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The CW Change-Up: Media Buyers Lose

media buying

Media planners seeking to buy in the 18-34 and minority demographics can plan to see inventory plummet and the market become controlled by one player, as UPN and the WB networks merge to form a new network called the CW. The depth of the fallout cannot yet be fully understood, but it is clear that the merger is just the sort of consolidation buyers dread, Media Life writes. “I’ve never seen a consolidation, no matter how it’s been dressed, look like a real good thing to our clients,” said Publicis Groupe Media CEO Jack Klues.

The merger will reduce primetime options for buyers of media, cutting the number of programming between the two networks from 23 to 13 hours. The WB has traditionally sold out early and at high prices because of its reach with younger viewers. With less programming to that demo, prices will rise not just at CW but at Fox, which targets almost all of its 15 hours of programming to viewers 18-34. Even the other networks, at least for their programs targeting that particular demo, may see prices increase.

Another loss for media buyers will come in the form of fewer shows aimed at African Americans, as UPN’s six black shows are not all likely to make the cut.

Media buyers aren’t the only ones left struggling. Former WB and UPN stations that aren’t picked up by the new CW as affiliates will be left scrambling for programming when the networks officially merge in the fall, Mediapost writes. The two networks must dissolve before starting the new one, and respective station affiliation agreements will be terminated at that time. Stations with multi-year agreements extending beyond September will be left holding the bag, and may take legal action.

This could hurt companies from News Corp (which in addition to owning Fox also owns some local UPN stations) to independent station owners such as Sinclair Broadcasting, CNNMoney reports.

In the meantime, about 100 UPN and WB stations are in murky waters, wondering whether to buy syndicated programming for the fall or whether they will become CW affiliates.

As for who may come out on top, CNNMoney predicts that it might not be CW or any of the other major TV networks, but rather cable television, which might wind up gaining more viewers because of the limited options for viewers. Some UPN or WB shows that get dropped by the CW may get picked up by cable if the price is right.

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Ad Industry Declines Mirror 2001 Recession: Goldman Sachs

All sectors of the media business will suffer from the weakened economy in 2008 and 2009, with a slump in local advertising particularly hurting newspapers and local TV, according to a new projection from Goldman Sachs.

Broadcast nets will experience…

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NY Times Shuts ‘International Herald Tribune’ Site Down

The New York Times is shuttering its International Herald Tribune site; NYTimes.com will soon host the international news normally reserved for its sister website.

The move is not about cost savings, but rather about growth, NYTimes.com general manager Vivian Schiller…

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Vaseline Tracks Actual Buzz about New Lotion in Small Alaska Town

Unilever’s Vaseline set forth on an unusual research project in a small town in Alaska. Setting up a storefront, the company began giving away free bottles of lotion and asking recipients to name the person who had recommended they come…

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‘Meet the Press,’ Minus Russert, Suffers Slow Slide

Meet the Press, the show hosted by Tim Russert for 17 years before his death last June, is beginning to slip in ratings.

Last month, CBS’s Face the Nation pulled ahead of Meet the Press for the first time in two…

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Blogging Hits Mainstream, Integral to Media Ecosystem

Bloggers collectively create nearly one million blog posts each day, and half of bloggers believe blogs will be a primary source of news and entertainment in the next five years, according to Technorati’s 2008 State of the Blogosphere Report, MarketingCharts writes.…

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Discount Retailers Report Mixed September Results

Wal-Mart and Costco reported same-store gains in September, with sales rising 2.4% and 9% respectively. Sales at Target stores open at least a year fell 3%, writes Retailer Daily.

Below, fiscal results from the discount retail giants:

Sales of food and…

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