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  1. Nov 14, 2022 · The great checkout line binge watch did not happen, but COVID19 did. As we emerge from the pandemic, it's worth taking stock of TV viewing habits in a streaming age, including audiences’ viewing ...

    • Falon Fatemi
    • Shorter Seasons and Year-Round Programming
    • Streaming Services Benefit
    • Great Shows Gone Too Soon
    • The Pandemic Works Its Way Into TV Storylines
    • Fewer Exteriors...
    • And Less Kissing
    • Awards Shows Are Ratings Losers
    • Faking A Crowd
    • Pandemic Winners
    • There's No Stopping Reality Competitions

    The production shutdown led networks to delayed and sometimes shortened seasons for shows, including NBC's "This Is Us," HBO Max's “The Flight Attendant,” the final episodes of CW's “Supernatural” and HBO's "Euphoria," among many others. The final season of "Brooklyn Nine-Nine," due in March, won't even start filming until next month, and won't air...

    Peak TV was supposed to have crested by now, but the number of outlets to stream shows keeps expanding. In the past year, Peacock, Discovery+ and Paramount+ joined recent startups Apple TV+, Disney+ and established streamers Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime Video, among others. Too many? Not for a pandemic year that made us all shut-ins, searching fo...

    The pandemic introduced a new term to the TV industry: The unrenewal. Series like Netflix’s “GLOW,”“The Society” and “I Am Not Okay with This”; ABC’s “Stumptown”; Comedy Central’s “Drunk History”; TruTv’s “I’m Sorry,” and Showtime’s “On Becoming a God in Central Florida” all saw promised new seasons canceled as a direct result of COVID-19, their ne...

    When some programs returned after production delays, their characters were wearing masks. Several series, including ABC's "Grey's Anatomy," NBC's "Law and Order: SVU," "Superstore" and "This Is Us" and CBS' "All Rise," made the pandemic part of their fictional worlds. "Grey's" portrayed life at a hospital during the height of the pandemic, with bur...

    If you've noticed fewer outdoor or other location scenes in your favorite recent shows, you're not alone. For safety reasons, some studios put the brakes on elaborate set-ups, which require more time, money and precautionary measures, especially in a pandemic. COVID-19 protocols forced producers to spend as much as 30% more to produce the same numb...

    COVID-19 restrictions, especially social distancing, have directly affected what viewers see in other ways, from intimate scenes in daytime soap operas – actors' spouses stood in as romantic partners – to police shows. CW's "Walker" had to use computer graphics to approximate spit. “Now, there’s a lot of things we can’t do," “S.W.A.T.”star Shemar M...

    Awards shows attempted to make do with virtual ceremonies that followed COVID-19 safety measures, but couldn't come close to matching pre-pandemic audiences. They were hurt by the lack of red-carpet fashions and unfamiliar movie titles, as theaters remained closed in much of the country. Emmys ratings sunk to a record low 6.1 million viewers, while...

    Awards show hosts weren’t the only ones playing to empty arenas. Sporting events used cardboard cutouts of fans to fill empty venues. The NFL used artificial crowd noise, while talk shows, "America's Funniest Home Videos" and the NBA employed fans in Zoomed-in audiences. And Fox’s “The Masked Singer” inserted old footage of live audiences to make i...

    The early months of the pandemic turned oddball true-crime and reality shows into necessary comfort food. Netflix's "Tiger King" was one of the streaming platform’s top docuseries for the year, along with “Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez.” Innovative dating shows “Love is Blind” and “Too Hot To Handle” also had chemistry with viewers.

    Reality competitions adapted more nimbly than scripted series, as NBC's "America's Got Talent" moved production outdoors, ABC's "American Idol" sent camera equipment to finalists' homes and CBS' "Big Brother" enlisted an all-star cast, enabling all of them to stick close to their planned schedules. Others, such as ABC's "Dancing with the Stars"went...

  2. Mar 16, 2021 · Consider how much has changed in the past ten years: The growth of on-demand content libraries, the habituation of ad-free viewing, the omnipresence of celebs on social media, the ability to catch ...

    • Kevin Raposo
    • The 1920s: The First Working TV. In 1924, Scottish inventor John Baird invented the first TV made of things he found, such as cardboard and a bicycle lamp.
    • The 1930s: The First Electric TVs. The Baird Televisor from 1929 was a mechanical television set and soon became obsolete after electric televisions (easier to mass produce) became available.
    • The 1940s: Network Television. By the late 1940s, the price of TVs had dropped, so many more people than ever before were able to watch television for the first time.
    • The 1950s-1960: Remote Controls, Daytime TV, and Sitcoms. The first TV remote was invented in 1950, but since TV had been popular without it for the last decade, not many people bought it.
  3. Just as it has in the U.S., the market where Netflix was born, connected TV (CTV) adoption and streaming enablement are redefining how global consumers are spending their TV time. In aggregate, linear television remains the best way to reach mass audiences, but reach levels are dropping between 2% and 3% each year as viewing behaviors fragment across the growing variety of streaming content.

    • William Quinn
  4. Jan 12, 2021 · Streaming services have seen a 400% increase in subscribers since March 2020, according to information presented during an official streaming session at the virtually hosted 2021 Consumer Electronics Show. The pandemic accelerated a move to streaming for many, old and young, as services like Starz and HBO Max adjust to a new customer base that is savvier than ever before.

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  6. Nov 21, 2021 · 2021-11-21T12:00:00+00:00 ... and their predictions for what the next 25 years may bring. Television Back Then ... 5G technology could represent one of the most significant changes to television ...

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