HomeCinemaBanter

HomeCinemaBanter (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/index.php)
-   UK sky (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/forumdisplay.php?f=4)
-   -   Five's new channels testing? (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=46239)

Dave Fawthrop September 19th 06 09:00 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 08:26:01 +0200, Jomtien wrote:

|Zero Tolerance wrote:
|
|You don't have to pay Sky to get Channel 5. It's FTV.
|
|You do actually have to pay Sky something to get the viewing card.

Yes GBP20 see sig.
Ch5 bumpf says that they will be Free To Air, but I expect they are
Linguistically Challenged.
--
Dave Fawthrop dave hyphenologist co uk Google Groups is IME the *worst*
method of accessing usenet. GG subscribers would be well advised get a
newsreader, say Agent, and a newsserver, say news.individual.net. These
will allow them: to see only *new* posts, a killfile, and other goodies.

Mark Carver September 19th 06 09:51 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Mike wrote:
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 21:00:37 +0000 (UTC), Brian McIlwrath
wrote:

Actually the BBC have been *VERY* secretive about what the ultimate savings
have been!! They did announce how much they were saving by not paying Sky BUT
have never admitted just how much extra they are having to pay for the
rights to films/events!! It is quite possible that they are actually paying
MORE now!


As long as the extra money doesn't go to that smug **** Murdoch or any
of his family it's alright by me :)


The money that gets paid to 20th Century Fox for rights ends up in his
hands. At least the Beeb don't show the Simpsons and 24 any longer.

--
Mark
Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply.

Nigel Barker September 19th 06 10:57 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 00:11:01 +0100, "John Porcella"
wrote:

I wrote to Five about this.

Here is the correspondence.

Your Reference: VA/167105/IK (Please quote this reference in all further
correspondence)





Date: 13th September 2006




Dear John



Thank you for your recent further e-mail and please allow us to apologise
for the delay in responding.

We were sorry to read that you were unhappy with our previous response. We
can not comment on ITV's licence to broadcast, as that may very well be
different from ours, as indeed Channel 4's may be too.

We would also remind you that as we do not make any programmes ourselves, we
only receive broadcast rights. When we purchase broadcast rights for
programmes and films, we only buy rights for UK broadcast, as even if a
rights holder would sell us their programming for further broadcasting, the
cost would be prohibitive. Obviously it is in our interest, as a commercial
broadcaster, to maximise our audience, but not at any cost.


It is also worth bearing in mind that, as ITV makes many of its own
programmes, these restrictions may not apply to their satellite output.



Thank you for your interest in Five.

Yours sincerely

Ian

VIEWER ADVISOR



Please note that the contact details for Five Customer Services are as
follows:



Telephone: 0845 7 05 05 05 / 020 7421
7270

Text telephone for use by deaf people: 0845 7 41 37 87

E-mail:

Fax: 020 7836 1286


You should reply by pointing out that if they moved their transmissions from
Astra 2B to Astra 2D there would be no issue with regard to broadcasting outside
of the licensed territory. The Astra 2D beam is tightly focused on the UK & is
the satellite that ITV, BBC & Film 4 all broadcast FTA. There is plenty of
transponder space there as BSkyB have a load of encrypted channels that they
could easily swap with the five transponders on Astra 2B.

--
Nigel Barker
Live from the sunny Cote d'Azur

Mark Carver September 19th 06 12:05 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Nigel Barker wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 00:11:01 +0100, "John Porcella"
wrote:



You should reply by pointing out that if they moved their transmissions from
Astra 2B to Astra 2D there would be no issue with regard to broadcasting outside
of the licensed territory. The Astra 2D beam is tightly focused on the UK & is
the satellite that ITV, BBC & Film 4 all broadcast FTA. There is plenty of
transponder space there as BSkyB have a load of encrypted channels that they
could easily swap with the five transponders on Astra 2B.


The problem is that BSkyB perform C5's uplinking (unlike BBC, ITV, and 4),
so they're unlikely to do that swap.

C5 would do better to try and rent space on one of ITV or the BBC's
transponders, but I suspect uplinking and encryption are bundled together
into a package with Sky.



--
Mark
Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply.

G Bell September 19th 06 12:22 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
"michael adams" writes:

Women also buy most of the soap and the deoderant as well as the
aftershave around christmas. As they get most of the benefit. If
there's a hunk spraying the stuff on himself then the advert is
ususally aimed at women. If there's a bit of totty then the advert
is aimed at men.


Wondered why I felt the need to buy so many tampons.

Graham

Zero Tolerance September 19th 06 01:18 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 08:57:33 GMT, Nigel Barker wrote:

You should reply by pointing out that if they moved their transmissions from
Astra 2B to Astra 2D there would be no issue with regard to broadcasting outside
of the licensed territory. The Astra 2D beam is tightly focused on the UK & is
the satellite that ITV, BBC & Film 4 all broadcast FTA.


That's the myth - you should have read the earlier comment from C5
which pointed out, quite correctly, that:

"The recent decision by the BBC and ITV to broadcast in the clear from
a different satellite is not something that Five can copy. The
satellite coverage now used by these channels can still reach parts of
mainland Europe, and the Republic of Ireland."

--

Zero Tolerance September 19th 06 01:19 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 11:05:40 +0100, Mark Carver
wrote:

C5 would do better to try and rent space on one of ITV or the BBC's
transponders


There is absolutely no possibility of them agreeing to that!

--

galaxyguy September 19th 06 01:26 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 

Mark Carver wrote:
Nigel Barker wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 00:11:01 +0100, "John Porcella"
wrote:



You should reply by pointing out that if they moved their transmissions from
Astra 2B to Astra 2D there would be no issue with regard to broadcasting outside
of the licensed territory. The Astra 2D beam is tightly focused on the UK & is
the satellite that ITV, BBC & Film 4 all broadcast FTA. There is plenty of
transponder space there as BSkyB have a load of encrypted channels that they
could easily swap with the five transponders on Astra 2B.


