Friday, March 8, 2013

U.S. Passports at All-Time High



U.S. Passports are at an all time high and have been trending up for years. The high % of persons with passports in the U.S. has never been higher and if you consider that in Canada 60%+ have passports, we are probably on track to catch them. Why?

Lots of theories but no clear cut answers. I think it’s the ease of travel planning thanks to the internet and people’s desire to connect with others in the world thanks to social media sites like Facebook or Twitter. Also, the high number of immigrants and foreign born who, unlike our forefathers, are ready, willing and able to go back home to visit family and friends.

Bottom line is the U.S. is catching up to our Canadian and Australian counterparts when it comes to international travel and I don’t see how that can be anything but a good thing.

Maybe, finally... the media will start treating Americans like the world savvy citizens we are long last becoming.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Getting sick? That will cost you... BIG

I normally stick to TV & the media but in this case, who wouldn't be scared/horrified/disgusted out of their mind by the naked greed displayed by companies who's supposed goal is to "heal". The impotent hand of government will not fix this mess and I suppose we are each now on our own to navigate a world where if you get sick, you could easily simply die a pauper as the healthcare companies suck your life's savings dry. Is it any wonder that "Medical Tourism", as incongruous as those two words sound next to each other, is one of the fastest growing segments of the travel industry. 


What are the reasons, good or bad, that cancer means a half-million- or million-dollar tab? Why should a trip to the emergency room for chest pains that turn out to be indigestion bring a bill that can exceed the cost of a semester of college? What makes a single dose of even the most wonderful wonder drug cost thousands of dollars? Why does simple lab work done during a few days in a hospital cost more than a car? And what is so different about the medical ecosystem that causes technology advances to drive bills up instead of down?

Friday, February 22, 2013

Look at Nielsen's Catch Up Strategy



FROM THE NEWSLETTER CYNOPSIS.COM

Nielsen Co. is doing nothing less than expanding the definition of television by instituting a comprehensive plan to capture all video viewing including broadband, Xbox and iPads.  Timed to the start of the next broadcast TV season in September, Nielsen expects to have new hardware and software tools ready for the approximately 23,000 TV homes it samples. The measurement will also capture viewership from so-called "over-the-top" television programming delivered via broadband to a TV set. For now, Nielsen will count TV-connected devices such as Microsoft's Xbox, Apple TV and Roku's set-top; iPads or computers will be added later. Nielsen says its eventual goal will attempt to capture video viewing of any kind from any source.  

FROM DON'T DRAG ME DOWN:  
23,000 TV Homes to represent an incredibly diverse 100,000,0000+ U.S. TV Homes? It doesn't matter what you measure if you don't measure enough of it, you will get skewed, incomplete and unreliable results. Period.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Mr. TV Reports On Us From NATPE




Thanks to Marc Berman (AKA - Mr. TV) for featuring me and "Raw Travel" in his widely followed media site and newsletter TV Media Insights newsletter.

If you are in the media biz or want to be, you should check Marc's site out. On top of knowing his stuff, he's also one of the industry's nicest people.


Friday, January 11, 2013

Sunday, January 6, 2013

The Cable TV Limbo. How Low Can We Go?


Continuing on my theme of derivative programming showcasing the worst (well maybe not the very worst, but still) we have to offer, comes this announcement from A&E that they are green-lighting a "reality" (yeah, we all know reality isn't real.. but that's the name of the "genre") program on the former "colorful" Louisiana Ex-Governer Edwin Edwards who was released from prison after serving time on bribery and extortion charges.


From Inside TV:

The Governor’s Wife will star 85-year-old Edwin Edwards and his 34-year-old wife, Trina, along with several of their children from previous marriages. Edwards served four times as Louisiana’s governor over the course of three decades, and also served eight years in federal prison for crimes committed while he was in office. In 2001, Edwards was convicted on bribery and extortion charges. He became pen pals with Trina during his prison stint and they married after his release last year. 

The show will focus on Edwin and Trina’s May-December relationship and follow Edwin’s daughters (Anna, a 62-year-old, four-time divorcĂ©e and Victoria, a 60-year-old ex-showgirl) along Trina’s sons (Logan, 15 and Trevor, 13).
 
Some official description: “The series follows Trina as she attempts to fit into the former governor’s upscale world and busy social life while trying to get along with daughters twice her age and corral her teenage sons. Between school projects, running for president of the Homeowner’s Association, fending off skeptics who think she’s a gold digger, and thoughts of adding a baby of their own to the mix, the Edwards clan truly represent a new take on the modern family.”

Click HERE for the rest of the story on Inside TV.

According to the site, executive producer Shaun Sanghani told the New Orleans Times-Picayune  that Edwards is “one of the most animated political leaders of the last century” and noted that producers “hope to capture that same charisma and charm in his personal life as he re-enters society after a lengthy prison sentence.”

