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I enlist my "radio" for mah ridzz, mostly. |
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These are radio's bread and butter customers, and they're not going to up and drop the service just 'cases there are some commercials added, or 'case the price goes up a buck or two a month... all satellite has to do is stay just a little bit better than ClearChannel... which frankly means they can just jam a mic up Howard Stern's ass and beam sounds of his anus down to Earth, and stay in business. |
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And if commercials are added to sat radio the price should go down. I mean thats why you dont pay for regular radio, because sponsors do. If you raise the price and add commercials that will turn people away, perhaps not a large number of the stern/nascar fans, but people none the less. but I guess I am a little one sided since I listen to stuff that will keep me awake in the morning;) |
Kevin (and 100_Percent_Juice),
You both seem to assume everyone thinks as logically as you do. The problem is, most people will bitch about commercials, but won't cancel subscriptions. Maybe 1 or 2 in a 100, but those numbers are not significant. But most people these days view commercials as a necessary annoyance. Just because you think one way (and even if a whole gaggle of internet forum guys do too) it doesn't change the fact that commercials don't bother the average satellite radio consumer to the point of cancellation. |
Most sheeple don't seem to much care about the ever-increasing number and new ways that advertisements are being thrown at them.
Did you know that there is a new fiber-optic turf being developed for football fields? Just as durable as regular astro-turf, but it can display graphics. Right on the playing surface. I'm sure you can imagine where they're heading with this... :rolleyes: Pretty soon agents from the Bureau of Advertising will knock on your door everday to strap you into your viewing chair, Clockwork Orange style, for your legally required daily dose of commercials. |
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Speaking of DRM... the next step in DRM is requiring you to listen to x minutes of ads in order to unlock the music you already paid for. It's bad enough that the music companies are saying things like "you don't own the CD you bought, you own the right to listen to the music on that CD in one device". Give me a fucking break... But they get away with it... RIAA and MPAA get away with suing grandma for copyright violations because they know that even with all the bad press it generates, the general public doesn't care that there are monopolies out there gobbling up their individual rights. Hell, the general public doesn't even have the power to fight back if they did care. Mark my words... satellite radio will slowly get commercials (in fact many stations already have them, and all of them have ads for other channels), and it won't make a dent in their consumer base (Nick's 1-2% estimate is probably 100-1000 times higher than reality). People bitched and moaned when cable got commercials, but I don't see cable going out of business over it anytime soon, hell people don't even remember the days of commercial-less cable. Sat Radio will do the same, and make more money on the deal, and pass none of the savings on to their customers, because if they did, they'd be failing their shareholders. |
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Adding commercials will result in some cancellations, more non-renewals for people who didn't buy the "lifetime" service, and fewer new subscriptions. I can't see this possibly being a good long-term strategy even if the ad revenue makes up the difference.
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I know the iPod is very successful, but it's because of iTunes which made what used to be a painful process of Napster-ing around for a decent quality pirated song into a simple point and click legal purchasing system that even semi-brain dead Dixie Chicks fans can use. But Apple is the only one to figure it out... even to the point that Steve Jobs is talking about wanting to ditch the DRM in iTunes and open up the industry. *Everyone* else doesn't get it... every other music seller wants stricter controls, more ad revenue, and more lowest common denominator content. Unfortunately, iTunes is kinda bound to these morons because unless Apple wants to get into the record production business, nearly all the content on iTunes comes from the status-quo loving, lobby heavy, monopoly music industry. And Kevin, with regards to the music industry's long term strategy... history has shown, over and over, that you're wrong. Since electronic media was invented in the 30's, the industry has been moving to less real content, more "perceived" value, more ad revenue, and higher end-user costs. The advent of the internet and digital music doesn't seem to have changed the way the industry works, they seem to believe that they can go ahead "business as usual" in the light of new technology... and frankly, unless we get some smart leadership that can see through all the industry lobbyists bullshit, I think the mass media conglomerates have enough power to insure that business does continue to operate as usual. |
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I'm just trying to explain that satellite radio is taking a product that doesn't really fit my needs and reducing its attractiveness further. I can't be the only one. |
Maybe you could write them and ask for the Alanis Morrisette/Dire Straits/Jewel channel?
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You forgot Shania Twain.
Jerk. :p |
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