FarSky wrote:
For free, with no ads or product placement, and on their own schedule?
If someone could crack that nut and make enough money to fund the program, that person would be very successful.
Unfortunately, consumers don't want to make any concessions at all to the fact that shows cost money to produce.
Im not sure that's true.
I watch a
lot of content on Netflix, iTunes & ordered blu ray - because I want to watch it when
I want to watch it. I try and avoid watching streaming/bit torrent. I lapsed on two shows when I really wanted the next season (Mad Men & BSG), but then bought the blu rays when released to 'make up for it'.
My friends who are more willing to Warez than me seem to use paid usenet feeds & run pretty complex home media / storage / disk array / broadband solutions.
All of this suggests people are willing to invest time and money to get content the 'right' way - it's just that media companies are too locked into selling it in the way that their infrastructure (people, kit & processes) are set up to deal with, rather than the way people want to consume it - high quality, instantly globally available, whole storylines at a time.
I'd love to have the iTunes TV show rental concept that was tried in the US - 59p per HD episode for single view. Dip your toes in for cheap and see if you like the show.
Basically, more flexible, available, simultaneous, high quality, on demand
paid delivery, with variable pricing for keep/hire, SD/HD, season or per bite, etc, with
great indexing and discoverability (no, NOT one **** site per network, requiring a cable sub, with completely different ui semantics, and Ads embedded half the time, you **** UX imbeciles) would cause me to spend more money on media, not less. And I already spend a lot.
*shrug*
I probably spend more in Comixology than for video entertainment - and its because those guys have understood how to make their content conveniently consumable.
For reference, I also have a Humax PVR satellite feed thingy - i.e. broadcast - it's *TERRIBLE*. I never ever use it more than three times a year, always for 'must watch live feeds' (queens speech, sporting events, etc).