Here is what I say to Mr. Sanghani. "You are intellectually lazy and represent what is THE WORST (well maybe not the worst, but then again, maybe so) in the television industry. Shows like this reward bad and outrageous behavior and criminality with fame. Could it be that you don't know how to tell an original story? Of all the great subjects out there you could choose to cover, you chose an ex con politician and his former pen pal, now wife who from the looks of things, could have seduced a murderer, but I suppose decided that move had already been done multiple times. Sleep well tonight. Job well done." 

But we can't lay the blame all at Mr. Sanghani's feet. He's just pitching what sells to cable networks  these days. The whole process has become soulless. People either quit having pride in their work or somewhere along the line just figured it doesn't matter. Or more likely, the pressure to stand out in an increasingly fragmented and outrageous media landscape has infected decision making of folks who may not have had that strong of backbones to begin with. 

I can only hypothesize why someone, anyone, with a modicum of respect or talent would choose to follow the herd off a cliff. But then again, this has been going on since the dawn of time (not misguided reality show concepts but horribly bad behavior). Rewarding bad or obnoxious behavior via a TV show, is however, fairly new but has already become the new normal.

Of course, I can and will choose my right "not to watch". And increasingly more and more people are doing that. Yet, according to the ratings, not enough to make it not worth cable networks' while not to continue to perpetuate programming such as this. TV viewership is like a once deep body of water, who's banks have been leveled and now the water is spread so thin over such a large area, no healthy fish can survive, only bottom dwellers and amoebas and such. Bad analogy, but it will have to do until I can come up with another one. 

Now I strongly believe in freedom of speech and Mr. Shanghani's right to choose whatever subject he decides to choose to make his show. But I also believe that networks, TV stations and all media outlets and their producers & content creators do have a responsibility and accountability for their actions and right now, they act as if their actions and choices don't have consequences for the rest of us. They do and as the Newtown, CT tragedy illustrated, these consequences can be horrific (violence is an even older if more damaging scourge inflicted on us by "Hollywood").

Cable's new found love affair with "laugh at the redneck" shows (with full cooperation and no shortage of fame starved rednecks or actual faux rednecks) would be deemed politically incorrect and offensive if this were "laugh at the Asians, Hispanics, African Americans" or "laugh at the people living in the ghetto" or "struggling illegal immigrants" or any others on a lists of "can't touch" ethnic or socioeconomic groups. Luckily for the networks and for people like Honey Boo Boo's parents, poor white trash is fair game. Go for it and duplicate it, and then do it again and again and again only further and further pushing the boundaries, not of creativity, but of bad taste. This coming from a medium never really known for it's refined tastes in the first place. 

Well, I'm a former redneck (see high school sophomore yearbook photo as exhibit A if you can find it. Sorry, no way am I posting that here) and I find this garbage offensive, both as a viewer and a former redneck. I think I'll start a group called RAGE (Rednecks Against Godawful Exploitation). OK, OK it should be FRAGE (Former Rednecks Against Godawful Exploitation). But by the time I got around to getting it organized and arranging a decent protest the powers that be at cable TV would have changed yet again (see "Current TV", one of the few decent channels that no one watched as Exhibit B) or have moved on to lowering the bar even lower, also yet again. (Say what you will about A&E but they are in no danger of being sold to Al Jazeera).

Just when you think  that they must be running out of people to put on TV comes a new one. If they could find Hitler alive and well, he'd definitely get a show that would probably show his "softer" side.

Since Hitler is a no go, maybe they'll find that murderous despot Joseph Cony in the African jungle or some other war criminal and the different channels can fight it out over his life's story of "reintegration" into society. I'm sure it will be a ratings killer. Pun intended.


Thursday, December 27, 2012

Shameful Sameness Celebrated by Cable TV Programmers

Laying low, feeling ill. Too much travel, think I'll stay in and see what's on. Broadcast TV is in reruns. What's on cable?

My TV choices tonight:

- Baggage Battles - Travel Channel,
- Auction Wars/Shipping Wars - Discovery
- Border Wars - National Geographic
 - Pawnshop All Stars - History Channel

hmmm.. how about this "Cheap, non imaginative, derivative of a derivative, copycat cable tv programming wars" ? 

Or "I think I'll disconnect my cable TV because it's all the same old garbage" wars?

Would that work?

Here is what Apple's CEO Tim Cook had to say about the herd mentality:

"I've never thought going with the herd was a particularly good strategy. At best you'll be middle of the pack" 

Apple is not a perfect company but they damned sure are successful... and original. Maybe they'll shake up the TV business in 2013. 

Something's gotta give. All these non reality "reality" shows look and sound exactly the same. I swear there must be one big production company doing all this stuff. Probably barely eeeking out a living as "work for hire" too. 

But hey, middle of the pack is something. I guess. 

Think I'll watch netflix.