avclub-83536c292af49b9642dfadfea453e9b1--disqus
Fsald
avclub-83536c292af49b9642dfadfea453e9b1--disqus

When I was in college just a few years ago, almost no one brought their laptops to class, especially if the class was under ~20 people. Was my school unusual or is it tv writers/people out of college for a decade who have the wrong impression?

When I was in college just a few years ago, almost no one brought their laptops to class, especially if the class was under ~20 people. Was my school unusual or is it tv writers/people out of college for a decade who have the wrong impression?

Like many others, you make the mistake of assuming the Networks set the prices - they don't, the advertisers do. NBC would love to charge $50 million for every single viewer, but no advertiser would pay that. If NBC insists on charging the same rate for Harry's Law that they'd ask for The Office, no one would pay it.

It's a simple problem of supply and demand. Older folks are available in great supply (they watch more tv than younger folks), so they are less valuable. Why pay a premium for NCIS when you can reach the same number of older viewers much more cheaply by advertising on Dateline or Good Morning America. If want to

Raising Hope's lowest grade this season was a C, once. That means, if Raising Hope is only being rated against itself, then every episode of Raising Hope except one this season has been better than an average episode of raising Hope. How can that be possible? How do so many shows never get an F. Breaking Bad and