I would love to see BBC4 pick this up, but wouldn't the blatant shilling of the book/cd in the final segment potentially cause some editing problems for the BBC??
Why? The BBC allow the same thing on their chat shows
Would also really like to see The David Letterman Show back on TV but no channels will show it.
I think the way things are going everything will be downloaded in the next few years as no one will want to watch TV unless the show is shown days after the US.
There is some hope, if and when the Electric Sofa channels launch early next year.
On their site there's a link called "Sofa Stars" with their schedule and there's a listing that says:
23:00 Late Night American Chat Shows
Shown the day after its American broadcast.
it should work on there is sky are smart enough to pick it up
they could pick it up with colbert and even at 11pm that double header would get viewers plus both shows are available in HD.
Given that News Corp is on the verge of gaining control of Sky, would you think they'd be happy to broadcast it on one of their flagship channels? It's like the God channel having a chat show hosted by Richard Dawkins.
More4 actually edit out a full screen of the product being discussed (Ofcom reasons I assume). Though as you say, there are still some close-ups. They've also (inconsistently) edited out plugs for Stewart's own book.
I can't see the programme on BBC, if it turns up anywhere it'll be Comedy Central or somewhere more obscure. Truth is, if More4 couldn't justify it, despite sponsorship and a fixed place in their schedule for years, then I doubt it'd survive anywhere in the UK.
Truth is, if More4 couldn't justify it, despite sponsorship and a fixed place in their schedule for years, then I doubt it'd survive anywhere in the UK.
As much as I hate to say it, i think you're probably right. And it's not like it was buried away in the early hours - to their credit it has remained at 8:30pm during the entire run.
I'm hopeful for Comedy Central UK picking it up, since they produce and air it in the states, so I doubt it would be any real degree of trouble to air it over here.
Very sad news, I'd often thought More4 supported the show well given the ratings but this move was unexpected to me.
As far as their website - there are ways round the global restrictions. The problem I find is getting behind on episodes - like with me watching the Colbert Report, I've not seen anything since late October, finding the time to watch streams is difficult particularly at times of high demand. It's easier to keep up when it's sat on your Sky+ box taking-up spsce.
Given that News Corp is on the verge of gaining control of Sky, would you think they'd be happy to broadcast it on one of their flagship channels? It's like the God channel having a chat show hosted by Richard Dawkins.
lol fox entertainment and news are fairly different beasts
Given that News Corp is on the verge of gaining control of Sky, would you think they'd be happy to broadcast it on one of their flagship channels? It's like the God channel having a chat show hosted by Richard Dawkins.
FOX has never let their ego get in the way of making a profit e.g. they let the Simpsons take the piss out of FOX as long as they keep producing ratings and selling DVDs.
FOX has never let their ego get in the way of making a profit e.g. they let the Simpsons take the piss out of FOX as long as they keep producing ratings and selling DVDs.
That's true but sadly, it sounds like ratings played a part in More4's idiotic decision here, so I doubt Murdoch's lot would pick it up as they wouldn't be likely to gain much.
Just to add one more point in the mix - The Daily Show is available on iTunes in the UK. Your pick of an extortionate £1.89 for one episode or a fairly reasonable £9.99 for a 'season pass' which buys you the last one and next 15 - ie 62p/episode. The versions also have the extra parts of interviews (the references to which were, of course, cut by More4) which are usually on the Comedy Central website.
Combined with fairly frequent ways to buy iTunes Gift Cards for less than face value (£25 card costs £20 in Clintons this weekend, for example), it's not too bad a deal.
Somewhat intriguingly the page on iTunes states 'Watch the Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Comedy Central' - presumably that's an error, but other US shows do say 'Watch xxx on ITV2' or the like - referencing the UK broadcaster, not the US. EDITed to add - Colbert on iTunes has the same line about watching on Comedy Central - almost certainly an error then.
I can see where you're coming from russell, but do you really expect people to essentially subscribe to a single program ?
Which, if they buy a £9.99 season pass, is what they'll be doing as the Daily Show on a typical month would be 20 episodes.
At the rate of 62p an episode, it would work out at a 'subscription' rate of £12.40 per month - for a single show.
