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#11
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Martin Jay wrote:
On Sat, 28 Nov 2009 13:42:53 +0000, johnwright ""john\"@no spam here.com" wrote: Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Peoples' tastes have changed. Many used to complain about adverts, too many US imports and repeats on TV. People now pay--specifically for US imports and repeats--to watch such things. Taste is largely irrelevant. Its the proportion of what comes out of the viewers pocket and what comes from advertisers that in the context of Sky has changed. The original statement that made me post was that the licence fee was massive. I was simply attempting to put it into context. I pay licence fee monthly by direct debit so I can see how little it costs compared to Sky (which in actual fact I sacked since their costs to me were going up faster than what I earned. Even when I sacked them I was paying them twice as much as I was paying in licence fee. Most people pay a lot more - like the chap I knew who bought everything who was paying nearly £50 per month. So in two and a bit months he would be paying the same as the licence fee. -- I'm not apathetic... I just don't give a sh** anymore ?John Wright |
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#12
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On Sat, 28 Nov 2009 13:42:53 +0000, johnwright ""john\"@no spam
here.com" wrote: Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Not really fair to compare the BBC's 8 TV channels against the hundreds of channels on Sky, though. -- |
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#13
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Zero Tolerance wrote:
On Sat, 28 Nov 2009 13:42:53 +0000, johnwright ""john\"@no spam here.com" wrote: Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Not really fair to compare the BBC's 8 TV channels against the hundreds of channels on Sky, though. Indeed, it takes only a minute or so to step through the Beeb's TV channels and discover nothing worth watching, with Sky you can waste an entire evening doing so. -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. www.paras.org.uk |
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#14
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On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 13:49:04 GMT, Zero Tolerance wrote:
Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Not really fair to compare the BBC's 8 TV channels against the hundreds of channels on Sky, though. How many of those "hundreds of channels" do Sky actually produce the orginal output themselves rather than just provide bandwidth, resell or transmit repeats. Sky 1 & 2, Sky Sports 1 - 3, Sky Sports News? not sure if that is FTV as Sky 3 or Sky News are. Oh and don't forget the licence fee also funds radio. National, digital only and local radio. I bet there are quite a number of people very happy that Radio Cumbria exists (again about the third time in 8 years, F&M, Carlisle Floods and the recent floods). -- Cheers Dave. |
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#15
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On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 14:26:09 +0000, Mark Carver
wrote: it takes only a minute or so to step through the Beeb's TV channels and discover nothing worth watching, with Sky you can waste an entire evening doing so. LOL. How true! -- Z |
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#16
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On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 14:51:22 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 13:49:04 GMT, Zero Tolerance wrote: Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Not really fair to compare the BBC's 8 TV channels against the hundreds of channels on Sky, though. How many of those "hundreds of channels" do Sky actually produce the orginal output themselves rather than just provide bandwidth, resell or transmit repeats. Sky 1 & 2, Sky Sports 1 - 3, Sky Sports News? not sure if that is FTV as Sky 3 or Sky News are. Oh and don't forget the licence fee also funds radio. National, digital only and local radio. I bet there are quite a number of people very happy that Radio Cumbria exists (again about the third time in 8 years, F&M, Carlisle Floods and the recent floods). And the Grayrigg train derailment (Feb 2007) mainly for its curiosity value. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
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#17
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"Brian Gaff" wrote in message ... Hmm, well, I know a heck of a lot of elderly folk sfor whom loss of bbc 7 would be a blow. They have no computer to use the on demand system, which is muted to replace it, and bought dab mainly for this service. It is now on Freeview of course, which has also helped get it accepted as a very nice trip down memory lane. I do not think most would get a computer simply to try to get shows, they want it served up as they do now. on the rare occasion i've heard radio 7, i've got the distinct impression i was actually listening to an old tv show with audio only - is it my imagination or is that actually what they do? -- Gareth. that fly...... is your magic wand.... http://dsbdsb.mybrute.com you fight better when you have a bear! |
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#18
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On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 17:41:35 -0000, "The dog from that film you saw"
wrote: "Brian Gaff" wrote in message m... Hmm, well, I know a heck of a lot of elderly folk sfor whom loss of bbc 7 would be a blow. They have no computer to use the on demand system, which is muted to replace it, and bought dab mainly for this service. It is now on Freeview of course, which has also helped get it accepted as a very nice trip down memory lane. I do not think most would get a computer simply to try to get shows, they want it served up as they do now. on the rare occasion i've heard radio 7, i've got the distinct impression i was actually listening to an old tv show with audio only - is it my imagination or is that actually what they do? Not as far as I know. The style is that of radio before TV. The style persisted after TV became what it is today. There were often studio audiences for radio comedy shows so the performers were to some extent performing to that audience as much as to the listeners. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
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#19
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On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 13:10:17 +0000, johnwright ""john\"@no spam
here.com" wrote: Martin Jay wrote: On Sat, 28 Nov 2009 13:42:53 +0000, johnwright ""john\"@no spam here.com" wrote: Consider that the licence fee tends to be less per month than just about the cheapest subscription to Sky TV. For which you get some channels all with adverts. Peoples' tastes have changed. Many used to complain about adverts, too many US imports and repeats on TV. People now pay--specifically for US imports and repeats--to watch such things. Taste is largely irrelevant. Its the proportion of what comes out of the viewers pocket and what comes from advertisers that in the context of Sky has changed. If what viewers want hasn't changed, we have to accept that before subscription TV came along viewers weren't being given what they wanted. Subscription TV is largely repeats and US programming, so, presumably, that's what people want. As you mention, they're certainly willing to pay a premium for it. -- Martin Jay |
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#20
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"Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Sun, 29 Nov 2009 17:41:35 -0000, "The dog from that film you saw" wrote: on the rare occasion i've heard radio 7, i've got the distinct impression i was actually listening to an old tv show with audio only - is it my imagination or is that actually what they do? Not as far as I know. The style is that of radio before TV. The style persisted after TV became what it is today. There were often studio audiences for radio comedy shows so the performers were to some extent performing to that audience as much as to the listeners. in this case it was ever decreasing circles - was that ever a radio show? -- Gareth. that fly...... is your magic wand.... http://dsbdsb.mybrute.com you fight better when you have a bear! |
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