Promo - December 2008 - (Page 9) romances–suggesting that the sessions are generating an audience coming back for more. The average age of the social viewers is 36 years old, an indication that the Web videophile profile is an aging one. And Soohoo says a substantial portion of that audience is taking a second look at episodes they’ve seen on air to have the shared experience: “What we’re trying to do is to tap into two fronts: people who’ve seen it on air and people who might not have a TV.” Media analyst Gary Arlen thinks the socialization aspect is spawned by dire necessity: “The fact is the networks are desperate to engage younger viewers and keep them engaged. The communal aspect is very important, providing the ability for people to talk about programming.” Arlen sees the networks’ online maneuvers as works in progress to simply discover the most effective way to present video online. He also notes that it’s a new revenue stream. And eventually, Arlen believes the networks will incubate new shows on the Web to gauge viewer interest as an alternative to creating series pilots. Soohoo sees that as a distinct possibility for CBS. He TRUE STORIES Frito-Lay is pushing its TrueNorth nut snacks with a contest to find a story about one person’s life passion that will become a TV spot during next year’s Academy Awards. The TrueNorth brand has struck a partnership with Oscar-winning actress Helen Hunt, who will direct the 60-second ad spot. Consumers are being invited to submit essays now through Dec. 31 for a chance to have the story of their most compelling passion told in the spot, to air during the 81st Annual Academy Awards broadcast on Feb. 22, 2009. TrueNorth will be the exclusive snack category advertiser during the annual film awards show. The spot will be one of several that TrueNorth will run during the pre-show and the awards show itself. “We want to find people who have found their “True North” and put a spotlight on their powerful stories,” says Regan Ebert, vice president and general manager, warehouse direct business for Frito-Lay North America. The personal passion spot will be the starter for a multimedia campaign on national TV, in print and online that will include three inspirational stories the brand has already discovered. The campaign will include profiles of Gary Greff, whose sculptures adorn his hometown of Regent, ND; Majora Carter, an ecology activist in the Bronx, NY; and Teddy Gross, who is empowering children with the power of a penny.—Rich Tedesco points to the short-form “Novel Adventures” Webisodes the network created with Saturn as an example of a format that could be a launching pad for a series on air. “Novel Adventures” features four women book-club members who hop in Saturn vehicles for real-life excursions inspired by their shared literary experiences. The primary impact of streaming TV series for all networks thus far is viewing continuity, enabling fans of particular shows to catch up with episodes they’ve missed. “By making episodes available and allowing flexibility in terms of when and where shows can be watched, we’re seeing overall viewership increasing,” says Alexis Rapo, ABC vice president of digital media, who notes that viewers typically watched between six and eight episodes of a series each season before shows were streamed online. While the potential for sampling is significant, overall viewership aggregation supporting each series is the primary benefit. “Prior to the start of the season, we see increased viewing of the previous season’s finales,” Rapo says. “Viewers want to revisit the finale’s cliffhanger or just reacquaint themselves with characters and storylines before new episodes premiere.” ABC’s viewers for its full episodes player are 30 years old on average, affluent and educated. It draws its largest online audiences in May, reinforcing the idea that viewers are playing catch-up to see season finales. The overall audience for network series online grew 5% in May, year-to-year, according to Nielsen Media Research, with nearly 162 million Web surfers—against 282 milliion on air viewers—watching an average of 5 1⁄2 hours of online video that month, compared to 154 million watching an average of about 3 1⁄2 hours during the same month last year. More than 217 million viewers watched episodes on mobile phones. Nielsen had no comparative numbers in that category for last year. NBC tried to redress its also-ran status among the Big Four broadcasters with a major pre-season premiere play in September. It streamed advance screenings of 10 series on NBC.com, on Hulu.com (jointly owned with Fox), Yahoo, MSN, AOL, MySpace and Fancast.com. It also used Xbox Live on Xbox 360 and Microsoft’s Zune player as alternative preview platforms. “The benefit of the sampling programs is that we get significant exposure from each venue, which promotes the content offering,” said John Miller, NBC chief marketing officer, in September. That lineup included rookie entries “Knight Rider,” “Kath and Kim,” “My Worst Enemy” and “Crusoe.” The sampling doesn’t appear to have paid off, with none of those series in the current top-50-ranked shows. CBS leads in overall primetime rankings, but is running neck-and-neck with ABC so far this season among the allimportant 18- to 49-year-old viewers—the advertisers’ “sweet P spot”—with NBC third in those rankings, followed by Fox. l 9 Promo / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / December 2008 http://NBC.com http://hulu.com http://fancast.com http://WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - December 2008 Promo - December 2008 Contents Editor's Note Alternative Viewing UGC Refresher Course KFC Takes Wing Title Sharing the Holidays That Holiday Glow Wish List Commentary Ready to Eat Recession Busters Q&A: A Higher Mark Resource Center The Agency Center Gift Giving Index of Advertisers Promo - December 2008 Promo - December 2008 - Promo - December 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - December 2008 - Promo - December 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - December 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Promo - December 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Promo - December 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Promo - December 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - December 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - December 2008 - Alternative Viewing (Page 8) Promo - December 2008 - Alternative Viewing (Page 9) Promo - December 2008 - UGC Refresher Course (Page 10) Promo - December 2008 - UGC Refresher Course (Page 11) Promo - December 2008 - UGC Refresher Course (Page 12) Promo - December 2008 - UGC Refresher Course (Page 13) Promo - December 2008 - KFC Takes Wing Title (Page 14) Promo - December 2008 - Sharing the Holidays (Page 15) Promo - December 2008 - That Holiday Glow (Page 16) Promo - December 2008 - That Holiday Glow (Page 17) Promo - December 2008 - Wish List (Page 18) Promo - December 2008 - Commentary (Page 19) Promo - December 2008 - Ready to Eat (Page 20) Promo - December 2008 - Ready to Eat (Page 21) Promo - December 2008 - Ready to Eat (Page 22) Promo - December 2008 - Ready to Eat (Page 23) Promo - December 2008 - Recession Busters (Page 24) Promo - December 2008 - Recession Busters (Page 25) Promo - December 2008 - Recession Busters (Page 26) Promo - December 2008 - Recession Busters (Page 27) Promo - December 2008 - Q&A: A Higher Mark (Page 28) Promo - December 2008 - Q&A: A Higher Mark (Page 29) Promo - December 2008 - Q&A: A Higher Mark (Page 30) Promo - December 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 31) Promo - December 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 32) Promo - December 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 33) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 34) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 35) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 36) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 37) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 38) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 39) Promo - December 2008 - Gift Giving (Page 40) Promo - December 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 41) Promo - December 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 42) Promo - December 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - December 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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