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Popular Threads
As you say, if it can be proven to be cost-effective as well as effective, the limits will only be invention.
Although I'm a smidgen outside of the age demo, I'm definitely a women who watches two of those shows regularly. I'm also often at my computer or iPod Touch at the same time. However, I'm usually doing something completely different there. I wouldn't be the least bit interested in any of the ideas you've suggested. Sorry.
A couple years ago Will & Grace fans could buy some of the clothing and accessories online following an episode. I'm not sure how successful the experiment was but I give them high points for trying.
If a show wanted to engage me online, sure promote a new feature at the end of the episode or at an end of a commercial break. Be innovative online but don't play with me while I'm watching an episode on TV.
There's a way to go and ideas to be approved/dismissed, yet just starting the discussion has to be better than not having it at all?
My favorite television show is American Idol, and last season they mentioned online content at some point during a show which I immediately checked out. More recently, Ryan Seacrest (and by that I mean some intern) has been posting online short videos that he shot with his phone during the week.
If I were the marketing director, I would set up a web page specifically for Ryan's videos (or other content mentioned during the show) and sell boatloads of advertising on those pages after communicating to advertisers that the viewers will most likely be female. Idol fans are a little intense, and my guess is that this would pay off very quickly!
Particularly when you hear of companies shelling out $3 million for a 30-second SuperBowl ad - there has to be a better way?