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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...months ago, the state of the TV networks seemed grim. For the first time during a regular television season, cable's basic channels had collectively passed the six broadcast networks in their share of the prime-time audience. Ad spending--down for all media since the start of the recession--seemed unlikely to do much to improve the picture. Some industry analysts were predicting that when the so-called up-front market began--the period in May and June when major advertisers reserve the bulk of their commercial time for the upcoming TV season--the networks would be lucky...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadcasting: What Ad Slump? | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

...billion total. Even better, cancellation rates over the summer for those orders were only about 5%, a big improvement over the nerve-jangling 10% to 15% rates last year. Comparably low cancellation rates are starting to register for the first quarter of 2003. All this has left relatively little ad time available in the so-called scatter market, where advertisers who prefer to buy time at the last minute come to shop. The scarcity, combined with surprisingly strong demand, has sent prices soaring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadcasting: What Ad Slump? | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

...premiums of between 25% and 40% in scatter" above the prices fetched last spring, says Joseph Abruzzese, the former president of sales for Viacom's CBS Television, who just left to take over ad sales at cable's Discovery Networks, a unit of Discovery Communications. And that was after CBS leveraged last season's muscular prime-time performance into 10% to 12% up-front rate increases, especially for such younger-skewing hits as Survivor, Everybody Loves Raymond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadcasting: What Ad Slump? | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

Network TV is outperforming most other media. Up-front sales for cable TV were up about 14% from last year, but revenues for the first six months of the year were off 10%, according to Competitive Media Reporting. Ad revenues of local newspapers climbed 6% in the same period, but those of national newspapers were down 6%. Magazine ad pages ticked up 2.6% in September, according to the Publishers Information Bureau, but ad-page totals are still down almost 7% for the first nine months of the year. Radio revenues, says the Radio Advertising Bureau, have shown a 3% gain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadcasting: What Ad Slump? | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

...dicey economy, the networks appear to have played their cards shrewdly. Broadcasters sold a higher than usual proportion of their ad time last spring--about 85%, vs. the more typical 75%. They not only got their high prices up front but also created a squeeze for the few spots left this fall. Yet the high prices reflect an increase in demand, not just a contraction of supply. Jon Nesvig, sales president of News Corporation's Fox Broadcasting Co., says his network has seen a big boost in advertisers seeking spots in sports programming (demand that was depressed last fall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadcasting: What Ad Slump? | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

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