The problem is that BSkyB perform C5's uplinking (unlike BBC, ITV, and 4),
so they're unlikely to do that swap.

C5 would do better to try and rent space on one of ITV or the BBC's
transponders, but I suspect uplinking and encryption are bundled together
into a package with Sky.



--
Mark
Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply.


C5 is the most recent (and last) channel authorised under Act of
Parliament to broadcast. They are a private channel but they ought to
be able to uplink to
Astra themselves; lets face it, it is Astra who are beaming the signal
in
and as you point out the 2D satellite would overcome this ridiculous
argument over licensing. One of the points I was making about the fact
that US serials and films
are widely broadcast on both public and commercial European
broadcasters is that the
programme is viewable across the Continent, including the UK, FTA.
Of course a French channel will dub Quantum Leap (Code Quantum) into
French
and a German channel will dub into German, but the point is the
programmes are freely available. Their whole schedules are 'in the
clear'. Isn't 5 owned by RTL anyway??
If it still is, it makes a mockery that we can choose RTL and RTL2
programmes
freely from both Germany and Austria. Ongoing encryption of 5 after the
analogue switch off will currently make it available only by contacting
Sky and so Sky can
bolster their "offerings". C5 was meant to be a public channel in terms
of viewing.
If ITV can broadcast US films and serials and the BBC can also, then 5
should do so also. The channel may be private but they have a duty to
broadcast by digital satellite
to all UK residents and by using Videoguard they are denying many of us
the right
to their channel(s). Dropping encryption would also save them alot of
money.
Encryption is all about a denial of service and it goes against the
ethos of
good satellite broadcasting. If half the UK broadcasters can do it "in
the clear"
and all the German stations (about 20 of them), plus the French public
and
Commercial stations, then I believe that 5 should fall in and broadcast
as they
should - to all digital satellite viewers.


Mark Carver September 19th 06 02:26 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Zero Tolerance wrote:
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 11:05:40 +0100, Mark Carver
wrote:

C5 would do better to try and rent space on one of ITV or the BBC's
transponders


There is absolutely no possibility of them agreeing to that!


For political or technical reasons ?

Technical I can understand, the BBC and ITV rented transponders are already
choc-a-bloc with no spare capacity. Not even enough it would seem for the
BBC to be a 'proper' broadcaster and supply its radio stations at 256kb/s.

Political, well if BBC and ITV want to get 'Freesat' off the ground, they
will need all the friends they can muster.

--
Mark
Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply.

Zero Tolerance September 19th 06 04:24 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On 19 Sep 2006 04:26:12 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

and as you point out the 2D satellite would overcome this ridiculous
argument over licensing.


Except it wouldn't because 2D reaches large chunks of Europe and,
closer to home, Ireland, which Channel 5 do not purchase transmission
rights for.

Of course a French channel will dub Quantum Leap (Code Quantum) into
French and a German channel will dub into German, but the point is the
programmes are freely available. Their whole schedules are 'in the clear'.


And in French. Or German. Chances of any significant audience outside
France and Germany? Slim.

Ongoing encryption of 5 after the analogue switch off will currently make it
available only by contacting Sky and so Sky can bolster their "offerings".


Isn't that rather up to Channel 5 and nobody else?

C5 was meant to be a public channel in terms of viewing.


Are you suggesting that it's not? Some kind of closed-circuit TV? :-)

If ITV can broadcast US films and serials and the BBC can also, then 5
should do so also.


If ITV and the ludicrously over-funded BBC can afford to pay extra for
European & Irish rights, then that's up to them. It suits their
political ideologies better to say "well, going FTA won't save us any
money, in fact it'll cost us more, but we can stick two fingers up at
Sky and that's important to us" then that's fine. Other companies,
like Channel 4 and Channel 5, (a) do not have as much money to throw
around on playing such games, and (b) probably have no desire to
anyway.

Five is a private company with private shareholders. Why would it
waste money on buying rights for audiences outside its transmission
area, just for going FTA? It's money down the drain. No sensible
company would do it.

The channel may be private but they have a duty to broadcast by digital satellite
to all UK residents and by using Videoguard they are denying many of us
the right to their channel(s). Dropping encryption would also save them alot of
money.


Five are a private company and they have NO duty to broadcast by
digital satellite AT ALL, they have NO duty to broadcast "to all UK
residents", and those residents have no "right" to their channels. It
would not save them ANY money, it would cost them MORE. What is in it
for them? Nothing.


--

David Taylor September 19th 06 05:14 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On 2006-09-18, John Porcella wrote:

with wheels/wings) is not to be even encouraged?

I suppose it's the feminisation of TV and the media again, but do Five
really not wan't

"wan't"?


So he can't use apostrophes correctly.

At least that's a bit more complicated than quoting correctly, which
appears to be too difficult for you...

Perhaps you should just stop your pedantic whinging until you're able
to make posts which not only correctly use apostrophes, but which actually:

a) Contain facts, not bull****.
b) Comply with netiquette.

--
David Taylor

galaxyguy September 19th 06 05:42 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Zero Tolerance wrote:
On 19 Sep 2006 04:26:12 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

and as you point out the 2D satellite would overcome this ridiculous
argument over licensing.


Except it wouldn't because 2D reaches large chunks of Europe and,
closer to home, Ireland, which Channel 5 do not purchase transmission
rights for.

Of course a French channel will dub Quantum Leap (Code Quantum) into
French and a German channel will dub into German, but the point is the
programmes are freely available. Their whole schedules are 'in the clear'.


And in French. Or German. Chances of any significant audience outside
France and Germany? Slim.

