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Dean View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 13:57
That's not what the article said - but, yeah - nationalise facebook in the name of the world government bad.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 14:14
I love how in one breath he claims to be concerned with users' privacy and in the next he condemns facebook for not handing its data over to public researchers.

I may have to write an op-ed on this.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 14:36
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

That's not what the article said - but, yeah - nationalise facebook in the name of the world government bad.


Originally posted by dumb article dumb article wrote:

"Users in some parts of the world might panic if Facebook becomes an official part of the U.S. government. But there are plenty of examples of good public investment in media and infrastructure."


I think at least it is part of the idea. The fact that someone even thought of nationalizing facebook it's rather scary.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 17:00
some part of the world might panic - the rest of the world would simply stop using it. I know for some that is an unthinkable notion, but 5 years ago the idea of not using MySpace was an unthinkable notion until the numpties at News Corp broke it. These things (social networks) work because there is the feeling (or impression) of public ownership - no one thinks of it as Zuckerberg's Facebook - they think of it as their Facebook - regardless of who owns the fiscal side of it or the hardware side of it or who profits from the advertising - the bit that makes it all work is the public that uses it, on their Wall and their Timeline with their Friends sharing all those things that are theirs. That will stop once it becomes the Washington's Facebook so there is no need to get all panicky and headless chicken-y about state controlled social network sites.
 
Nationalisation in the spirit of public ownership isn't a bad thing - nationalisation in the spirit of government ownership is a bad thing, government for the people by the people is a silly notion because someone has to be in charge, and once you've adopted that it becomes government by the man for the people, which isn't that different to private ownership - when public ownership can actually be public ownership it actually works - it works so bloody well that capitalists then decide to privatise it so they can reap the rewards, but then it stops working because the only thing that made it work was the public buy-in, and then rewards fritter away.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 19:17
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

some part of the world might panic - the rest of the world would simply stop using it. I know for some that is an unthinkable notion, but 5 years ago the idea of not using MySpace was an unthinkable notion until the numpties at News Corp broke it. These things (social networks) work because there is the feeling (or impression) of public ownership - no one thinks of it as Zuckerberg's Facebook - they think of it as their Facebook - regardless of who owns the fiscal side of it or the hardware side of it or who profits from the advertising - the bit that makes it all work is the public that uses it, on their Wall and their Timeline with their Friends sharing all those things that are theirs. That will stop once it becomes the Washington's Facebook so there is no need to get all panicky and headless chicken-y about state controlled social network sites.
 
Nationalisation in the spirit of public ownership isn't a bad thing - nationalisation in the spirit of government ownership is a bad thing, government for the people by the people is a silly notion because someone has to be in charge, and once you've adopted that it becomes government by the man for the people, which isn't that different to private ownership - when public ownership can actually be public ownership it actually works - it works so bloody well that capitalists then decide to privatise it so they can reap the rewards, but then it stops working because the only thing that made it work was the public buy-in, and then rewards fritter away.


Can you give one example of something that the public has owned that did not have "someone (...) in charge" and that has thrived for more than ten years and has "worked"?

Not a libertarian "challenge" by the way- you UK folks have a remarkably different mindset and system than us US folks, so I'm curious to see if there is anything that has truly worked that the public "truly" owns and controls and has "worked" in some meaningful capacity.


Edited by Epignosis - August 16 2012 at 19:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 19:18
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

I think tempted would be a better word. The initial change of loyalties by Sauron was not due to any supernatural influence of Morgoth. 


You don't need a supernatural influence to be corrupted.  Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2012 at 19:59
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

some part of the world might panic - the rest of the world would simply stop using it. I know for some that is an unthinkable notion, but 5 years ago the idea of not using MySpace was an unthinkable notion until the numpties at News Corp broke it. These things (social networks) work because there is the feeling (or impression) of public ownership - no one thinks of it as Zuckerberg's Facebook - they think of it as their Facebook - regardless of who owns the fiscal side of it or the hardware side of it or who profits from the advertising - the bit that makes it all work is the public that uses it, on their Wall and their Timeline with their Friends sharing all those things that are theirs. That will stop once it becomes the Washington's Facebook so there is no need to get all panicky and headless chicken-y about state controlled social network sites.
 
