[Infowarrior] - New Type of Ads Trick Viewers, Help Circumvent DVRs

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Mon Jan 17 16:08:24 CST 2011


Okay - finally a good use of the annoying channel bugs on TV.  Since networks would neeeever "stamp" an advertiser's time, you can just wait until you see the channel bug on screen to know the commercial break is over.  ---- rick


New Type of Ads Trick Viewers, Help Circumvent DVRs

Submitted by Anne Landman on January 16, 2011 - 7:01pm
Main Source: 
NPR, January 12, 2011

Advertisers are using a new technique to trick DVR users and people who mute TV ads into watching their ads. The new ads, called "interstitial ads," "podbusters" or "DVR busters," are designed to look and feel just like the shows viewers are watching. They often feature the same actors, in character, and may use brief, insipid out-takes from the real show to lure unsuspecting viewers into watching them. Advertisers run podbusters late in the show, around the time that cliffhanger-endings are keeping viewers on the edge of their seats. Examples of DVR busters include Tina Fey starring in an ad for American Express during her show, 30 Rock, and commercials seen near the end AMC's Mad Men that feature actors from the show in an office environment and wearing 60's fashions, to make people think the show has started again. By the time people realize they are really watching an ad and not the show, the commercial is almost over.  Mike Rosen, an executive with a media agency, explains that ads that mimic shows viewers really like help transfer the positive feelings people have about those shows to the products being advertised on them.

http://www.prwatch.org/node/9872


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