Ongoing encryption of 5 after the analogue switch off will currently make it
available only by contacting Sky and so Sky can bolster their "offerings".


Isn't that rather up to Channel 5 and nobody else?

C5 was meant to be a public channel in terms of viewing.


Are you suggesting that it's not? Some kind of closed-circuit TV? :-)

If ITV can broadcast US films and serials and the BBC can also, then 5
should do so also.


If ITV and the ludicrously over-funded BBC can afford to pay extra for
European & Irish rights, then that's up to them. It suits their
political ideologies better to say "well, going FTA won't save us any
money, in fact it'll cost us more, but we can stick two fingers up at
Sky and that's important to us" then that's fine. Other companies,
like Channel 4 and Channel 5, (a) do not have as much money to throw
around on playing such games, and (b) probably have no desire to
anyway.

Five is a private company with private shareholders. Why would it
waste money on buying rights for audiences outside its transmission
area, just for going FTA? It's money down the drain. No sensible
company would do it.

The channel may be private but they have a duty to broadcast by digital satellite
to all UK residents and by using Videoguard they are denying many of us
the right to their channel(s). Dropping encryption would also save them alot of
money.


Five are a private company and they have NO duty to broadcast by
digital satellite AT ALL, they have NO duty to broadcast "to all UK
residents", and those residents have no "right" to their channels. It
would not save them ANY money, it would cost them MORE. What is in it
for them? Nothing.


-Zero Tolerance, I begin to understand why you chose your 'nick'; you seem rather strongly intolerant of views, or am I just imagining it?

As to your points:
You suggest that few people outside France or Germany would watch their
channels
and I suppose we might as well add Spanish and Italian FTA channels
into the mix,
might'nt we? If you are watching Sports events, a Classical concert,
Ice Skating,
Marine and Nature programmes is it necessary to speak the/any language
- No.
My example of "Code Quantum" on M6 is a good one in that most American
TV
is so easy to follow that you can follow it without it being in
English. So, 'Quantum Leap' is at least intelligent and worthwhile but
most US serials are so facile that the thin plots are utterly
predicatable.Watching them in a foreign language can make them seem at
least a bit more interesting sometimes. Arte, the best European Arts
Channel
which is free to air broadcasts in either French or German. They
present many English
programmes and show them in English with sub-titles. TV5 Europe offers
subtitles in French, Dutch, German and about 5 other languages; they
too have great films.
Lots of people in England learning a foreign language seek out these
channels and
many non-learners enjoy watching the sun rising over the Alps each
morning -
the view you express that the actual and potential audience size is
"Slim" is
very debatable.
Lets move on to the audience shall we? When I suggest that offering 5
via Sky
which can then bolster it up as one of their channel "offerings", you
tell me
"Isn't that up to Channel 5 and nobody else?" Hmmmm. Although a private
channel
C5 was established as a Mainstream channel by Parliament. In the move
from analogue to digital I'm sure it was never the intention of
Government to hand over C5 on digital satellite exclusively to Sky.
Many UK satellite owners own non Videoguard receivers;
they also pay a licence fee not just for the BBC but for the right to
view UK public TV
channels; curiously this includes Channel 5. As I said earlier
encryption is all about audience denial and C5 has no right to enter
into a cosy private exclusive relationship
with Sky. It has a public duty too; so again I say 'No it isn't up to
C5 and nobody else'.
Who owns 5? You mention private shareholders but I note that 5 is not
registered on the UK exchanges, so who owns 5? If it is the private
shareholders of RTL then they
are operating double standards because RTL and RTL2 are 'in the clear'
24/7 in analogue and digitally. Do I watch them - sometimes, yes. I
wander how much they pay for UK and Irish broadcasting? (I bet they
don't pay €1) Yet they broadcast from both
Austria and Germany right over the UK, Ireland and up to Iceland, I
guess.
C5 ought to challenge any "restrictive licensing" from the US and enter
into an alliance with all the FTA channels to end such nonsense. You
are being held to ransom.
There are about 60 digital and analogue TV stations, UK and European
who broadcast across the beam width offered by their signal from Astra.

Its time C5 realised that whilst it is private that it is primarily a
broadcaster and a larger
audience brings with it better negotiating rights to advertisers. ITV
has that benefit now
along with BBC World, TF1, M6, Vox, ZDF, RTL, 3Sat, etc etc.
Broadcasting is about broadcasting and encryption of your digital
signals is all about
'narrowcasting'. Your channel already imitates M6 in many ways (which I
believe is now also owned by RTL). Learn from all your rivals and don't
shut out UK viewers after the
Analogue switch off.


charles September 19th 06 07:07 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
In article ,
Edster wrote:
(Zero Tolerance) wrote in message


Five are a private company and they have NO duty to broadcast by
digital satellite AT ALL, they have NO duty to broadcast "to all UK
residents", and those residents have no "right" to their channels. It
would not save them ANY money, it would cost them MORE. What is in it
for them? Nothing.


Larger audiences would mean larger advertising fees.


larger audiences would mean they could try to get higher advertising fees.
However if the firm advertising is offering UK products it's not a lot of
use if the extra viewers are outside the UK

--
From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey"

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11


Zero Tolerance September 19th 06 07:48 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On 19 Sep 2006 08:42:50 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

-Zero Tolerance, I begin to understand why you chose your 'nick'; you seem
rather strongly intolerant of views, or am I just imagining it?


I am uncompromising and intolerant of error or faulty logic. I do
respect views and opinions (and am really easily swayed by a good
point) but I do tend to jump on "opinion stated as fact" - sometimes
too much, so if that is the case here, my apologies. :-)

You suggest that few people outside France or Germany would watch their
channels and I suppose we might as well add Spanish and Italian FTA channels
into the mix, might'nt we? If you are watching Sports events, a Classical concert,
Ice Skating, Marine and Nature programmes is it necessary to speak the/any language
- No.