Nationalisation in the spirit of public ownership isn't a bad thing - nationalisation in the spirit of government ownership is a bad thing, government for the people by the people is a silly notion because someone has to be in charge, and once you've adopted that it becomes government by the man for the people, which isn't that different to private ownership - when public ownership can actually be public ownership it actually works - it works so bloody well that capitalists then decide to privatise it so they can reap the rewards, but then it stops working because the only thing that made it work was the public buy-in, and then rewards fritter away.


Can you give one example of something that the public has owned that did not have "someone (...) in charge" and that has thrived for more than ten years and has "worked"?

Not a libertarian "challenge" by the way- you UK folks have a remarkably different mindset and system than us US folks, so I'm curious to see if there is anything that has truly worked that the public "truly" owns and controls and has "worked" in some meaningful capacity.
The one that springs instantly to mind is the BBC, I'm sure someone will argue that it is neither publically owned (it's a publically funded corporation set up by Royal charter) nor does it operate without someone (The Director General) in charge, but it is an example of a "nationalised" company that is neither Government funded nor Government controlled or influenced (okay it is semi-autonimous and the BBC World Service is a flimsy cover for British Foriegn policy, but on the whole it does manage to be as impartial as is humanly possible I believe). The other examples I was think of are cooperatives, mutual societies and worker-partnerships - the largest of these in the UK are The John Lewis Partnership, The Co-Operative Society and The Nationwide Building Society, though there are many such organisations such as worker-cooperatives that operate quite successfully on a smaller scale, for example Magpie Recycling in Brighton, of course none of those are owned by all the public, they are owned by some of the public.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 12:09
I like the BBC. Do you ever watch the panel show QI? It's one of my favorites.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 12:34
I enjoy QI when it's fresh, I'm not so keen on the endless re-runs on Dave.
 
As I grow ever older I am become less tolerant of having programmes interrupted by advertisements, so I prefer watching the Beeb to most other channels. Fortunately in the UK we have "regulations" that prevent any more than 12 minutes of advertising in a single hour subject to an overall average of 9 minutes per hour on all commercial channels but even that can be too much for me. Since this is the Libertarian thread I would imagine that many here would prefer that to be deregulated so they could fill the hour with adverts upto whatever the consumer would tolerate by market forces... I've watched PA now sells T-Shirts TV in the buy a PA T-Shirt, you know they look cool USA and I don't see but first a word from our sponsor buy a PA T-Shirt now! how that works but don't forget to buy that PA T-Shirt.
 
I think there are smarter ways of selling me stuff I don't want or need and as much as I love the Meerkat adverts for whatever it is they are selling, (for viewers in the USA think: GEICO Gecko) I'll not be buying their product on the strength of an animated comedy sketch featuring an anthropomorphic critter with an amusing foreign accent (told you to think of the mockney gecko, we have a russian meerkat).


Edited by Dean - August 17 2012 at 12:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 12:40
I'm not that sure many people would tune in to a channel where the advertisement content is so excessive as to turn watching any program into a nightmare.

I like the BBC though mostly for news. Incredibly, it's quite close to impartial.

More incredibly, I actually think PBS shouldn't be first in the list of government-run things to disappear. It's actually somewhat decent.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 13:04
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

I'm not that sure many people would tune in to a channel where the advertisement content is so excessive as to turn watching any program into a nightmare. 
I'm sure they will because I'm sure they do. In the USA you are already tolerating more ad breaks per hour than we do in Europe - if an ad break every 8 minutes is currently acceptable (in the EU that is currently not accpetable) they only have to make each one a minute longer and no one will even notice.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 14:04
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

I think tempted would be a better word. The initial change of loyalties by Sauron was not due to any supernatural influence of Morgoth. 


