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A Presentation on:
“TV PROGRAMS ON
AIR”
                 Group members:
                     Aditi Verma

                   Brenda Yeoh

                    Brandy Chai

                   Chelsea Orie

                 Brynn Z. Lovett
• Television: Most widely-used means of
  mass communication.

• There are 112.3 million television
  households in the United States; the
  average home has more television sets
  (2.73) than people (2.55; Average, 2006)!
 {Baran, S.J., 2010}.
Organization of the
          Broadcast Industry
• Two types of television systems in the Broadcast
  Television Industry:
1. Commercial Television system
2. Non-Commercial Television system

• FCC – Federal Communications Commission

•    The TV industry is classified into
1.   Production
2.   Distribution
3.   Exhibition
Ownership In The Television Industry:

• All major networks in the industry are owned by
  conglomerates such as NBC, ABC, Fox etc.
• Telecommunications Act allowed a person or organization
  to own unlimited number of TV stations < 39% of the US
  population (2008).

Producing Television Programs:

• A TV station divided into 5 departments namely Sales,
  Engineering, Production/Programming, News and
  Administration.
• There is a station manager who is the chief of all the station
  activities.

Getting TV Programs on Air:

• News
• Interview programmes
• Prime time shows
 Almost every station has a studio that contains a
  set for one or two anchor-people, a weather
  forecaster, and a sports-caster (Dominick, J. R., 2011).
 News director for the station allocates the stories
  to the reporters and the camera crews.
 They then do the video-recording of the report by
  going to the scene of the story.
 Meanwhile, the newscast producer and the news
  director decide what stories would be aired and in
  what time slots.
 This schedule is drawn up while the reporters and
  the camera crews arrive with their stories.
 It is then the job of the reporters to write copies of
  the stories and the editors to prepare the
  segments of the videotape.
POPULAR NEWS CHANNELS
        WORLD-WIDE
• CNN
• CNBC
• BBC
• FNC (Fox News
  Channel)
Slides by Brynn
 Two individuals
 A host and an artist / experienced
  individual
 Example : Charlie Rose / Jeff Randall Live
            - Local Program presented by WNET
            - One hour show every night
 Consists of segments videotaped on
  location
 Later edited into final form
 Provides a variety of topics
 Format in an interview or commentary
 America’s Next Top Model
  - appeal to both men and women
  - competition, age and popularity
  - emotional attachment
 American Idol
  - celebrity judges
  - appropriate for all ages
PILOT.
                                               Two And A
                                                Half Men

Pilot is the first episode of every series.

Pilot is very important because we do not know if the
audience may like it. Thus, “If the idea looks promising the
network and the producer will enter a contract of a pilot”
(Dominick, J.R.,2011).

When a pilot show gets good attention from genuine
audience, five or six episodes that are produced may be
ordered by the network and may show them in the next fall
schedule.
                                                 Slides by: Brenda
 “From the hundreds of ideas that are sent to the
  network, only a few ever make it to prime time”.
  (Dominick, J.R.,2011)


 If the ratings of a program is successful, then as
  expected, few episodes will be ordered by the
  network for the rest of the season.

 In the meantime, network executives carefully going
  through the hundreds of program ideas for the
  coming season and the whole process will repeat
  once again.
Slides by Chelsea
 Prime time is when the viewing of television is at
  its highest.
 In the Eastern and Pacific time zones, it is from 7
  – 11 pm and in the Central and Mountain time
  zones prime time is 6 – 10 pm. (Mitchell E.
  Shapiro, Primetime, viewed 17 September
  2011, http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?ent
  rycode=primetime)
 It all starts from an idea.
 Hundreds of ideas are received every year (ex.
  From independent producers, network
  employees, amateurs)
 From hundreds, 50 – 75 would be selected
 The list is trimmed again after examining the plot
  outlines and background sketches of the potential
  series.
 A request of a sample script is made by the
  networks.
An American    sitcom about the main character, Ted
Mosby, telling his kids in 2030 of how he met their
mother
Broadcasted by the network CBS
Show starts at 8pm
Very popular
Reasons why – it reminds most viewers of another
show called ‘Friends’
 the actors and actresses acting in it already had their
fan base from other shows
 the way of how the story is told intrigues viewers –
keeps them wanting to know who Ted will eventually
marry
Where Did The Money Go?