Absolutely, but for the most part, watching TV in a language you don't
speak is, for most people, and most types of broadcast, not much fun.
Don't get me wrong, I've got a FTA box hooked up to Astra 1 and I love
nosing through it and Hotbird on occasion. I adore the quality and
presentation of European TV and it's a constant source of regret to me
that I just can't make the time to really sit down and learn a few new
languages.

Nonetheless - in most cases, the 'value' of a programme dubbed into
French is fairly small outside France. Ditto Italy, Germany, etc.

My example of "Code Quantum" on M6 is a good one in that most American
TV is so easy to follow that you can follow it without it being in English.


Again, fair enough, but hardly a mass-market activity.

Interesting as foreign television is, if I want to be properly
entertained, it's going to need to be in my own language.

the view you express that the actual and potential audience size is
"Slim" is very debatable.


I think I'd stand by that. The points you make are good - excellent,
in fact. But realistically, how many people in the UK are going to all
sit down and watch something in a language they don't speak? With no
subtitles? Is the audience for that activity going to trouble even the
most minor of English-language channels on Sky? I honestly doubt it.

Hmmmm. Although a private channel
C5 was established as a Mainstream channel by Parliament. In the move
from analogue to digital I'm sure it was never the intention of
Government to hand over C5 on digital satellite exclusively to Sky.


Perhaps, but in the absence of any prohibitions to the contrary, it's
really not any of their business. C5 certainly has obligations as
regards its terrestrial carriage - it must be FTA, etc. (Although I
seem to recall that the original licence did make provision for a
certain percentage of pay content, but that was a LONG time ago and
might no longer be the case.) But as far as satellite goes, it's free
to make its own arrangements.

It wasn't that long ago that a Sky box and viewing card was good
enough for all five terrestrial channels. OK, the BBC broke ranks for
political reasons and to protect the future of the licence fee. (Greg
Dyke's autobiography deals with this in excellent detail.) ITV
wouldn't **** on Sky if they were on fire, so again no surprise in
that move. But it mustn't be assumed that all these moves were
cost-saving or even cost-neutral, because the reality is far from
that.

Many UK satellite owners own non Videoguard receivers;
they also pay a licence fee not just for the BBC but for the right to
view UK public TV channels; curiously this includes Channel 5.


No, that's not true. The licence fee is for the right to operate a
television reciever, it's not a right to recieve any particular
channel.

As I said earlier encryption is all about audience denial and C5
has no right to enter into a cosy private exclusive relationship
with Sky. It has a public duty too; so again I say 'No it isn't up to
C5 and nobody else'.


I do see your point but I disagree. UK Company law states that
companies are obliged to operate in the best interests of the
shareholders, and that - in the absence of any specific regulation to
the contrary - altering its satellite transmission arrangements to
provide for FTA broadcast is not a move which it is legally under any
kind of "duty" to perform unless it saves the company money or opens
up new revenue opportunities.

It doesn't make sense for C5 to do such a thing. It only needs a brief
look at the experience of the BBC and ITV to realise that such a move
costs more in programme rights, and results in the inability to show
certain material entirely when those wider rights are simply not
available. Bear in mind that C4 and C5 rely on a far larger amount of
imported material - the very same imported material that is also
eagerly snapped up by channels in Ireland, who often have exclusive
rights in that territory. Will C4 and C5 want to lose out on major
imported shows for their UK viewers, simply because they can't prevent
FTA satellite transmissions from spilling into Ireland?

Who owns 5? You mention private shareholders but I note that 5 is not
registered on the UK exchanges, so who owns 5? If it is the private
shareholders of RTL then they are operating double standards because
RTL and RTL2 are 'in the clear' 24/7 in analogue and digitally.


In a foreign language - so any overspill is effectively 'de minimis'.
Very different kettle of fish to broadcasting in English (at all), or,
for example, the situation where UK and Irish broadcasters can hold
rights to the same english-language presentation of a programme.

Think of a big import that you love - Sopranos, Desperate Housewives,
CSI, Lost, whatever, I don't know. Are you an Aaron Sorkin fan? Did
you like The West Wing? Want to see Studio 60? Now imagine that
instead of waiting until January to see this series, you can tune your
satellite receiver into an Irish channel that's showing it FTA. Are
you going to wait? Probably not - and that situation, in reverse, is
the problem. Those Irish channels are encrypted for the same reasons
as the more import-heavy UK ones are.

Its time C5 realised that whilst it is private that it is primarily a
broadcaster and a larger audience brings with it better negotiating
rights to advertisers. ITV has that benefit now
along with BBC World, TF1, M6, Vox, ZDF, RTL, 3Sat, etc etc.


But this is exactly the point - people who book adverts on ITV do so
because they want to reach a UK audience. Sometimes not even the whole
UK, just a tiny little bit of it. Overspill into Europe is no help and
of no interest. And again using the Irish example, it's a positive
hazard, where TV3, which up until recently was 45% owned by ITV and
screened huge swathes of its material (Emmerdale, Coronation Street,
Coronation Street, Coronation Street..). If ITV started selling
adverts targeted at Ireland, suddenly TV3 goes out of business, and,
in reverse, that means the income ITV were making from selling those
programmes suddenly goes pop.

It was always the dream of European satellite broadcasting that there
would be powerful, Europe-wide "Super Stations" filled with blue-chip
Europe-wide brands, commercials for consumer electronics, fast food,
cars and banks that united us all in our Europed Europeanness. It
didn't happen. Even advertisers segment the countries of Europe. They
don't WANT people in France seeing commercials for something they
haven't released in that territory yet. McDonalds don't want English
viewers seeing their World Cup commercials saying "Come on Germany!"
while at the same time they say "Come on England!" on British
channels. There's just no money in Europe-wide broadcasting, outside
of sex and shopping.