You don't need a supernatural influence to be corrupted.  Wink


Yessir, but I think that goes along with it when people read the word nowadays.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 14:12
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Since this is the Libertarian thread I would imagine that many here would prefer that to be deregulated so they could fill the hour with adverts upto whatever the consumer would tolerate by market forces... I've watched PA now sells T-Shirts TV in the buy a PA T-Shirt, you know they look cool USA and I don't see but first a word from our sponsor buy a PA T-Shirt now! how that works but don't forget to buy that PA T-Shirt.


That's true, but that's not the same thing as me agreeing with the continued expansion of commercial time.

One thing I happen to love though would be a vastly inferior product at this point if commercials were capped. The modern NFL is annoyingly cluttered with the omnipresence of commercial breaks, not to mention in-game commercials. This revenue though was necessary to draw prime athletes away from other sports which offer longer careers and a diminished risk of life altering injuries.

So yes I do not agree with the regulation. Yes, the increased advertising basically plays a game of chicken with a set of viewers essentially deemed as passive enough to watch any amount of advertisements as long as the increases are implemented gradually. But I can also see the rare occasion where the lack of regulation allows a particular industry to thrive and give a high quality product.

Part of the issue of TV, I think, was lack of serious competition. It will either be felled completely by internet media in the coming years or have to make serious changes on that front.



"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 14:27
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Since this is the Libertarian thread I would imagine that many here would prefer that to be deregulated so they could fill the hour with adverts upto whatever the consumer would tolerate by market forces... I've watched PA now sells T-Shirts TV in the buy a PA T-Shirt, you know they look cool USA and I don't see but first a word from our sponsor buy a PA T-Shirt now! how that works but don't forget to buy that PA T-Shirt.


That's true, but that's not the same thing as me agreeing with the continued expansion of commercial time.

One thing I happen to love though would be a vastly inferior product at this point if commercials were capped. The modern NFL is annoyingly cluttered with the omnipresence of commercial breaks, not to mention in-game commercials. This revenue though was necessary to draw prime athletes away from other sports which offer longer careers and a diminished risk of life altering injuries.

So yes I do not agree with the regulation. Yes, the increased advertising basically plays a game of chicken with a set of viewers essentially deemed as passive enough to watch any amount of advertisements as long as the increases are implemented gradually. But I can also see the rare occasion where the lack of regulation allows a particular industry to thrive and give a high quality product.

Part of the issue of TV, I think, was lack of serious competition. It will either be felled completely by internet media in the coming years or have to make serious changes on that front.





I have a theory that as the internet makes it easier and easier to simply chop out commercial breaks, eventually most advertising will become integrated into the  content itself in the form of product placement or in-story discussion of products. This was done in the early days of radio with characters on comedy shows discussing the virtues of a particular brand of soap and I find it much less obnoxious than ad breaks, because you still get the flavor of the show you like. Time will tell if I am proven right.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 18:25
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Since this is the Libertarian thread I would imagine that many here would prefer that to be deregulated so they could fill the hour with adverts upto whatever the consumer would tolerate by market forces... I've watched PA now sells T-Shirts TV in the buy a PA T-Shirt, you know they look cool USA and I don't see but first a word from our sponsor buy a PA T-Shirt now! how that works but don't forget to buy that PA T-Shirt.


That's true, but that's not the same thing as me agreeing with the continued expansion of commercial time.

One thing I happen to love though would be a vastly inferior product at this point if commercials were capped. The modern NFL is annoyingly cluttered with the omnipresence of commercial breaks, not to mention in-game commercials. This revenue though was necessary to draw prime athletes away from other sports which offer longer careers and a diminished risk of life altering injuries.
You have me at a slight disadvantage [read: eyes glazing over] in that I know 4/5ths of sod all about football. My first question would be "away from what other sports specifically?" since the athletic attributes of a football player don't seem to be too compatible with any other sport that springs to mind and certainly not one where 1,700 athletes can earn $11.4m during their sporting career (all the average figures I used to arrive at those "facts" are available on the web, I found them in about a minute) - I assume most of them expect to make a living in some football related career for the remaining 34 years of their employable lifetime after retiring from professional football and not live off the savings they accumulated while playing (but even if they did $335K a year for life isn't a punch in the face). In the UK we have 540 Premiership Football (socher) players earning more or less the same per year as an NFL player (£1.16m or $1.9m) - their playing career is at least twice that of an NFL player - there are Premiership players in their 40s still drawing salary.
 