    Network programming is quite expensive and the
    cost varies on the type of show. Quiz and reality
    shows are much cheaper to produce than sitcoms,
    dramas etc.
    Rating And Network Executing:

    • National Advertisers
    • Local Advertisers
    • National Spot Advertisers



Slides by Brandy
Measuring TV Viewing

 Nielsen Ratings
 are coupled with detailed analysis of
  consumer viewing behavior and
  demographic information.(Nielsen.nd)
 Deciding factor in canceling/ renewing
  television shows by television networks.
Nielsen Media TV Rating
   Collect data through Nielson Television Index
   Using a device called People Meter (>12000)
   Portable People Meter



Local- Market TV Rating
   Surveys more than 200 markets
   Diary & electronic meter techniques( Set Meter & Local
    People Meter)
   Collect more than 2 million papers diaries during the
    “sweep” every year.
   “Sweep” happen 4 times a year (Feb, May,
    July,& Nov) to measure the local television
    market in the entire country.

   Nielsen long-term plans call for the phasing
    out of paper diaries.

   C3 rating defined as the rating of the
    average commercial minute including live
    viewing & DVD playback within 3
    days.(Dominick.J.R.,2011,pg 252)
Ratings Reporting

   Rating= Number of households watching
    a program divided by total number of TV
    household (TV HH)

   Share of Audience = Number of
    households watching a program divided
    by households using television at that
    time. (HUT)
Determining accuracy of Rating

 Media Ratings Council (MRC) previous named
  Electronic Media Rating Council(EMRC)
 Monitors
 Audits
 ratings
Broadcast ratings are still criticized by the public.
 Participants may have different viewer habits
 Nielsen reports based on the 55% of the diaries sent
  out, it is possible that “returners” behave differently
  from “nonreturners” .(Dominick.J.R.,2011,pg 253)
 Ratings companies having difficulties to measure the
  viewing of a certain groups.
 Exp: Stations that are being measured engage
  promotions to “hype” the rating.
Example of the diary that used to collect the rating of TV
program.
Television Audiences
 TV  set has become firmly entrenched
  in America.
 In year 2009, 99% of all homes in the
  country have at least 1 working TV
  set; 75% have more than 1.
 TV audience change in daily, it’s grow
  from 7 A.M., reaches high peak from
  8.A.M to 11 P.M. and drops again
  after 11 P.M.
Viewing is heaviest:
 Winter months & smallest during July and August(outdoor
  activities)
 Preschool & female viewers dominate during day time
  hour, from Mon-Fri
 Saturday morning viewers are under13; prime time
  viewers are those in 18-49 year-old.
 People with low in-come
 Female viewers
Factors affect viewership:
   Age
   Sex
   Social class
   Education
Career Prospects
• Not very bright
• Further declines
• Better at Local level
Presenters:      Slides by:

Brynn Z Lovett   Brenda Yeoh

Aditi Verma      Brandy Chai

                 Chelsea Orie

                 Brynn Z. Lovett

                 Aditi Verma
References:
•   Baran, S.J., 2010, Introduction to Mass Communication: Media Literacy
    and Culture, 6th edition, McGraw-Hill.
•   Dominick, J. R. (2011);The Dynamics of Mass Communications: Media in
    Transition, 11th edn; McGraw Hill; Boston
•   CBS, 2011.Most Popular Reality TV Shows. Interactive inc. <
    http://www.tv.com/reality/genre/9/summary.html>
•   Nielsen, ND, Television Measurement.
    http://nielsen.com/us/en/measurement/television-measurement.html
    viewed by 13th September 2011.
•   Museum TV,
    http://www.museumtv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=primetime
•   Quora,
    www.quora.com/Why-is-How-I-Met-Your-Mother-so-popular

