Best reality TV show format

So here is proof that something good can emerge from a war situation. Israeli TV has pretty much become 100% reality shows this year, importing all the American/European junk TV formats (Survivor, Big Brother, etc). Ugh…

It took a war in Gaza for Israel’s Channel 2 to come up with an original, and incredibly good, reality show format. The kids in southern Israel have not been going to school for over two weeks now, and are at homes and shelters with not much to do. The idea for the TV show (named “Learning Together”) is super-simple – Put cameras inside a classroom and bring the most interesting people in the country to give a lesson on a subject of their choice. There are several “classes” each morning, passed by people like: Presidents of Israel, book authors, etc. For example – as a kid (and even an adult) – could you hope for anything more interesting than getting a class in citizenship by Nobel Prize winner, President Shimon Peres?… Wow.

I’m not sure what the ratings are for this show, but I love how for a near zero production cost a new format emerged which is intelligent, educational and original.

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Anti-Dilugon

AdJab reports today:

ABC wants to kill DVR ad-skipping
ABC executives have held discussions with the people providing consumers with DVRs about a potential future feature for the devices that would disable the ad-skipping.

This reminds me of an amusing part of Israel’s history, and as unbelievable as it sounds – it is a true story…

In the 70’s the only TV station in Israel started broadcasting a handful of programs in color. Very few people would benefit from this because color TV sets were not very affordable at the time. This led to an outcry of people complaining that it was unfair that some people can see programs in color while most others couldn’t.

And that led to a wonderful government law commissioning a cutting edge technology, available exclusively in Israel at the time, called the ‘Mehikon’ (variation on ‘eraser’ in Hebrew). The law required that every new color TV set imported to Israel be installed with a special electronic board (the ‘Mehikon’) that ‘erases’ the color from programs that happen to be broadcast in color(!!) So even if you got yourself a nice shiny new color TV set, it was crippled by law back into a black & white only box.

Of course it took very little time for a bunch of Israeli entrepreneurs to develop the ‘Anti Mehikon’ – another electronic board that was added into those color-turned-into-b&w TV’s which bypassed the circuitry of the Mehikon and got back the color to the TV set.

I know this story seems like a piece of particularly wild science fiction, and I hope that in 30 (hopefully less) years initiatives such as the one ABC is cooking will seem just as unbelievable.

However, if they do make this happen and cripple DVR’s to prevent ad skipping, I predict a red hot market for ‘Anti-Dilugon’ (Hebrew for ‘Anti-skipping’) chips which will de-cripple the DVRs back to what they should be.

“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.” –Mark Twain.

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Search vs TV

Search Engine Guide posted an article about how Ask may emerge as a significant search player, just like FOX did in the TV market:

The FOX Network does pretty well for themselves, despite sitting on the outside as the number four network player. That’s the line of thinking that the folks behind Ask.com are using when it comes to their long term plan for growth.

I’ve heard this comparison quite a few times recently. But aren’t search and broadcast TV fundamentally different?

When watching TV, especially since getting a DVR, I am picking interesting shows, not networks. I’m not even sure I can match the right network to each show I see on a regular basis. So in TV it’s the shows (or – content) that matter, not the channel.

With search however, the specific content hardly matters anymore – the 4 major search engines provide similar results and similar features. Heck – they all crawl and index the exact same pages, so how much differentiation can be expected? Therefore, when choosing a search engine it’s the habit the plays the biggest role. Which means that in search it’s the channel that matters, not the content.

If you want to change the search game, you have to leapfrog the content and make it really matter. Relevancy and features are almost insignificant.

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