--

Zero Tolerance September 19th 06 07:50 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 16:55:11 +0100, Edster wrote:

Larger audiences would mean larger advertising fees.


Any possible increase in audience would be so small as to be massively
outweighed by the increased programme costs, and loss of viewers from
no longer being able to attract the best imports.

If going FTA on satellite suddenly brought in another 8 million
viewers, then yeah, it'd make a whole lot of sense. As it stands,
going FTA would raise your potential audience by.. what.. about 1%?
It's not worth getting out of bed for.
--

charles September 19th 06 08:18 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
In article ,
Zero Tolerance wrote:
McDonalds don't want English viewers seeing their World Cup commercials
saying "Come on Germany!" while at the same time they say "Come on
England!" on British channels. There's just no money in Europe-wide
broadcasting, outside of sex and shopping.


or "Carlsberg" "The Official England Team Drink, especially when a match
involved England v Denmark

--
From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey"

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11


Mark Carver September 19th 06 08:29 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
charles wrote:
In article ,
Zero Tolerance wrote:
McDonalds don't want English viewers seeing their World Cup commercials
saying "Come on Germany!" while at the same time they say "Come on
England!" on British channels. There's just no money in Europe-wide
broadcasting, outside of sex and shopping.


or "Carlsberg" "The Official England Team Drink, especially when a match
involved England v Denmark


Or Champion's League sponsors, Sony Playstation and Amstel 'beer'.


--
Mark
Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply.

galaxyguy September 20th 06 01:28 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 

Mark Carver wrote:

Zero Tolerance, Many thanks for the time you've taken and in answering
many of my points. I didnot intend to show disrespect to you regarding
your 'nick' and I'm very pleased you took none. There is nothing wrong
with strong opinions or facts epsecially when they enable a good
debate.
I too take on board a number of your points but for the sake of keeping
the debate going
can just throw a few remarks into the pot again?
You replied 'The licence fee is for the right to operate a television
receiver, it's not a right to receive any particular channel'. I guess
you are right but when television is all digital
then homeowners with no Freeview Aerials and boxes or Sky receivers or
other digital satellite boxes will, under your argument still have to
pay a licence fee even though
they have no TV channels! I'm assuming you still agree that will be the
case.
OK, being one of only several thousands of UK viewers with a non
Videoguard non Sky
digital s.t.b. I can live with seeing "Service Is Not Running Or
Scrambled" for Channel 5.
After all it will be 2012 before Crystal Palace shuts down analogue.
One of the main points I have been making is that anyone wanting to see
German clear
TV, or French, or Spanish, or Italian can do so and they can watch
series such as Lost
if they choose here in Britain and Ireland in their living room.
However, we in Britain cannot see your channels because of your issues
over licensing. OK, for a minute
I'll pass over that and offer C5 the Canal + answer to this question.
Canal + as you know was the first PPV TV station and its immense
success led to
the development (some time later, of Sky). So how do they resolve this
issue?
Answer, easily. The programmes they make themselves or have
commissioned are
'in the clear' and each day at lunchtime and in the early evening
popular programmes
are broadcast and identified in schedules as 'Clear'. Afterwards when a
new film comes on, or an import series, or football then, they encrypt.

You mentioned a list of US programmes to me and I have honestly to
reply that however
successful they are to 5, that I haven't seen any of them at all. Maybe
I've missed out
on "West Wing" but I don't actually live in the USA and I choose to
trawl the 5 schedules for UK made programmes and this week the
highlight would be
'Hotel Inspector', which has been very entertaining. Your brief News
and Weather programmes are English and so even if you followed the
strictest definitions imposed
by US serials then you would still be able to broadcast 'in the clear'
for part of your schedules.
I did take on board your comment about 5 not necessarily wanting to use
digital satellite. I do understand you have to pay Sky an extremely
large fortune to be included
in their EPG. This is something most Sky viewers will be unaware of,
but must
figure in your broadcasting costs. 5 though is not a small, struggling
station is it?
It is part of the RTL stable and as such your parent group is very
wealthy.
Advertising - an interesting area, isn't it? You think pan European
advertising would never take off; but it has and in many ways. Firstly
look at the Car adverts transmitted in Britain - all the cars are shown
in a 'general European environment' - but they are nearly all left hand
drive cars. Adverts made for the biggest car buying public.
Secondly, what about Euronews and Eurosport. They feature adverts for
aimed
at all of us. I'm sure Somfy blinds, Renault, Kia and Rolex etc...
don't consider their
money wasted. Finally, as to the adverts on ITV and German channels.
Many
adverts are the same such as many womens lotions and hair dyes. And I'm
sure
that even within the UK it has done Becks Beir and all the other German
brewers
no harm to have free overseas advertising. It's a win, win situation.
I honestly think you underestimate the number of extra viewers you may
gain, but I do realise that, for example, RTL2 is a duplicate of 5 in
many ways.
German TV viewers are fortunate in that they have so many domestic
channels and that
they all broadcast FTA in both broadcasting formats still. One reason
for this is the
ongoing poverty in the former East but, most importantly, the Mountains
in the South
make terrestrial transmission too difficult and satellite solves the
issues.
Well 5, you aren't broke and ITV isn't wealthy any longer. If they can
broadcast
'in the clear', I trust that you will review this issue. There is the
option of partial
encryption I've mentioned which is used by Canal + and Digital + Espana.


