 20 times that amount as sales tripled.

      http://luiscabral.net/iio/ch04/ET/

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Glenn, 9 Oct 2015 @ 6:48pm

    Hey, I never said PBS was perfect. As a rule, though, Masterpiece and Nova and Nature are better than anything you'll find on the other networks. Are there "commercials" on PBS? Sure, but if someone has a hard time seeing the difference, then it's probably too late for that person anyway.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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