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BBC3 DOGS
On 8 Jan 2007 09:38:46 -0800, Time To Burn wrote:
*Sigh* I have cited the reasons why "identification, recognition and awareness = tuning in again in future" so many times before... however they are included again below, just for you. snip So why does this not apply to radio? They seem to manage with station ID at decent intervals. Maybe they should be saying "radio2 radio 2" in the background? -- Regards Dave Saville NB Remove -nospam for good email address |
BBC3 DOGS
Time To Burn wrote:
snip The only thing that is self-evident is that some posters to this thread are annoyed by DOGs. I very much doubt whether the level of annoyance amongst the wider viewing public is as high as you think. I'm sure the vast majority of the population are annoyed by DOGs. I personally will not watch any channel that uses them. The people that claim that the majority of viewers fid them usefull are quite simply liars. |
BBC3 DOGS
Dave Saville wrote:
On 8 Jan 2007 09:38:46 -0800, Time To Burn wrote: *Sigh* I have cited the reasons why "identification, recognition and awareness = tuning in again in future" so many times before... however they are included again below, just for you. snip So why does this not apply to radio? They seem to manage with station ID at decent intervals. Maybe they should be saying "radio2 radio 2" in the background? don't give them ideas! -- Paul (Need a lift she said much obliged) ------------------------------------------------------- Stop and Look http://www.geocities.com/dreamst8me/ |
BBC3 DOGS
"Adrian A" wrote in message ... Time To Burn wrote: snip The only thing that is self-evident is that some posters to this thread are annoyed by DOGs. I very much doubt whether the level of annoyance amongst the wider viewing public is as high as you think. I'm sure the vast majority of the population are annoyed by DOGs. I personally will not watch any channel that uses them. The people that claim that the majority of viewers fid them usefull are quite simply liars. More than 60% of multi-channel viewing is of logo-free content last time I calculated the stats/share. |
BBC3 DOGS
Pyriform wrote:
For example, I once went on a course where the lecturer had some kind of verbal tic that caused him to randomly append the words "to it" to many of his sentences. *lol* I had a lecturer who used to do that with "right". I think the record was over a hundred. Geoff |
BBC3 DOGS
In article , Geoff Winkless wrote:
Pyriform wrote: For example, I once went on a course where the lecturer had some kind of verbal tic that caused him to randomly append the words "to it" to many of his sentences. *lol* I had a lecturer who used to do that with "right". I think the record was over a hundred. We had a teacher at school who used the word "therefore" in nearly every sentence he uttered. I think everyone who's ever been in a teaching establishment of any sort must have encountered at least one character like this. Once you've noticed their particular verbal tic, you can't *not* notice it, and your sole objective from then on becomes keeping a tally, to the total neglect of whatever it is that they're trying to teach you. Rod. |
BBC3 DOGS
"Pyriform" wrote:
... The different filters people apply to their senses are quite interesting. For example, I once went on a course where the lecturer had some kind of verbal tic that caused him to randomly append the words "to it" to many of his sentences. ... "To wit" probably - meaning "that is to say" or "namely". It's legalese and *is* a bit unusual outside of that context. -- Dave Farrance |
BBC3 DOGS
Dave Farrance wrote:
"Pyriform" wrote: ... The different filters people apply to their senses are quite interesting. For example, I once went on a course where the lecturer had some kind of verbal tic that caused him to randomly append the words "to it" to many of his sentences. ... "To wit" probably - meaning "that is to say" or "namely". It's legalese and *is* a bit unusual outside of that context. I don't think so, although of course it's impossible to be sure. He never used it in an appropriate context to it. As far as I can recall, it always went at the end of his sentences. I did once have a flying instructor who put "there" at the end of most of his sentences, with his voice trailing off as he said it - but that wasn't nearly as jarring. It just felt like a substitute full stop, there... |
BBC3 DOGS
Pyriform wrote:
BrianH wrote: Pyriform wrote: Time To Burn wrote: Graham Murray wrote: "Time To Burn" writes: It certainly is. Their standard response is in fact: "as the number of channels grows, we believe it is important to ensure that viewers can quickly identify when they are watching a BBC service." How many viewers care who the provider is? Surely what most people care about is the programme that they want to watch not which station is transmitting it. This has been covered many times before. Only in the sense that everyone else hates them, but you (and certain TV executives) believe that DOGs are justified because they establish some kind of conditioned response in the viewer: they select a particular channel in the expectation that they will receive televisual gratification. I say you are wrong, and that you have no research to prove it. It is merely a whimsical executive fantasy, predicated on the idea that the average viewer has the intellect of a laboratory rat. Surely the real reason for the now globally ubiquitous screen logo is simply an attempt to imprint a watermark and thereby dissuade commercial copying. Or am I missing something here? Yes, you are missing the fact that anyone who wants to do this would usually have other non-defaced sources for the material, or would simply remove the logo using technological means. Point taken, but I meant a "weak attempt ... [to] dissuade", in particular amateur efforts rather than professional studios. After all, there are some VERY amateur film recordings for sale in far eastern markets; I remember watching one awful pirated one that had been made in a cinema with head silhouettes appearing at the bottom of the screen as people came and left their seats. And are there really "other non-defaced sources" so easily accessed as a digital satellite FTA source, for example? I'm thinking of some of the more prestigious BBC productions. Anyway, I still think that copyright protection is a more credible reason than the risible official ones given, that of brand identification, or worse, that the public finds it useful for identification. |
BBC3 DOGS
Roderick Stewart wrote:
In article , Geoff Winkless wrote: Pyriform wrote: For example, I once went on a course where the lecturer had some kind of verbal tic that caused him to randomly append the words "to it" to many of his sentences. *lol* I had a lecturer who used to do that with "right". I think the record was over a hundred. We had a teacher at school who used the word "therefore" in nearly every sentence he uttered. I think everyone who's ever been in a teaching establishment of any sort must have encountered at least one character like this. Once you've noticed their particular verbal tic, you can't *not* notice it, and your sole objective from then on becomes keeping a tally, to the total neglect of whatever it is that they're trying to teach you. But have you noted just how many times anyone interviewed uses the verbal crutch "you know"? Usually lamely tailing off a sentence when further descriptive powers desert them. This has reached such proportions that even public figures sprinkle their utterances with very liberal doses, sometimes in every sentence, such that I believe the general audience does indeed mentally filter it out, along with its companion, "I mean" that appears almost as frequently. |
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