FOX’s feeble attempts to discourage DVR fast-forwarding
FOX attempts to thwart DVR users with a silent image? What is it with networks failing to understand that the very DVR consoles that I’m sure they use at their own household are also in use in millions of other television rooms?
U.K. advertisements for Fox’s new drama, “Brotherhood,” which premieres in Britain in October, simply shows an image of Providence, R.I., where the show is set, and the program’s logo. Viewers fast-forwarding through the ad would see the image for a few seconds; those watching it normally would hear dialogue from the show in the background.
Jon Hollett, a Fox International spokesman, said the company was experimenting with ways to get its messages to DVR users who routinely breeze through ads without antagonizing real-time viewers by broadcasting a flat, silent image for thirty seconds.
I can not personally attest to having ever used a DVR but I do know that a certain a number of people who do. For those that use their TiVO’s or alternative DVR’s, what what are your thoughts on networks experimenting with methods to disuade customers from fast-forwarding through commercials?
