-
Website
http://boxcutters.net/blog -
Original page
http://boxcutters.net/blog/2009/04/27/freeview-launches-new-campaign-more-for-free-but-at-what-cost/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
murrayNE
26 comments · 2 points
-
Daniel D Boxcutter
6 comments · 1 points
-
daveaa
5 comments · 3 points
-
Daniel Kilby
5 comments · 2 points
-
catbrain
264 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Ep 207: Modern Family, Twilight Zone
2 weeks ago · 6 comments
-
Ep 206: Misfits, The Prisoner, Lunch Disclosure
3 weeks ago · 6 comments
-
Ep 205: Adam Christou, Melrose Place
4 weeks ago · 8 comments
-
Ep 207: Modern Family, Twilight Zone
What's next, an autographed Kyle Sandilands fan card?
Simply put: the networks' customers (the advertisers) are set to directly benefit, and their consumers (the viewers who think they're customers) are just being herded into barns. That's it.
In making up the number of channels forthcoming and omitting vital facts, e.g. Freeview-branded recorders will restrict ad-skipping, they're fooling the ignorant masses into buying their official Freeview crippleware. By the time the punters realise they've been had, they've already spent their money and it's too late to do anything about it. (The ad, then, is extremely well-targeted because chucking together a load of 60-year-old IMT clips and 'reality' winners appeals to the sentimentality of exactly the kind of person who's easily fooled by this sort of thing.)
Meanwhile, the advertisers are happily sedated, safe in the knowledge that increasing numbers of victims I mean people are basically forced to sit through their shrill shouty nonsense about end-of-model run-outs and dirt cheap books and yoghurt. The networks are happy, the public is disillusioned but continues to watch, life proceeds as normal until IPTV appears and confuses everybody all over again.
Oh, and as if everything else about Freeview isn't bad enough, 'for free' is just about the most egregious abuse of English I have ever seen in a slogan.