I dunno... as a disinterested outsider this ad revenue to draw prime athetes seems a little tenous to me
 
However, the structure of a NFL Football game lends itself to be punctuated by ad breaks - 3 hours to watch a 60 minute game... more than enough opportunity to insert as many adverts as is required considering you have a captive audience that is hell-bent on going nowhere for the next 180 minutes, except perhaps the bathroom and the beer-fridge. [by comparison a 90 minute premiership football (socher) match lasts 105 minutes and when televised on a commercial channel the adverts only appear during the half-time break].
 
Even with capping I can't see too much damage being done to ad revenue - with capping the avalable ad time is now at a premium and can command the best price.

Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


So yes I do not agree with the regulation. Yes, the increased advertising basically plays a game of chicken with a set of viewers essentially deemed as passive enough to watch any amount of advertisements as long as the increases are implemented gradually. But I can also see the rare occasion where the lack of regulation allows a particular industry to thrive and give a high quality product.

I don't, but I'm neither a sports fan nor someone who is overly impressed by the commercialisation of sport so I don't see how that improves the quality of the sport - a good and gifted linebacker (I have no idea what that is) is going to want to play football regardless of who he plays for or how much he is paid - I guess the system started to pay its players well when it started to earn enough to pay them - the implication now is that the system has to earn enough to attract the players good enough for the teams to earn enough to pay them...
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


Part of the issue of TV, I think, was lack of serious competition. It will either be felled completely by internet media in the coming years or have to make serious changes on that front.
On commercial TV advertising pays for content - the success of the content determines how much it can earn in ad revenue - that would suggest that the system should converge on quality programming, yet this is not what we are seeing on our TV screens. Something isn't working and it does not appear to be the advertising that's failing.
 
I'm always wary of any predictions regarding the Internet - and doubly wary of any claims regarding earnings made from the Internet. I don't think direct passive Internet advertsing works, in fact I'm pretty sure it doesn't - the people who make money with adverts are those that sell the ad-space. What does seem to work up to a point is indirect viral advertising, but we are getting wise(r) to that. The thing that strikes me as significant about Internet advertising is that the Internet doesn't use it very much - the internet driven enterprises use TV and Print media to advertise themselves.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 17 2012 at 20:47
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

You have me at a slight disadvantage [read: eyes glazing over] in that I know 4/5ths of sod all about football. My first question would be "away from what other sports specifically?" since the athletic attributes of a football player don't seem to be too compatible with any other sport that springs to mind and certainly not one where 1,700 athletes can earn $11.4m during their sporting career (all the average figures I used to arrive at those "facts" are available on the web, I found them in about a minute) - I assume most of them expect to make a living in some football related career for the remaining 34 years of their employable lifetime after retiring from professional football and not live off the savings they accumulated while playing (but even if they did $335K a year for life isn't a punch in the face). In the UK we have 540 Premiership Football (socher) players earning more or less the same per year as an NFL player (£1.16m or $1.9m) - their playing career is at least twice that of an NFL player - there are Premiership players in their 40s still drawing salary.
 
I dunno... as a disinterested outsider this ad revenue to draw prime athetes seems a little tenous to me
 
However, the structure of a NFL Football game lends itself to be punctuated by ad breaks - 3 hours to watch a 60 minute game... more than enough opportunity to insert as many adverts as is required considering you have a captive audience that is hell-bent on going nowhere for the next 180 minutes, except perhaps the bathroom and the beer-fridge. [by comparison a 90 minute premiership football (socher) match lasts 105 minutes and when televised on a commercial channel the adverts only appear during the half-time break].
 
Even with capping I can't see too much damage being done to ad revenue - with capping the avalable ad time is now at a premium and can command the best price.


