Political axe grinding boosts US TV bottom lines

Healthcare reform, cross-dressing teachers and medicinal marijuana are touch-paper issues on American television screens

Political advertising in the US is a much welcomed antidote to the recession, with the Healthcare Reform debate pumping millions of dollars into local TV stations, especially in the home states of key lawmakers.

However, it’s not just the contentious healthcare debate that’s helping prop up television revenues. The US is unique in inviting lobbyists, politicians and other interest groups to use the airwaves to bang their particular drums on a regular basis.

The website of the Campaign Media Analysis Group reveals a blitz of political advertising, including a crusade against cyber-bullying, environmental activism, the Healthcare Reform debate and two new ads from the US National Association of Broadcasters, attacking a proposed Performance Tax for its potential effects on musicians and small town radio stations.

With Congress voting on the American Clean Energy and Security Act, lobby groups on both sides of the Green divide are lobbing grenades at each other via national television screens, while the Marijuana Policy Project continues to campaign for legalised medicinal marijuana.

At the more bizarre end of the political advertising spectrum, the National Organisation for Marriage is campaigning against gay marriage and in Alaska, the Palinesque SOS Anchorage group has purchased airtime complaining that new non-discrimination code means people could no longer object to a man in a “highly visible sales job coming to work in a dress and high heels or a male teacher coming to class as a woman”. As if he’d want to.

Nonetheless, it’s the Healthcare Reform legislation that is the Grand Fromage of all political advertising in the US at the moment, with dozens of organisations, from Health Insurance companies, to individual doctors, to patient rights groups and the right-wing US Chamber of Commerce buying bully pulpit airtime.

The Campaign Media Analysis Group told US Today that healthcare lobby groups splurged $1,000,000 on a staggering 1,900 TV spots in one week last month in Indiana alone, with $1,200,000 spent on 1,600 spots each in Arkansas and Louisiana.

These are campaigns specifically targeting Congressmen and women and Senators identified as holding the balance of power in the healthcare debate, but there are more general ads broadcast right across the United States, either in support of the legislation, or doom-mongering against it.

The surge is set to go on for some time, as the debate itself has to grind through the Senate, even before any form of legislation is framed by a joint Committee, whose machinations will themselves be subject to even more lobbying on television.

In the US, there are few regulations controlling the nature and amount of political advertising. The singular true control is a free-market one. If you have the money, you can flood the airwaves with your views.

For example, in last year’s Presidential election, Barack Obama was able to outspend John McCain nearly three to one on television, in one week in early October, splashing out more than £20-million in just 17 states.

So the ad-spend for and against healthcare reform is no surprise, given the vast powers arrayed on either side of the debate. It’s not as if the US pharmaceutical industry is shy of a few nickels and dimes, nor is the health insurance industry.

All this campaigning is helping to hold up TV advertising figures; despite the downturn, television still accounts for nearly two thirds of ad spend in the US, with print suffering as its revenues head to the Internet.

However, there will be a resolution to the healthcare reform debate and when that fat pig squeals its last, television executives will be hoping for a new red rag and a new bull.

Perhaps the closure of Guantanamo Bay, will start the axes grinding again, certainly any attempt by the White House to set new environmental targets will attract much heat and not very much light.

There’s always the helpful US democratic system to fall back on, with elections coming hard and fast, every two years for Gubernatorial, local and national Senate and Congressional positions.

It’s a pity these political ads are not subject to the same restrictions as commercials for medicines in the US, where any significant side effect must be reported in the ad, such as a promotion for an anti-asthma drug, which in some cases may cause death from asthma.

Imagine a political advertisement that carried a warning to the effect that “the claims made in the preceding commercial do not necessarily reflect the truth and may in fact be bare-faced lies”.

 

 

 

 


Related news items:
Newer news items:
Older news items:

Latest Press Releases

STMicroelectronics reaches ultimate dimension in TV with new high-performance digital TV system-on-chip and video-enhancement IC for 3DTV and 3D graphics

STMicroelectronics, one of the world's largest semiconductor companies and a leader in chips for set-top boxes and digital TVs, has announced a new TV System-on-Chip (SoC) offering the first-of-its-kind integrated 3D graphics accelerator (OpenGL-ES 2.0 and OpenVG 1.1 compliant), enabling next-generation Internet TV services, exciting user interfaces and casual gaming.  

Plex to enable next generation of NetCast connected TVs

Plex (www.plexapp.com), a leading software provider of an open platform for media management and consumption, has announced the availability of the newest version of its service.  

Mobile advertisers forecast to spend $1.8 billion on location-based campaigns in 2015

Location-based advertising is still in its infancy, but according to a new study from ABI Research, businesses are primed to spend $1.8 billion on it in 2015 as part of their overall mobile marketing budgets.  

New ways of 3D interactivity and control at IBC

The use of interactive 3D visualisations is growing each year. Real estate property developers, governments and even industrial companies are reaping the benefits of these multifunctional visual presentations. World-leading 3D company Zero Creative is demonstrating its new solutions at IBC this year.  

Icareus delivers interactive OTT SeniorTV service platform

Icareus has developed a new kind of Interactive OTT TV service targeted to Senior citizens in Finland. The first customer of the OTT platform and SeniorTV service is a Finnish company called EcoTec that launches it under its own brand SmartCare TV.  

Sky reaches high definition landmarks

LIVING HD has launched on Sky, meaning that Sky has now confirmed all 50 High Definition (HD) channels that will be available by Christmas, in line with its promise to customers.  

Pacific Television Center boosts London capabilities with new HD gear

Pacific Television Center, a Los Angeles-based independent global transmission and production company, is following up the recent expansion of its bandwidth from OC3 (155mb) to OC48 (2480mb) between London and Los Angeles with key equipment upgrades to its London facility.  

Latens launch ECO UI5 on Entone hybrid devices at IBC 2010

Latens, the leading provider of software security solutions for Pay-TV across all networks and Entone (IBC stand no. IP-503), the market leader in Hybrid TV and Connected Home solutions, have announced the launch of ECO UI5 middleware and its successful integration with Entone's Amulet IPTV Receiver and Janus Media Hub.  

justAd.TV takes advertising beyond the 30 second spot

justAd.TV is making its debut at IBC in Amsterdam, addressing the growing industry need to enable more effective advertising in the increasingly on-demand TV world.  

For more videos from this exclusive RTVN/FBTVN Roundtable, visit our TV Gaming & Gambling overview page

Videos