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View Full Version : ABC To Offer Free (Ad-Supported) Downloads of Shows



Butch
03-02-2006, 01:16 PM
The same shows that are now available on iTunes for $1.99 will be offered by ABC.com for free with ads.

Good deal if you ask me. Yeah, I know ads kind of suck, but somebody/thing has to pay for the production . . . and many people are willing to sacrifice their time for the money ($1.99) they would have to pay otherwise . . . I'm glad to see them trying the new model.

http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=48109

ABC TO OFFER AD-SUPPORTED PRIME-TIME SHOW DOWNLOADS
Meanwhile, iTunes Will Still Sell Ad-Free Versions of Same Programs
March 02, 2006
QwikFIND ID: AAR46X
By Claire Atkinson

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) –- Walt Disney Co. is expanding the availability of its hit shows via ABC.com as part of its plans to create the "network of the future." CEO Bob Iger detailed

Bear Stearns conference
“Mike Shaw [ABC's president ad sales and marketing] announced today we are going to take a product to market in May," Mr. Iger said at the Bear Stearns media conference in Florida this week. "Viewers will have the ability to access shows such as 'Lost,' 'Desperate Housewives' and 'Grey’s Anatomy' on ABC.com. They will be ad supported, free to the consumer.”

Ads that accompany the video offering would not necessarily be the same as those that appeared during the show's broadcast, he said.

Mr. Iger said Disney wanted to try a variety of business models for its product, whether subscription or advertising supported. ABC shows are also offered via Apple iTunes and iPod platforms for $1.99 a pop. Those shows come without ad involvement.

'New direct commerce opportunities'
Mr. Iger said Disney was looking to create a number of revenue models but because the company did not wish to turn its back on the ad community, it would create new opportunities for them.

“There is so much greater consumption of media, the opportunity for advertisers are greater; look at what Google has managed to do,” Mr. Iger said. “Our job is to create the new networks and new direct commerce opportunities.”

So far greater availability of ABC's shows via Apple’s iTunes does not appear to have dented the shows' ratings, something advertisers had feared might happen if consumers could find them elsewhere at anytime. For the week of Feb. 20, “Grey’s Anatomy” ranked No. 6 in the Nielsen Media Research ratings, watched by 24.7 million households, just behind coverage of the Winter Olympics Feb. 23.

Gary Carr, senior VP-director of national broadcast at TargetCast TCM, New York, said: “The one thing advertisers are worried about is whether people are watching the commercials and are they watching the shows?”

Not yet selling new platform
He said ABC not yet started selling the new platform, but noted that CBS, which has a deal to offer its hit shows via Comcast’s video-on-demand platform, does so with the advertising that runs on the linear network intact.

“Its good that they’re all trying different things. They’re testing a lot of models that can generate additional revenues,” he concluded.

NBC also offers many of its network shows on the iTunes platform -- "The Office" is one of the top performers -- while Fox is offering two network shows, "Prison Break" and "24," through satellite sibling DirecTV's VOD system for 99 cents.

DarkFury
03-02-2006, 01:42 PM
Not that ABC has anything really worth watchin' nowadays... :heh:

But yeah... that's good news, hopefully CBS will follow suit and drop the $1.99 charge to watch back Survivor episodes. (but I doubt they'll do that.. they probably like the extra income).

Cubsfan
03-02-2006, 01:46 PM
I'd love to watch these with ads... on my iPod in the gym. Otherwise, I'm not going to set at my computer and watch them. I'd love if iTunes had both versions.

ialsohaveadream
03-02-2006, 07:39 PM
Woo hoo! Free Lost!

mcs328
03-03-2006, 08:47 AM
Has anyone heard about free KFC food if you FFWD through TIVO shows and the KFC ads? Supposedly there's a code for free chicken when the KFC is fast forwarded this way so it give ppl with a TIVO an incentive to watch the ad for the code.

Butch
03-03-2006, 08:58 AM
http://www.adage.com/news.cms?newsId=48123

KFC SITE VISITS SPIKE AFTER ABC REJECTS SPOT
Network Dropped Ad Due to 'Hidden Message'
March 02, 2006
QwikFIND ID: AAR47H
By Kate MacArthur
CHICAGO (AdAge.com) -- Score one for the buzz marketing team at Kentucky Fried Chicken.

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In rejecting a commercial for KFC, the ABC TV network may have given the chicken chain enough free publicity to recoup the costs of its sandwich giveaway. The Walt Disney Co.-owned network blocked the spot, which encouraged viewers to replay it in slow motion to find a hidden message as the key to getting the $1 sandwich for free, in an effort to comply with a Federal Communications Commission ruling on subliminal advertising.

11,000 entries
KFC saw Web-site visits spike to 11,000 entries after the spot first aired, and as of today, more than 70,000 people have submitted codes for the free sandwich.

ABC was the only network to block the hidden message, pointing to its longtime policy to not air spots known to carry “anything that would be below the audience threshold of sensation of awareness.” Yet KFC widely promoted the spot as a publicity stunt in a Feb. 23 press release hyping the first hidden message in a national ad.

“This program gives us the chance to generate news in a completely unconventional way,” Tom O’Keefe, executive creative director on the KFC account at Interpublic Group of Cos.' FCB, New York, said in the release.

The message was also visible to viewers even without slowing down the spot, albeit briefly.

“Any fear that flashing a coupon code is going to somehow turn people into animatrons and march over to KFC is completely ridiculous,” said Patrick Vargas, associate professor-advertising at the University of Illinois. He called the KFC ploy a new twist to James Vicary’s subliminal message claim in the late 1950s that he presented a hidden message of “drink Coca-Cola and eat popcorn” to moviegoers. “This is a very similar thing. ABC just adds to the hype. It’s fun, but it’s certainly not dangerous.”

Subliminal persuasion
Two executives close to the situation said ABC wanted to steer clear of any subliminal persuasion because not every viewer has the technology to slow down the spot and see the hidden message. “Some people still watch TV using rabbit ears,” said one.

KFC parent Yum Brands has used a buzz-marketing strategy for several years and is well-known for creating publicity stunts to fuel promotions from space launches to elections.

In fact, KFC had been trying to come up with a way to do this for years, said the KFC spokeswoman. “It was a PR-buzz idea years ago, but technology wasn’t around to make it work,” she said. “It definitely played off the consumer who is tech-savvy and loves to play games. ... We thought it would be great to take our existing 30-second commercial and make it an interactive commercial.”