I don't expect many will, no. Just felt it was worth pointing out that there is still a legal way of watching it in the UK - I had no idea it was on iTunes UK until today. And although, as you rightly say, it is expensive for one show it's a lot cheaper than other ones on iTunes (30 Rock is £37 for 22 episodes in SD or £49 in HD :eek: ).
I guess there's a question of what is a fair price, but that's probably for another thread
That's true but sadly, it sounds like ratings played a part in More4's idiotic decision here, so I doubt Murdoch's lot would pick it up as they wouldn't be likely to gain much.
If "ratings played a part" in taking the show off air in what way is it "an idiotic decision"? Commercial telly is ratings driven and if a 43rd repeat of Grand Designs gets a better share than The Daily Show then it's a no brainer for Channel 4.
No company will pay out money for a show that isn't making them money. If it turned a profit then it would have stayed on air.
If "ratings played a part" in taking the show off air in what way is it "an idiotic decision"? Commercial telly is ratings driven and if a 43rd repeat of Grand Designs gets a better share than The Daily Show then it's a no brainer for Channel 4.
No company will pay out money for a show that isn't making them money. If it turned a profit then it would have stayed on air.
Not just about that though is it? As I said before TDS has generated shitloads of free publicity for More4 as it’s regularly talked about in print, online and it’s interviews often end up on newscasts, cultural programmes and several times on Newsnight! Can’t say that about Grand Designs can you? If the decision to drop it is purely financial then it’s a penny-pinching short-sighted one that will do them more harm than good.
I guess there's a question of what is a fair price, but that's probably for another thread
You're probably right sir
£49 quid for HD 30 Rock though ?. Bloody hell!
Anyway, I guess with Friends moving to Comedy Central next year, that in itself could generate extra publicity for the channel and potentially make it a better bet for TDS.
If "ratings played a part" in taking the show off air in what way is it "an idiotic decision"? Commercial telly is ratings driven and if a 43rd repeat of Grand Designs gets a better share than The Daily Show then it's a no brainer for Channel 4.
No company will pay out money for a show that isn't making them money. If it turned a profit then it would have stayed on air.
which is the reason why tv goes down hill as it should be a balance between crap and good tv and thats why any bbc knocker is misguided.
for me tv channels shouldnt be making a profit, they should aim to supply quality and break even.
I can see where you're coming from russell, but do you really expect people to essentially subscribe to a single program ?
Which, if they buy a £9.99 season pass, is what they'll be doing as the Daily Show on a typical month would be 20 episodes.
At the rate of 62p an episode, it would work out at a 'subscription' rate of £12.40 per month - for a single show.
The same sort of decision is made by the channel owners; if people aren't prepared to purchase it, perhaps it isn't as good as people here think. I tend to rank US chat shows like soaps, they are nice to have for free, but not really worth purchasing - there is too much padding by the audience etc.
If "ratings played a part" in taking the show off air in what way is it "an idiotic decision"? Commercial telly is ratings driven and if a 43rd repeat of Grand Designs gets a better share than The Daily Show then it's a no brainer for Channel 4.
No company will pay out money for a show that isn't making them money. If it turned a profit then it would have stayed on air.
CH4 group is not commercial TV, it just looks like it is.
It gets a lot of tax-payers money to put out in primetime certain programming that commercial channels cannot do for ratings reasons.
And The Daily Show isn't even on CH4 itself. MORE4 was clearly created to allow CH4 to go trash and to carry the sort of programming that CH4 used to carry.
But not any more of course. It's become wall-to-wall lifestyle programming.
That's true but sadly, it sounds like ratings played a part in More4's idiotic decision here, so I doubt Murdoch's lot would pick it up as they wouldn't be likely to gain much.
No sure, it was a general point. If more4 couldn't pull an audience I can't see anyone else picking it up.
If there are no takers then I would hope CC would show it over here - but I hoped that when FX dropped colbert and it never happened.
Comments
Why? The BBC allow the same thing on their chat shows
There is some hope, if and when the Electric Sofa channels launch early next year.
On their site there's a link called "Sofa Stars" with their schedule and there's a listing that says:
23:00 Late Night American Chat Shows
Shown the day after its American broadcast.
