TV Viewers Like Movie Commercials
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Home Entertainment, Movie Marketing
I really, really love movie trailers, yet for some reason I can't stand movie commercials on television. Maybe it's because they're repeated over and over and over again, like the current spot for The Love Guru, which has been driving me nuts all week. I hardly even watch TV (with no more Lost til 2009, there's nothing good on) and yet I believe I've seen it about a thousand times over the past few days.Apparently I'm in the minority, however, because TiVo has just released data showing that ads for movies are one of the few kinds of commercials that its subscribers actually watch rather than fast-forward through. The DVR company also revealed the movie that had the least-fast-forwarded spot: Forgetting Sarah Marshall. A single FSM ad that ran during an episode of The Office was the single-most popular (or, at least most-viewed) for the month of April. Second least-fast-forwarded in that month was a spot for Hancock. Also considered "DVR-resistant" are those amusing Mac vs. PC commercials, while an ad for Ford that ran during an episode of American Idol placed high for April, as well.
This data is expected to further convince networks to place movie ads at the head of a commercial "pod" (I call them commercial breaks), because it will boost ratings for that pod and discourage fast-forwarding through the rest of the commercials during that break. I guess that means I'll be annoyed by a lot more repeated spots like the Love Guru ad.
[via Movie Marketing Madness]









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-18-2008 @ 8:55PM
Scott said...
The irony of this post is the Love Guru advertisement on the top-right of this page. I hear you on the frustration of the ad frequency. Movie commercials are really the only thing I don't fast-forward through except for those hilarious Comcast commercials. "Mr. J! Mr. J! Everybody loves Money." Sorry, I'm a nerd.
Reply
6-18-2008 @ 9:02PM
tjax said...
I stopped watching movie trailers long time ago. They're usually full of spoilers, often giving away the best scenes from the movie, and they usually tell you nothing about the actual quality of the movie. Also, a lot of good movies have terrible trailers, and a lot of crappy ones have decent trailers which basically include the best parts. To see how misleading a trailer can be you only have to watch the fake trailers to Titanic as a horror movie or Shining as a lite family comedy that surfaced some time ago. These days trailers are just marketing crap. I usually look at the reviews first before deciding to go see a movie or not.
Reply