NEW YORK: Viacom joins ABC, NBC, CBS and FOX on the roster of broadcast groups that have blocked access to users of Google TV.
Full-length episodes of shows from such Viacom-owned channels as MTV, VH1, Comedy Central, Nickelodeon and BET are no longer available on the search engine's new Internet TV platform. Internet users can still access Viacom shows on its websites through desktop computers. Users of Google TV, however, are unable to find those Internet shows through the new service.
"We’re blocking access to our full episode content from Google TV’s web browser," the company said in a statement. "We continue to evaluate Google TV to identify opportunities where it may make sense to optimize our web content for the platform."
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Viacom Blocks Google TV
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11/24/2010 04:07:00 a.m.
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Labels: abc, CBS, Fox, Google TV, international media, NBC, Viacom
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Fox Joins Broadcasters in Blocking Google TV

NBC, CBS and ABC have already said no to Google TV, and now Fox is making it unanimous.
Fox is the last of the broadcast networks to block episodes of its shows from appearing
on Google's video platform. Google's "footprint was too small."
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11/11/2010 02:55:00 p.m.
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Labels: abc, Cable industry, CBS, Fox, Google TV, NBC, online video
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
CBS, ABC Aim to Stop Online TV Site FilmOn
Reuters reports that CBS, ABC, NBC and Fox are asking a federal court to stop the Internet video service FilmOn from offering TV channels over the web and on Apple's iPad for free. "I'm not a thief," says founder Alki David. "We're a bona fide business. We're not pirates." ABC's 'Dancing' Attracts Tea Party Viewers.
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11/10/2010 04:48:00 p.m.
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Labels: abc, apple, CBS, FilmOn, Fox, iPad, NBC, online tv, online video, tv channels
Friday, May 18, 2007
Too fast to Fast-Forward

New York Times reports this morning that a Broadcast Newtork will soon offer advertisers two more ways to try holding the attention of viewers throughout those commercial breaks that consumers love to hate.
One idea is to run quickie commercials of only five seconds each. The other is to schedule a series with no commercial breaks at all, and instead incorporate sponsors’ products into each episode.
Executives of the network CW outlined their plans yesterday as they offered Madison Avenue a preview of their prime-time lineup for the 2007-8 season.
The proposals are the most recent to be advanced by the major networks, broadcast and cable, as they grapple with the problem of keeping viewers from changing channels during commercials — or, if the viewing is being done on digital video recorders, from fast-forwarding through the spots.
The presentation by CW was part of what is called upfront week, which gets its name because the broadcasters share their programming with advertisers and agencies before the fall season begins. The upfront week for 2007-8 ended yesterday with sneak peeks at the schedules of CW, owned by the CBS Corporation and Time Warner, and Fox Broadcasting, part of the News Corporation.
Last month, Fox tried interspersing humorous program snippets between commercials, and executives said they would try other versions of the snippets during the 2007-8 season.
The other reason to tinker with traditional commercial breaks is the penchant of DVR owners to skip through spots when they play back recorded programs. That problem is getting worse as more households acquire DVRs.
The two CW ideas are based on the network’s experience since September with a device known as a content wrap, which CW produced for almost 20 brands during the 2006-7 season.
In content wraps, products of advertisers like Procter & Gamble, Toyota Motor and Unilever are integrated into a set of three short program segments on topics like fashion and music. The segments were interspersed in commercial breaks during episodes of series like “America’s Next Top Model.”
The five-second commercials, intended as shorter versions of content wraps, are called “Cwickies” — a play on the network’s name, just as the initials of “content wrap” are “CW.”
CW took in $600 million to $650 million during the upfront market last spring, while Fox sold an estimated $1.8 billion.
The 2007-8 upfront week began on Monday with NBC. The presentations continued on Tuesday with ABC and Telemundo, then with CBS and Univision on Wednesday before ending with CW and Fox yesterday.
You can view the full article here
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5/18/2007 10:39:00 a.m.
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Labels: CW, Cwickies, DVR, Fox, NBC, Proctor and Gamble, Toyota, Unilever