"G" content, co-viewing make TV
comeback.
by Milano, Valerie
There's a new buzzword in U.S. TV programming schedules:
families. In sharp contrast to the rapid evolution occurring with
digital distribution platforms, children's programmers are taking a
page from an earlier era of television and resurrecting the notion of
family viewing.
"It's kind of interesting because it goes against some of
the reasons why television has splintered into so many channels,"
observed Alan Gregg, Alliance Atlantis' vp of Children's
Television. "The shift in the last 10 years was toward
narrowcasting. But +now the likes of YTV and Teletoon in Canada,
Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network in the U.S.--which traditionally were at
pains to put on programming that would turn adults away--are all talking
about it. It's basically going back to the traditional Sunday
night-type viewing because the co-viewing audiences are really an
important demographic.
"Co-viewing is going to define the kind of content being
produced over the next little while. We will see a rise in live-action
family programming and, maybe not a fall in animation, but perhaps a
change in style," Gregg said.
Over the past year, Disney Channel has reaped co-viewing benefits,
attracting large adult audiences for both High School Musical movies and
the second Cheetah Girls movie.
"Our movies tend to have a broader entry point,"
explained Scott Garner, svp of Programming for Disney Channel. While
movies have always been a staple of the net's programming, Garner
said the cable giant has adopted a less-is-more strategy.
"Over the past couple of years, we have cut back the number of
original movies we do and keep the premieres event-based. That's
what makes it special. Kids look at these movie premieres like the
breaking of a big box office movie. You can't go to the well too
often; overkill would undermine our strategy," Garner said.
Whether prompted by Disney's success or simply zeitgeist,
there's an increased interest among kid content providers in
specials and one-offs -projects that also happen to appeal to parents
and older siblings.
"Reruns are not enough anymore and neither is just doing
series," said Michael Ouweleen, Cartoon Network svp of Creative
Direction and Development. "Kids want movies. You need special
events."
Discovery Channel general manager Marjorie Kaplan concurred.
"It used to be that Saturday morning television [series] were the
be-all and end-all for kids. It's not that way anymore."
All the executives concurred that specials and one-offs are simply
pieces in the growing puzzle of kids' entertainment that includes
mobile, iTunes, video-on-demand, DVD and broadband. Kaplan said:
"Everything needs to be thought about as cross-platform" for
promotion as well as distribution. She pointed out that employing a
multiplatform strategy levels the playing field. "We're in 45
million U.S. homes, but that doesn't necessarily make us a smaller
competitor, because we can reach people on other platforms,"
concluded Kaplan.
Such increased competition has translated into yet another new fad:
increased production. "The overall trend in terms of TV for kids
and teens is that there's so much more development now," said
Cartoon Network's Ouweleen. "The competition is forcing
everybody to be better at their game and to think differently about how
they operate. It's creating an environment where people are trying
a lot of different things and treating their audience with a lot of
respect.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
"The competition has also made everyone realize that this
audience has critical faculties. They choose. Just because you put
something in front of them does not mean they're going to watch
it," Ouweleen said.
Co-viewing awareness plus the increasing sophistication of younger
demos have resulted in programming that takes a slightly harder edge,
addressing topics that can be used as fodder for conversation between
family members.
"We can deal with issues like drug addiction, teenage
pregnancy, same-gender sex," said Tommy Lynch, who produces South
of Nowhere for the N. "[These are] things that go on in the teen
space that we take right out of every high school in the country. Those
are not the kind of stories that we would tell to the six-to-12
demo."
Lynch added that social culture and technology conspire to age kids
quicker, meaning teen tastes in programming have changed over the last
decade.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
"The teen world today is much more complex," he observed.
"You talk about age compression: Their world moves at the speed of
light. They have information delivered to them in so many ways. Also,
when television started, the nuclear family was the basis of all
programming. The nuclear family of that era does not exist anymore.
"You have shows for teens, you have shows for kids, and you
have shows for adults, but when you hit a chord, people go to it. I bet
a lot of teen girls watch Grey's Anatomy. Kids today are watching
The Colbert Report and The Daily Show like our parents watched Walter
Cronkite," Lynch said.
According to him, the importance of snaring older teen viewers goes
directly to networks' bottom lines. "That demo has always been
the first to buy new technology and new stuff that people want to sell,
so advertisers desire them. And teens also have a cultural impact. MTV
was built as a teen network 25 years ago," said Lynch.
Marvista CEO Fernando Szew, whose company produces The N's
teen series Beyond the Break, said years of catering to tweens left a
void for older teens that is only now being filled. "I'm not
sure that the older teens were forgotten; it's just a natural
segmentation of what used to be the teenage marketplace," Szew
explained. "Clearly the world has gotten much more
sophisticated--more complex--and you do realize there is a segment of
the marketplace that was kind of being underserved and left
behind."
The push to reach older teens isn't just a U.S. trend.
"This has been an international phenomenon," Szew observed.
But, he added, "Although every marketplace is different, we cannot
forget that we in Hollywood are creating television in the U.S. that
influences culture around the globe."
COPYRIGHT 2007 TV Trade Media,
Inc. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.