OB:"That channel was our last hope"
Yoda: "No, there is another"
Yeah, without the extreme close ups
More4 actually edit out a full screen of the product being discussed (Ofcom reasons I assume). Though as you say, there are still some close-ups. They've also (inconsistently) edited out plugs for Stewart's own book.
I can't see the programme on BBC, if it turns up anywhere it'll be Comedy Central or somewhere more obscure. Truth is, if More4 couldn't justify it, despite sponsorship and a fixed place in their schedule for years, then I doubt it'd survive anywhere in the UK.
As much as I hate to say it, i think you're probably right. And it's not like it was buried away in the early hours - to their credit it has remained at 8:30pm during the entire run.
I'm hopeful for Comedy Central UK picking it up, since they produce and air it in the states, so I doubt it would be any real degree of trouble to air it over here.
As far as their website - there are ways round the global restrictions. The problem I find is getting behind on episodes - like with me watching the Colbert Report, I've not seen anything since late October, finding the time to watch streams is difficult particularly at times of high demand. It's easier to keep up when it's sat on your Sky+ box taking-up spsce.
That will probably be Letterman and Fallon since they're also getting Entertainment Tonight from CBS.
We should petition Comedy Central UK to show it or something
lol fox entertainment and news are fairly different beasts
FOX has never let their ego get in the way of making a profit e.g. they let the Simpsons take the piss out of FOX as long as they keep producing ratings and selling DVDs.
That's true but sadly, it sounds like ratings played a part in More4's idiotic decision here, so I doubt Murdoch's lot would pick it up as they wouldn't be likely to gain much.
Combined with fairly frequent ways to buy iTunes Gift Cards for less than face value (£25 card costs £20 in Clintons this weekend, for example), it's not too bad a deal.
Somewhat intriguingly the page on iTunes states 'Watch the Daily Show with Jon Stewart on Comedy Central' - presumably that's an error, but other US shows do say 'Watch xxx on ITV2' or the like - referencing the UK broadcaster, not the US. EDITed to add - Colbert on iTunes has the same line about watching on Comedy Central - almost certainly an error then.
Which, if they buy a £9.99 season pass, is what they'll be doing as the Daily Show on a typical month would be 20 episodes.
At the rate of 62p an episode, it would work out at a 'subscription' rate of £12.40 per month - for a single show.
I don't expect many will, no. Just felt it was worth pointing out that there is still a legal way of watching it in the UK - I had no idea it was on iTunes UK until today. And although, as you rightly say, it is expensive for one show it's a lot cheaper than other ones on iTunes (30 Rock is £37 for 22 episodes in SD or £49 in HD :eek: ).
I guess there's a question of what is a fair price, but that's probably for another thread
If "ratings played a part" in taking the show off air in what way is it "an idiotic decision"? Commercial telly is ratings driven and if a 43rd repeat of Grand Designs gets a better share than The Daily Show then it's a no brainer for Channel 4.
No company will pay out money for a show that isn't making them money. If it turned a profit then it would have stayed on air.
Not just about that though is it? As I said before TDS has generated shitloads of free publicity for More4 as it’s regularly talked about in print, online and it’s interviews often end up on newscasts, cultural programmes and several times on Newsnight! Can’t say that about Grand Designs can you? If the decision to drop it is purely financial then it’s a penny-pinching short-sighted one that will do them more harm than good.
You're probably right sir
£49 quid for HD 30 Rock though ?. Bloody hell!
Anyway, I guess with Friends moving to Comedy Central next year, that in itself could generate extra publicity for the channel and potentially make it a better bet for TDS.
which is the reason why tv goes down hill as it should be a balance between crap and good tv and thats why any bbc knocker is misguided.
for me tv channels shouldnt be making a profit, they should aim to supply quality and break even.
CH4 group is not commercial TV, it just looks like it is.
It gets a lot of tax-payers money to put out in primetime certain programming that commercial channels cannot do for ratings reasons.
And The Daily Show isn't even on CH4 itself. MORE4 was clearly created to allow CH4 to go trash and to carry the sort of programming that CH4 used to carry.
But not any more of course. It's become wall-to-wall lifestyle programming.
No sure, it was a general point. If more4 couldn't pull an audience I can't see anyone else picking it up.
If there are no takers then I would hope CC would show it over here - but I hoped that when FX dropped colbert and it never happened.