Being strong, having good hand-eye coordination, and being fast doesn't seem to be compatible with other sports? The most important for a sport is raw athleticism. The specific skills can be taught throughout the tens of thousands of hours that a professional athlete will practice in his career. Football players routinely are drawn from pools of players who would have otherwise gone into the NBA (basketball) or the MLB (baseball). Other sports certainly are affected, but those two sports have this happen very frequently. I don't have numbers, but there's a pandemic of football players going broke after only a few years of their career ending. The average NFL player's career sits at about 5 years. After that, a lot of them end up in supermarkets or other menial labor The numbers you cite give what appears to be a nice average salary, but take a look at the median salary of an NFL player. $770,000 is a nice living. However, given that you often leave with debilitating injuries it's not so nice. Also, given what you can make in the other premier sports in the USA, it's really not a good deal.

There's a pretty well established connection between league profitability and the quality of athletes. 50 years ago you had players working summer jobs and playing in the NFL. The level of competition is nothing like it is today.

Supply shortened pricing rarely provides an optimal for businesses. I haven't done any sort of research on the NFL's revenue, but I'm relatively confident that the maxim applies to them.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


I don't, but I'm neither a sports fan nor someone who is overly impressed by the commercialisation of sport so I don't see how that improves the quality of the sport - a good and gifted linebacker (I have no idea what that is) is going to want to play football regardless of who he plays for or how much he is paid - I guess the system started to pay its players well when it started to earn enough to pay them - the implication now is that the system has to earn enough to attract the players good enough for the teams to earn enough to pay them...


That's just not true though. A good and gifted linebacker may not have ever become a good and gifted linebacker without the promise of hitting it big in the NFL. He would be a good and gifted corner outfielder instead. That's part of the reason that American athletes don't go into soccer. It's not that we don't play it. I played soccer every day of my life when I was a kid. There's just no reason to continue with it really. If you reverse the roles of the NFL and the NBA, I doubt you would see LeBron James playing basketball over football.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

On commercial TV advertising pays for content - the success of the content determines how much it can earn in ad revenue - that would suggest that the system should converge on quality programming, yet this is not what we are seeing on our TV screens. Something isn't working and it does not appear to be the advertising that's failing.
 
I'm always wary of any predictions regarding the Internet - and doubly wary of any claims regarding earnings made from the Internet. I don't think direct passive Internet advertsing works, in fact I'm pretty sure it doesn't - the people who make money with adverts are those that sell the ad-space. What does seem to work up to a point is indirect viral advertising, but we are getting wise(r) to that. The thing that strikes me as significant about Internet advertising is that the Internet doesn't use it very much - the internet driven enterprises use TV and Print media to advertise themselves.
 


I'm unaware of any evidence that any advertising works. I'm not quite sure I can agree with your first statement. How does advertising provide an incentive towards quality entertainment?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2012 at 03:24
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


Being strong, having good hand-eye coordination, and being fast doesn't seem to be compatible with other sports? The most important for a sport is raw athleticism. The specific skills can be taught throughout the tens of thousands of hours that a professional athlete will practice in his career. Football players routinely are drawn from pools of players who would have otherwise gone into the NBA (basketball) or the MLB (baseball). Other sports certainly are affected, but those two sports have this happen very frequently. I don't have numbers, but there's a pandemic of football players going broke after only a few years of their career ending. The average NFL player's career sits at about 5 years. After that, a lot of them end up in supermarkets or other menial labor The numbers you cite give what appears to be a nice average salary, but take a look at the median salary of an NFL player. $770,000 is a nice living. However, given that you often leave with debilitating injuries it's not so nice. Also, given what you can make in the other premier sports in the USA, it's really not a good deal.

There's a pretty well established connection between league profitability and the quality of athletes. 50 years ago you had players working summer jobs and playing in the NFL. The level of competition is nothing like it is today.

Supply shortened pricing rarely provides an optimal for businesses. I haven't done any sort of research on the NFL's revenue, but I'm relatively confident that the maxim applies to them.
 