Adrian A September 20th 06 01:54 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
galaxyguy wrote:
Mark Carver wrote:

Zero Tolerance, Many thanks for the time you've taken and in answering
many of my points. I didnot intend to show disrespect to you regarding
your 'nick' and I'm very pleased you took none. There is nothing wrong
with strong opinions or facts epsecially when they enable a good
debate.
I too take on board a number of your points but for the sake of
keeping the debate going
can just throw a few remarks into the pot again?
You replied 'The licence fee is for the right to operate a television
receiver, it's not a right to receive any particular channel'. I guess
you are right but when television is all digital
then homeowners with no Freeview Aerials and boxes or Sky receivers or
other digital satellite boxes will, under your argument still have to
pay a licence fee even though
they have no TV channels! I'm assuming you still agree that will be
the case.


No, that won't be the case. For a start there's no such thing as a "Freeview
Aerial" the vast majority of people currently recieving analogue broadcasts
will be able to recieve digital just by connecting a digital reciever. For
the few that are unable to recieve any broadcast channels then no licence
fee is payable.

snip



galaxyguy September 20th 06 02:32 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Galaxy Guy wrote
Zero Tolerance, Many thanks for the time you've taken and in answering
many of my points......


Mark Carver, Apologises that your name appeared above my own posting.
I probably didn't edit the lines sufficiently. I want to make it
clear that the above posting is my own.
If I can reply to the point about "Freeview Aerials", in my area and I
guess in most too,
existing analogue aerials which deliver perfect analogue pictures
'pixelate' on Freeview
channels and don't over the full line up. Consequently an outlay of
about £120+ is needed
for a big, wide aerial in order to deliver this digital terrestrial
service. That said, apart from the ugliness of these bigger aerials
their cost is soon recouped in comparison to cable
and most Sky possibilities.


Zero Tolerance September 20th 06 09:17 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On 20 Sep 2006 04:28:30 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

when television is all digital
then homeowners with no Freeview Aerials and boxes or Sky receivers or
other digital satellite boxes will, under your argument still have to
pay a licence fee even though


An interesting point - it will depend on how a 'television reciever'
is defined at the time once analogue switchoff occurs. Certainly, an
analogue TV which is not capable of receiving television pictures then
- as now - will not require a licence. It will only be if it's used in
connection with something that receives 'live or as live television',
such as a Freeview box or even some kind of broadband system, that it
becomes a "television receiver" again.

Answer, easily. The programmes they make themselves or have
commissioned are
'in the clear' and each day at lunchtime and in the early evening
popular programmes
are broadcast and identified in schedules as 'Clear'. Afterwards when a
new film comes on, or an import series, or football then, they encrypt.


A good idea, but then, realistically, what is the benefit? FTA viewers
will just complain that they can't see C5 "when anything good is on",
and if they're going to have to have a Sky box to view the encrypted
programmes, then they may as well view on a Sky box all the time.

I did take on board your comment about 5 not necessarily wanting to use
digital satellite. I do understand you have to pay Sky an extremely
large fortune to be included in their EPG.


It's not actually a large amount of money compared to what
broadcasting actually costs. The last time I saw the figures (they
were on a website somewhere) the cost for an FTV channel was something
like £75k per year. Given that an outfit like 5 could easily spend
more than that on just one episode of a programme, it simply doesn't
figure. Look at some of the free to air channels on Sky - if even the
lowest of low grade rubbish available there can afford to pay to be on
the EPG, then it's clearly not a particularly burdensome charge.

It is part of the RTL stable and as such your parent group is very
wealthy.


Hold on, you keep saying "your" - I'm not Channel 5! Did you copy and
paste this from an email you sent them? :-)

Secondly, what about Euronews and Eurosport. They feature adverts for
aimed at all of us. I'm sure Somfy blinds, Renault, Kia and Rolex etc...
don't consider their money wasted.


True enough, but Euronews and Eurosport's adverts do have a certain
kind of "Europudding" feel to them. It's very unlikely that they're
covering their costs purely from those commercials.

The other problem is that advertising codes vary enormously between
different European nations. What's legal in one country is illegal in
another. It could be impossible to comply with two different sets of
regulations which control the same thing.

Well 5, you aren't broke and ITV isn't wealthy any longer. If they can
broadcast 'in the clear', I trust that you will review this issue.


I will do no such thing. And again, I am not channel 5. :-)

--

Mike September 21st 06 01:31 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Wed, 20 Sep 2006 19:17:23 GMT, (Zero
Tolerance) wrote:

It's not actually a large amount of money compared to what
broadcasting actually costs. The last time I saw the figures (they
were on a website somewhere) the cost for an FTV channel was something
like £75k per year. Given that an outfit like 5 could easily spend
more than that on just one episode of a programme, it simply doesn't
figure. Look at some of the free to air channels on Sky - if even the
lowest of low grade rubbish available there can afford to pay to be on
the EPG, then it's clearly not a particularly burdensome charge.


The low grade **** channel typical of the Murdoch style might only get
charged £75k but if the money grabbing ******* gets whiff of a quality
channel like five or the beeb wanting to be on the epg then you can
bet it will cost much, much more. This leaves the fat arrogant ******
with a bulging back pocket to spend on overpriced american
trash/assorted yachts/aircraft/homes and the quality channels like
five and the beeb a few bob to spend on programming. Yes Murdoch
really is a **** like that, and sadly the beeb and five are stupid
enough to go along with the evil money grabbing ****er.



--

maethorechannen September 21st 06 03:51 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Wed, 20 Sep 2006 04:28:30 -0700, galaxyguy wrote:


Mark Carver wrote: You replied 'The licence fee is for the right to operate a television
receiver, it's not a right to receive any particular channel'. I guess
you are right but when television is all digital
then homeowners with no Freeview Aerials and boxes or Sky receivers or
other digital satellite boxes will, under your argument still have to
pay a licence fee even though
they have no TV channels!