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TV Today

  • 1. A Presentation on: “TV PROGRAMS ON AIR” Group members:  Aditi Verma  Brenda Yeoh  Brandy Chai  Chelsea Orie  Brynn Z. Lovett
  • 2. • Television: Most widely-used means of mass communication. • There are 112.3 million television households in the United States; the average home has more television sets (2.73) than people (2.55; Average, 2006)! {Baran, S.J., 2010}.
  • 3. Organization of the Broadcast Industry • Two types of television systems in the Broadcast Television Industry: 1. Commercial Television system 2. Non-Commercial Television system • FCC – Federal Communications Commission • The TV industry is classified into 1. Production 2. Distribution 3. Exhibition
  • 4. Ownership In The Television Industry: • All major networks in the industry are owned by conglomerates such as NBC, ABC, Fox etc. • Telecommunications Act allowed a person or organization to own unlimited number of TV stations < 39% of the US population (2008). Producing Television Programs: • A TV station divided into 5 departments namely Sales, Engineering, Production/Programming, News and Administration. • There is a station manager who is the chief of all the station activities. Getting TV Programs on Air: • News • Interview programmes • Prime time shows
  • 5.
  • 6.  Almost every station has a studio that contains a set for one or two anchor-people, a weather forecaster, and a sports-caster (Dominick, J. R., 2011).  News director for the station allocates the stories to the reporters and the camera crews.  They then do the video-recording of the report by going to the scene of the story.  Meanwhile, the newscast producer and the news director decide what stories would be aired and in what time slots.  This schedule is drawn up while the reporters and the camera crews arrive with their stories.  It is then the job of the reporters to write copies of the stories and the editors to prepare the segments of the videotape.
  • 7. POPULAR NEWS CHANNELS WORLD-WIDE • CNN • CNBC • BBC • FNC (Fox News Channel)
  • 8.
  • 10.  Two individuals  A host and an artist / experienced individual  Example : Charlie Rose / Jeff Randall Live - Local Program presented by WNET - One hour show every night
  • 11.  Consists of segments videotaped on location  Later edited into final form  Provides a variety of topics  Format in an interview or commentary
  • 12.  America’s Next Top Model - appeal to both men and women - competition, age and popularity - emotional attachment  American Idol - celebrity judges - appropriate for all ages
  • 13.
  • 14. PILOT. Two And A Half Men Pilot is the first episode of every series. Pilot is very important because we do not know if the audience may like it. Thus, “If the idea looks promising the network and the producer will enter a contract of a pilot” (Dominick, J.R.,2011). When a pilot show gets good attention from genuine audience, five or six episodes that are produced may be ordered by the network and may show them in the next fall schedule. Slides by: Brenda
  • 15.  “From the hundreds of ideas that are sent to the network, only a few ever make it to prime time”. (Dominick, J.R.,2011)  If the ratings of a program is successful, then as expected, few episodes will be ordered by the network for the rest of the season.  In the meantime, network executives carefully going through the hundreds of program ideas for the coming season and the whole process will repeat once again.
  • 17.  Prime time is when the viewing of television is at its highest.  In the Eastern and Pacific time zones, it is from 7 – 11 pm and in the Central and Mountain time zones prime time is 6 – 10 pm. (Mitchell E. Shapiro, Primetime, viewed 17 September 2011, http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?ent rycode=primetime)
  • 18.  It all starts from an idea.  Hundreds of ideas are received every year (ex. From independent producers, network employees, amateurs)  From hundreds, 50 – 75 would be selected  The list is trimmed again after examining the plot outlines and background sketches of the potential series.  A request of a sample script is made by the networks.