^ As I said - I know 4/5th of sod all about NFL football, aided and abetted by knowing 4/5th of sod all about every other professional sport. I didn't know NFL players went into the NBA - I always assumed all basketball players where giraffes and all NFL players were rhinoceros - that is the fullest extent of my understanding of these sports. A good sprinter is never going to be a good middle distance runner is never going to win a marathon - physique plays a major role in what sports particular atheletes will excell at, and as try as hard as I can, I cannot see William Perry (sorry, that's the only football player I know) playing basket ball.
 
I found the 2009 $770K figure too, I also found the figure of $1.9m for 2011 - needless to say I went with the later in my example, however it does seem a little odd that there is a 147% increase in salary over a 2 year period during a recession so it does appear that one article was quoting the median and the other the mean, but in this instance I don't see how useful the median value is.
 
I question the well established connection between league profitability and the quality of athletes. If there has been an improvement in the quality of players then that seems to be reflected across all sports, professional and amateur - every Olympic games sees world records being broken - kids in 3rd grade are running times that would have qualified for a medal in 1896 - diet, standard of living, education, sports science, training, equipment etc. are all contributing to making better athletes - I don't think monetary incentives play that large a role in that (according to Maslow's hierarchy of needs pay is not a motivator, of course lack of pay is a demotivator, but that's a different issue).

Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


That's just not true though. A good and gifted linebacker may not have ever become a good and gifted linebacker without the promise of hitting it big in the NFL. He would be a good and gifted corner outfielder instead. That's part of the reason that American athletes don't go into soccer. It's not that we don't play it. I played soccer every day of my life when I was a kid. There's just no reason to continue with it really. If you reverse the roles of the NFL and the NBA, I doubt you would see LeBron James playing basketball over football.

I conceed to your better knowledge and understanding of American spectator sports.
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

On commercial TV advertising pays for content - the success of the content determines how much it can earn in ad revenue - that would suggest that the system should converge on quality programming, yet this is not what we are seeing on our TV screens. Something isn't working and it does not appear to be the advertising that's failing.
 
I'm always wary of any predictions regarding the Internet - and doubly wary of any claims regarding earnings made from the Internet. I don't think direct passive Internet advertsing works, in fact I'm pretty sure it doesn't - the people who make money with adverts are those that sell the ad-space. What does seem to work up to a point is indirect viral advertising, but we are getting wise(r) to that. The thing that strikes me as significant about Internet advertising is that the Internet doesn't use it very much - the internet driven enterprises use TV and Print media to advertise themselves.
 


I'm unaware of any evidence that any advertising works. I'm not quite sure I can agree with your first statement. How does advertising provide an incentive towards quality entertainment?
I (sort of) agree with you on both points really and (kind of) say that in my post. I do think that some indirect viral adverts have worked. In the UK we have the Delia Effect - which demonstrates that product placement can result in an increase in sales (albeit inadvertant in that example).
 
TV execs play the numbers game with Nielsen ratings and audience demographics when setting the price for advertising time during programmes - that model suggests that better programme content attracts an audience that in turn attracts advertisers - advertisers will pay more for a larger audience and they will pay more for an audience demographic that best fits their product - that seems to fit the free market model, (the public gets what the public wants), yet that's not what appears to happen in reality.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2012 at 13:16
I didn't mean to pick an example which put you at a disadvantage, so to speak, but it's quite literally the only example I can think of where I can put a good spin on the lack of such control laws in terms of effect rather than a empty-ish deontological justification.

I mean to quote the median value because of the nature of the sport. The mega-athletes which skew the mean salary do not really factor into this analysis. I mean to look at the marginal athletes, which in football constitutes the majority of the players. The minimum for a practice squad player for example (minimum is pretty representative for this group) is at $88,000 per year. It's someone earning in this range that would be especially volatile in terms of profession with respect to marginal differences in wage.

Of course the progress of nutrition and sports science in general has accounted for macro rise in talent. I mean to suggest the talent level of the NFL as compared to the talent level of MLB and NBA and other professional sports affiliates.