Seeing as people who live in analogue blackspots (ie, people who live in
isolated areas without any analogue coverage) have to pay a licence fee if
they own a TV simply for watching videos, then I think it's safe to assume
that the same will be true after the switch. Maybe you could wiggle out of it
if all your reception equipment is analogue (and you don't have broadband
internet either), but I doubt TV Licencing would let you get away with it
without a trip to court.

Answer, easily. The programmes they make themselves or have
commissioned are
'in the clear' and each day at lunchtime and in the early evening
popular programmes
are broadcast and identified in schedules as 'Clear'. Afterwards when a
new film comes on, or an import series, or football then, they encrypt.


Even though Five commissions programming, they still don't (for the
most part at least) own that programming - the production companies retain
ownership. So it doesn't matter if the programme is from the US or the UK,
Five don't really own it either way.


5 though is not a small, struggling
station is it?
It is part of the RTL stable and as such your parent group is very
wealthy.


It's not exactly a large station either, and it has to justify it's
existence to RTL (who then have to justify their existence to an even
larger media company).

Advertising - an interesting area, isn't it? You think pan European
advertising would never take off; but it has and in many ways. Firstly
look at the Car adverts transmitted in Britain - all the cars are shown


While there will be many adverts reused across European territories, the
people paying for them to be shown will be different groups. Why would
Ford UK pay for Ford Spain's advertising? Pan European advertising will
only take off once you have truly "european" companies.

no harm to have free overseas advertising. It's a win, win situation. I
honestly think you underestimate the number of extra viewers you may
gain,


How many people in the UK are actually affected by Five encrypting on
Satellite? As far as I can tell, the only people affected are those who
can not/will not get Five over freeview and are unwilling to get a Sky
"free to view" installation. I can't see there being that many people, and
I have to wonder if those few people are going to be that
interested in the sort of programming Five is outputting (you said
yourself that you don't have any interest in US programming - which means
that any ability to watch Five US would be of no use to you)


cheers
maethor

ps. I don't represent Five either :-)

The Wizard September 21st 06 04:20 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 

"Mike" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 20 Sep 2006 19:17:23 GMT, (Zero
Tolerance) wrote:

It's not actually a large amount of money compared to what
broadcasting actually costs. The last time I saw the figures (they
were on a website somewhere) the cost for an FTV channel was something
like £75k per year. Given that an outfit like 5 could easily spend
more than that on just one episode of a programme, it simply doesn't
figure. Look at some of the free to air channels on Sky - if even the
lowest of low grade rubbish available there can afford to pay to be on
the EPG, then it's clearly not a particularly burdensome charge.


The low grade **** channel typical of the Murdoch style might only get
charged £75k but if the money grabbing ******* gets whiff of a quality
channel like five or the beeb wanting to be on the epg then you can
bet it will cost much, much more. This leaves the fat arrogant ******
with a bulging back pocket to spend on overpriced american
trash/assorted yachts/aircraft/homes and the quality channels like
five and the beeb a few bob to spend on programming. Yes Murdoch
really is a **** like that, and sadly the beeb and five are stupid
enough to go along with the evil money grabbing ****er.


I guess you're not sending Murdoch a Christmas card this year then :-))

Instructions on the net for letter bombs





Nigel Barker September 21st 06 09:08 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Wed, 20 Sep 2006 19:17:23 GMT, (Zero Tolerance)
wrote:

It's not actually a large amount of money compared to what
broadcasting actually costs. The last time I saw the figures (they
were on a website somewhere) the cost for an FTV channel was something
like £75k per year. Given that an outfit like 5 could easily spend
more than that on just one episode of a programme, it simply doesn't
figure. Look at some of the free to air channels on Sky - if even the
lowest of low grade rubbish available there can afford to pay to be on
the EPG, then it's clearly not a particularly burdensome charge.


It is according to the 'Rapture' channel. To quote their press Release "Rapture
TV believes that BSkyB is charging excessively high fees for the supply of an
EPG service on the UK's only DSat platform."
http://www.rapturetv.com/pressrelease/

--
Nigel Barker
Live from the sunny Cote d'Azur

galaxyguy September 21st 06 12:15 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Zero Tolerance, Thanks again for an informative reply. Your detailed
comments and defence of the current status quo with 5 led me to believe
you may have some loose association with them. It was in that sense
that I wrote "your" a number of times.
Indeed, it's a shame you aren't C5 in wealth terms:)
Let me assure you and all readers here that I have not emailed 5 with
any of my postings here. I guess they monitor views expressed here
anyway. I have not cut and pasted anything and I hope my expressed
opinions, which I've taken some time to elaborate are not seized on and
'cut and pasted' by anyone else to C5. (Although opinions are not
covered by licensing agreements).
I'm disappointed that nearly every view I've stated has been knocked
back, but then again C5 may agree with some views I've noted.
My only contact with them was on Monday when I telephoned and was put
through to a very pleasant person from their Engineering Department who
quietly listened to me and told me that my expressed views would be
circulated around 5 as part of that day's log.
I was impressed and thanked him.
A little later I tried phoning Channel 4 to discuss these 'in the
clear' satellite issues.
I did not get beyond the Duty Officer who was not helpful at all.
As regards the concept of a C5USA channel coming on air within days, no
I doubt very much whether there will be anything worth watching on it
at all, for me. I am actually a bit suprised the Channel can be
legitimately allowed because I was sure that the EBU or Eurovision or
the EU have applied restrictions to all European TV stations that their
imported quota from outside Europe was fiercly restricted. I can't
recall the percentage but I thought it was as low as 20% at peak
broadcasting times. How you can establish a channel with 100% of US
programming and get away with it beats me; it certainly sounds very
retrograde and will undoubtedly be 'disposable TV'? What a waste of
transponder space and ideas. An earlier correspondent remarked that a
channel showing programmes from Australia {and New Zealand:my addition}
would sound much more appealing. I tend to agree though the quota issue
remains, doesn't it?


