Diane Mermigas writes:
This could be the year that a surge in time-shifted, on-demand, repackaged content for digital media consumers and advertisers takes the wind out of the television networks' often artificially inflated upfront ad sales and pricing. ¶ That would be a watershed event, especially for the broadcast networks, which have remained stubbornly unaffected by radical declines in audience levels and dramatic increases in competition. ¶ The collective impact of Internet streaming and downloads of television programs to portable wireless devices will at some point take a toll on broadcast and cable network expectations for ad pricing and volume. ¶ And that will irrevocably change the rules of play in television and network economics. ...
Link: Hollywood Reporter. Normally, I keep up with Diane Mermigas's work with an RSS feed of her name's hits in Google News. For whatever reason, it's missed a month of her colums, so I should have gotten this one and the two which follow earlier. --Dennis