I agree that the current pricing structures rests on producing quantity entertainment which I differentiate from quality entertainment. I'd never heard of the Delia Effect. I'll have to look into that more.
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2012 at 18:00
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

I didn't mean to pick an example which put you at a disadvantage, so to speak, but it's quite literally the only example I can think of where I can put a good spin on the lack of such control laws in terms of effect rather than a empty-ish deontological justification.
It's okay, I got the example and there is little doubt that add revenues contribute to higher player salaries, which attracts better atheletes from other sports they are suited to play - whether that results in a better game is something I'm unable to judge - whether the sport would be any different if salaries were lower is something that can only be guessed at since historical data cannot give a definative answer. You think it does, I'm not convinced that it does.

Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


I mean to quote the median value because of the nature of the sport. The mega-athletes which skew the mean salary do not really factor into this analysis. I mean to look at the marginal athletes, which in football constitutes the majority of the players. The minimum for a practice squad player for example (minimum is pretty representative for this group) is at $88,000 per year. It's someone earning in this range that would be especially volatile in terms of profession with respect to marginal differences in wage.
And I assume those lesser paid players would be exposed to less risk of injury and would still find reasonable employment in sport or some related business when they retired as a professional player.
 
[warning - pointless old man anecdotes approaching]
An old school chum of mine was an apprentice at Manchester United at age 16, since then he's coached college football in the USA for the past 18 years (currently assistant coach at University of Florida) - he never hit the big-time as a player, but he's done alright for himself. My nextdoor neighbour was a professional rugby union player who played 44 matches for his national side (Scotland), on retiring as a professional player he became a coach and is currently a director of Reading RFC - again, he's not wealthy, but he's done alright for himself. 
[/warning]
No one has a job for life and not everyone should expect to earn enough in their playing career to set them up for life - the idea that NFL players have to be paid so much because their careers are short and prone to injury strikes me as "a poor excuse" even when that is the reason. $88K/year isn't enough to do that, $770K/year isn't enough to do that.
 
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:

Of course the progress of nutrition and sports science in general has accounted for macro rise in talent. I mean to suggest the talent level of the NFL as compared to the talent level of MLB and NBA and other professional sports affiliates.
I think the pool of available talent is larger than the number of places available for professional athletes in all those sports, especially when drawn from a population of 250 million people - supply of suitable playes far outstrips the demand, yet wages are still high.
Originally posted by Equality 7-2521 Equality 7-2521 wrote:


I agree that the current pricing structures rests on producing quantity entertainment which I differentiate from quality entertainment. I'd never heard of the Delia Effect. I'll have to look into that more.
Another phenomenon that show how indirect viral advertising can be effective has (another cookery example) occurred over here in a cut of meat called fore-rib. Because this is normally sold bone-in and has a high fat content it was deemed "unattractive" to supermarket shoppers and was considered a cheap cut of meat for "poor people". I discovered this cut 30 years ago when I was an impoverished student and even though it was cheap it was extremely tasty, so became my joint of choice for the Sunday roast. Unfortunately over the past 2 or 3 years TV chefs have been extolling its virtues, including how inexpensive yet tasty it is, such that it has become very fashionable, and because of that, very expensive. The same thing is now happening with pork belly and lamb shank. Nothing has changed here except TV endorsements - the animal hasn't changed and the cuts of meat are the same, the increase in demand was created because they were low-price cuts yet then demand hasn't dropped now they've become high-price cuts - what has changed is perception and what created that change in perception was indirect advertising.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2012 at 10:07
Ok heath care rant that somehow should have some libertarian connection. A couple months ago I had a test done (CT scan) and the people in the place where I had it done told me my only obligation would be a 200$ copay. I agreed and paid. Two months later, last Saturday,  I received a bill for 950$ for the procedure. Contacting the imaging center, they told me the insurance company, who said it would cover the test, "changed its mind" because of supposed preexisting condition. How can this be? I'm sure even a drug dealer tells you what you are going to pay BEFORE you purchase the product, not after. That's part of a free agreement. If I was told the test was going to cost me 1200 I would have NOT have it done. This is another reason why I lose every inch of hope in this country's health system, laughingstock of the civilized world.   
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