[quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' date=\'Nov 12 2003, 07:19 PM\'] It'll help to quote your larger point, which was:
Public service announcements are, by definition, advertisements. Whether it's "This is your brain, this is your brain on drugs" or "Look at the new $20," they're still advertising a product, service, or opinion.
In an extremely broad sense, I see your point. I just don't believe it's relevant.
[...]Again, that's economic philosophy vs real world practicality. A station manager who runs PSAs instead of paid commercials won't have a station to manage for very long. He's not going to be too concerned about the "big picture" view that the costs got absorbed somewhere else while he's filing for unemployment. [/quote]
Relevant? This entire thread has been irrelevant! The original post was about offering $5000 in nickels instead of a $5000 check in the less-than-3% chance that a contestant spins a dollar and lands on the nickel on the bonus spin during an episode of TPiR. And much of game show discussion is irrelevant (What is the spelling of the surname of the first champion on the original
Sale of the Century? Who will replace Bob Barker when he's gone? Who would win a deathmatch between Bob Eubanks and Jim Perry?)
Irregardless of it's relevance, my point is that the following two assertions are incorrect: that PSAs have no cost and that they aren't advertisements. To a station manager, that might be "true"... to people outside of the biz, it's not.
The non-philisophical economics of the situation is that it's better to get money from advertisers than a third of the same amount from the government. The station manager doesn't need to understand the "big picture" because that's not part of his job.
Each job has its own "truths" which collide with what the average person thinks. To someone who works in the broadcast industry, a PSA is not an advertisement, but to Joe Sixpack, it looks like an ad, acts like an ad, so it must be an ad. Most people would say that the main goal in business is to maximize profits, but if you said it to an accountant, he/she would probably explode.