Just Because We Acknowledge Viewers Want Control Doesn’t Mean We’re Going to Give Them Any
Boy, NBC Universal really has those broadcast TV blinders bolted on tight, doesn’t it? Just weeks after yanking its programs from Apple’s iTunes store, the company announced plans for a download service of its own, one that combines the convenience of the Internet with that mainstay of pre-DVR broadcast television, the unskippable advertisement. The service is called NBC Direct and it will offer free episodes from a selection of the network’s more popular shows for display with NBC’s proprietary Windows-only software.
“With the creation of this new service, we are acknowledging that now, more than ever, viewers want to be in control of how, when and where they consume their favorite entertainment,” said Vivi Zigler, executive vice president of NBC Digital Entertainment.
Ironic then, that commercials will be embedded in the programs and viewers will not be able to skip through them. Even more so that downloaded programs expire within a week of their original on-air date–not a week after they’re first downloaded. “Kind of like ‘Mission: Impossible,’ ” NBC Universal Television Group president Jeff Gaspin told the New York Times, “only I don’t think there would be any explosion and smoke.”





Comments
The more I read about NBC’s obtuse attempts to “go digital” on their own, the more I am convinced that NBC’s executive ranks must be filled by those who were rejected during their interview at CBS, since CBS seems to have gotten it right and NBC so very wrong lately. Or perhaps it is the water that, through some contaminant, seems to be causing aggressive lessening of higher-level cerebral functions in the frontal lobe of NBC’s executive ranks. You can’t make this stuff up.
And the story is only going to get better down the line when, after many failed attempts, NBC has to go back to Apple and do some serious homage payments to Jobs & Co.
Posted by Jim Hillhouse at September 21st, 2007 at 9:28 am