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Is it something to do with toast always landing butter side down? Murphy's law?

2006-09-14 12:28:38 · 19 answers · asked by dogfishperson 3 in Entertainment & Music Television

19 answers

Advertisements pay for the programmes. I would like to know why there are so many adverts when we have to pay to watch them?
Years ago there could be no more than nine minutes of adverts per hour, split into three, three minute sections. I have recorded a two hour programme, edited out adverts, and only used eighty minutes of tape! How many times have you turned on the telly and sat there ages, changing channels, just watching adverts! My tip for UK viewers is stick to the BBC. What bliss to see a programme through for up to two hours and no adverts. Only problem though, no time to go make a cup of tea! One other thing, how come we have to pay up to £40.00 per month to get these extra channels, when all they do is show adverts!

2006-09-14 13:07:49 · answer #1 · answered by Dr David 6 · 1 0

No. except i'm type of bouncing between 2 issues (which does not artwork, as they have categorized classified ads at the same time besides). If i'm interior the front room, that has cable, i will surf by employing doing up or down channel. In my room, with few channels, i'd try this, or in basic terms bypass on to the channel i imagine might want to have something. yet in a lot of circumstances i do not. I under no circumstances substitute the channel that some different person is staring at, which i come across fairly impolite. (My landlady-roomie does this to me each and every of the time -- even replacing the educate mid-sentence if she receives bored. we are sisters so this is not about sex or nationality.) i'm 50, woman, white of blended ecu history, in California. in a lot of circumstances I both do something else (examine, play on the laptop) in the time of categorized classified ads. If i'm staring at something, i do not prefer to bypass over it even as it comes again. BTW, you at the on the spot are not likely to be sure if this is authentic this way, as your pattern will be both way too small, and under no circumstances in any respect representative of the final inhabitants, or any of the sub-communities.

2016-11-26 23:36:31 · answer #2 · answered by dudziak 4 · 0 0

Most channels have their programmes playing from the same start time to the same finish time. They usually have the same amount of adverts for each show (typically 20 mins per hours). These are best scheduled on every quarter hour, all channels will do it the same.

2006-09-14 12:31:48 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The shows are edited using a formula for scene breaks that is relatively uniform. That way it's the same when it goes into syndication. There is some variation which is why you might see 30 seconds of another show before it goes to commercial.

2006-09-14 12:38:39 · answer #4 · answered by daspook19 4 · 0 0

Marketing

2006-09-14 12:39:44 · answer #5 · answered by Dvplanetwaves 3 · 0 0

its just one of those things, where like every 15minutes a tv show has a break, and usually all tv programs start like on the hour or half past etc. Unless its like BBC 2 where no matter what time of day you watch it its Cra*!

2006-09-14 12:31:35 · answer #6 · answered by ADAM M 2 · 0 0

Synchronized to force you to watch! Grr...I hate when they do that! Also, do you notice sometimes they play the same commercial back to back? That is the local station trying to get back into synch with the National feed!

2006-09-14 12:38:49 · answer #7 · answered by Gothic Martha™ 6 · 0 0

notice the time it is when u do this. commercials are usually 15 min 30 min and 45 min in the hour.

2006-09-14 12:31:21 · answer #8 · answered by psychpath64 3 · 0 0

no. its because buisnesses pay lots of money for just a little time on tv. i suggest getting millions of channels. that way at least 2 channels arnt commericials :-P

2006-09-14 12:31:18 · answer #9 · answered by Morgan 2 · 0 0

Sods law

2006-09-14 21:38:00 · answer #10 · answered by sillyfilly001 1 · 0 0

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