  • 19. An American sitcom about the main character, Ted Mosby, telling his kids in 2030 of how he met their mother Broadcasted by the network CBS Show starts at 8pm Very popular Reasons why – it reminds most viewers of another show called ‘Friends’  the actors and actresses acting in it already had their fan base from other shows  the way of how the story is told intrigues viewers – keeps them wanting to know who Ted will eventually marry
  • 20. Where Did The Money Go? Network programming is quite expensive and the cost varies on the type of show. Quiz and reality shows are much cheaper to produce than sitcoms, dramas etc. Rating And Network Executing: • National Advertisers • Local Advertisers • National Spot Advertisers Slides by Brandy
  • 21. Measuring TV Viewing  Nielsen Ratings  are coupled with detailed analysis of consumer viewing behavior and demographic information.(Nielsen.nd)  Deciding factor in canceling/ renewing television shows by television networks.
  • 22. Nielsen Media TV Rating  Collect data through Nielson Television Index  Using a device called People Meter (>12000)  Portable People Meter Local- Market TV Rating  Surveys more than 200 markets  Diary & electronic meter techniques( Set Meter & Local People Meter)  Collect more than 2 million papers diaries during the “sweep” every year.
  • 23. “Sweep” happen 4 times a year (Feb, May, July,& Nov) to measure the local television market in the entire country.  Nielsen long-term plans call for the phasing out of paper diaries.  C3 rating defined as the rating of the average commercial minute including live viewing & DVD playback within 3 days.(Dominick.J.R.,2011,pg 252)
  • 24. Ratings Reporting  Rating= Number of households watching a program divided by total number of TV household (TV HH)  Share of Audience = Number of households watching a program divided by households using television at that time. (HUT)
  • 25. Determining accuracy of Rating  Media Ratings Council (MRC) previous named Electronic Media Rating Council(EMRC)  Monitors  Audits  ratings Broadcast ratings are still criticized by the public.  Participants may have different viewer habits  Nielsen reports based on the 55% of the diaries sent out, it is possible that “returners” behave differently from “nonreturners” .(Dominick.J.R.,2011,pg 253)  Ratings companies having difficulties to measure the viewing of a certain groups.  Exp: Stations that are being measured engage promotions to “hype” the rating.
  • 26. Example of the diary that used to collect the rating of TV program.
  • 27. Television Audiences  TV set has become firmly entrenched in America.  In year 2009, 99% of all homes in the country have at least 1 working TV set; 75% have more than 1.  TV audience change in daily, it’s grow from 7 A.M., reaches high peak from 8.A.M to 11 P.M. and drops again after 11 P.M.
  • 28. Viewing is heaviest:  Winter months & smallest during July and August(outdoor activities)  Preschool & female viewers dominate during day time hour, from Mon-Fri  Saturday morning viewers are under13; prime time viewers are those in 18-49 year-old.  People with low in-come  Female viewers Factors affect viewership:  Age  Sex  Social class  Education
  • 29. Career Prospects • Not very bright • Further declines • Better at Local level
  • 30. Presenters: Slides by: Brynn Z Lovett Brenda Yeoh Aditi Verma Brandy Chai Chelsea Orie Brynn Z. Lovett Aditi Verma
  • 31. References: • Baran, S.J., 2010, Introduction to Mass Communication: Media Literacy and Culture, 6th edition, McGraw-Hill. • Dominick, J. R. (2011);The Dynamics of Mass Communications: Media in Transition, 11th edn; McGraw Hill; Boston • CBS, 2011.Most Popular Reality TV Shows. Interactive inc. < http://www.tv.com/reality/genre/9/summary.html> • Nielsen, ND, Television Measurement. http://nielsen.com/us/en/measurement/television-measurement.html viewed by 13th September 2011. • Museum TV, http://www.museumtv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=primetime • Quora, www.quora.com/Why-is-How-I-Met-Your-Mother-so-popular