Zero Tolerance September 21st 06 08:14 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 07:08:50 GMT, Nigel Barker wrote:

It is according to the 'Rapture' channel. To quote their press Release "Rapture
TV believes that BSkyB is charging excessively high fees for the supply of an
EPG service on the UK's only DSat platform."
http://www.rapturetv.com/pressrelease/


Rapture could be like Jomtien, who believes that charging even one
penny would be an excessively high fee.

--

maethorechannen September 23rd 06 03:46 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 03:15:14 -0700, galaxyguy wrote:

I tend to agree though the quota issue
remains, doesn't it?



IIRC, the quota has a "when reasonable" clause - if your channel is
dedicated to non EU content, then the quota is not "reasonable" and
and therefore no longer applies. That's assuming the quota still exists
(I seem to remember that they were considering scrapping it, as it's not
particularly effective in a multichannel environment).


{{{{{Welcome}}}}} October 1st 06 02:24 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Thus spaketh galaxyguy:
Adrian A wrote:
galaxyguy wrote:

It was never free to air, it was soft encrypted with videocrypt, as
used by Sky at the time so only sold in the UK. No card was needed
but a Videocrypt decoder was.
--
Adrian


Adrian, Thank you for your reply. Yes, you are right. I forgot because
in the past the public chose and bought their Pace Sky Analogue boxes
through shops and dealers.
So, they came with Videoguard.


Back then they weren't Sky analogue boxes, Sky hadn't taken control,
though managed to brainwash a lot of people into thinking satellite
means Sky.

The boxes back then were analogue satellite boxes, later analogue
satellite boxes with decoder, this meant you could buy any box (as we
did) you wanted and Sky had nothing to do with the purchase or the
install, you just contacted Sky if you want to subscribe to their
channels once they started up the subscription service.


--
DVD rental: www.southeastbirmingham.co.uk/dvd
PAYG Mobile Offers: www.southeastbirmingham.co.uk/payg
Items for sale: www.dodgy-dealer.co.uk


{{{{{Welcome}}}}} October 1st 06 02:27 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Thus spaketh Edster:
(Zero Tolerance) wrote in message

On 18 Sep 2006 08:46:26 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

European viewers can
watch many of the same US
programmes on the German RTL, Vox, etc.. French TF1 and M6 and other
commercial broadcasters who are equally "licensed" but reception is
available Europe wide.


And who broadcast in a different language.


On analogue Sky, RTL used to broadcast a lot of stuff like that in
english with german subtitles. One of the UK satelite magazines used
to carry listings for it for that very reason.


No on Sky Analogue you only got the Sky channels, please don't let Sky
continue to brainwash you, what you had was analogue satellite, those
German channels were just broadcast from the same satellite Sky used for
their services (Astra 1) therefore with your analogue satellite box not
only did you pick up Sky's channels, you picked up other broadcasters
channels too, such as RTL, SAT1, DSF, MTV, Filmnet.....


--
DVD rental:
www.southeastbirmingham.co.uk/dvd
PAYG Mobile Offers: www.southeastbirmingham.co.uk/payg
Items for sale: www.dodgy-dealer.co.uk


Adrian A October 1st 06 03:15 PM

Five's new channels testing?
 
{{{{{Welcome}}}}} wrote:
Thus spaketh Edster:
(Zero Tolerance) wrote in message

On 18 Sep 2006 08:46:26 -0700, "galaxyguy"
wrote:

European viewers can
watch many of the same US
programmes on the German RTL, Vox, etc.. French TF1 and M6 and
other commercial broadcasters who are equally "licensed" but
reception is available Europe wide.

And who broadcast in a different language.


On analogue Sky, RTL used to broadcast a lot of stuff like that in
english with german subtitles. One of the UK satelite magazines used
to carry listings for it for that very reason.


No on Sky Analogue you only got the Sky channels, please don't let Sky
continue to brainwash you, what you had was analogue satellite, those
German channels were just broadcast from the same satellite Sky used
for their services (Astra 1) therefore with your analogue satellite
box not only did you pick up Sky's channels, you picked up other
broadcasters channels too, such as RTL, SAT1, DSF, MTV, Filmnet.....


I'd forgotten how much I missed Filmnet and TV1000 until you mentioned
Filmnet.
--
Adrian



Adrian A October 2nd 06 10:43 AM

Five's new channels testing?
 
Edster wrote:
"{{{{{Welcome}}}}}" wrote in
message

Thus spaketh galaxyguy:
Adrian A wrote:
galaxyguy wrote:

It was never free to air, it was soft encrypted with videocrypt, as
used by Sky at the time so only sold in the UK. No card was needed
but a Videocrypt decoder was.
--
Adrian

Adrian, Thank you for your reply. Yes, you are right. I forgot
because in the past the public chose and bought their Pace Sky
Analogue boxes through shops and dealers.
So, they came with Videoguard.


Back then they weren't Sky analogue boxes, Sky hadn't taken control,
though managed to brainwash a lot of people into thinking satellite
means Sky.

The boxes back then were analogue satellite boxes, later analogue
satellite boxes with decoder, this meant you could buy any box (as we
did) you wanted and Sky had nothing to do with the purchase or the
install, you just contacted Sky if you want to subscribe to their
channels once they started up the subscription service.


I don't have it any more, but I'm pretty sure my analogue box just
said Sky on the front, next to the hole where you stick the card? I
know you could just buy your own if you wanted to, but most people
would have just gone with whatever Sky sent them. I don't know the
date, but it was when Survivors was on UK Gold the first time around,
because that was what I wanted it for.


I never saw an analogue box with Sky on the front, when working as a channel
5 retuner I saw hundreds of recievers, the majority were Pace. I loved the
Pace ones where you could set the output channel from the remote.
--
Adrian




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:08 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com