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Scott
01-17-2006, 09:14 AM
From: Tuscon Citizen (http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/news/business/011306b10_super)

Majority of Super Bowl ads high definition
Super Bowl viewers with high-definition TVs this year will see every bead of sweat on Bud Light bottles as clearly as those on the players.

The game has aired in ultrasharp HD since 2000, but Super Bowl XL on ABC will be the first in which the number of HD ads crosses the 50-yard line.

"We expect more than half the ads to run in HD," says Ed Erhardt, ABC head of sports ad sales.

Last year, 10 of the more than 30 minutes of ads were HD.

Among this year's are the first HD Super Bowl ads from Anheuser-Busch, the largest advertiser, with 5 minutes.

As more consumers snap up HDTV sets, advertisers are adopting often more costly and complex HD sales pitches.

"High def continues to grow in popularity, and we want our consumers to see our ads in the highest-quality format," says Marlene Coulis, A-B head of brand management.

At the end of 2005, about 16 million U.S. households had at least one HD-capable TV, according to Leichtman Research Group.

Many more are being sold this month.

"In the weeks leading up to the Super Bowl, there's a lot of promotions," says NPD Group electronics analyst Ross Rubin.

Advertisers know a lot of viewers will be gathered in front of those fancy new televisions.

"Our research shows that for events like the Super Bowl, (groups) are often gathering in the home of an HDTV owner," says Brian Woods, chief marketing officer for Ameriquest Mortgage, which will have two HD ads for the second year in a row.

Super Bowl regular advertiser FedEx is switching to HD this year to ensure a "seamless transition" from the game to commercials, says ad director Steve Pacheco.

"When you're watching a high-def broadcast, and you see a (standard) commercial come on, it looks like someone put a sheet over your television," says commercial producer Dave Morrison.

Such ads also rarely fill the wide HD screen, leaving bands on each side.

On the other hand, "When you look at HD ads on regular TV, they still look terrific," says Pat Portela of post-production firm Nice Shoes.

Even with all the HD hype, there are still obstacles.

Depending on the filming and post-production techniques, the special ads can cost up to 15 percent more to produce.

And in HD, flaws are also supersharp.

"In high def, you see every detail: every wrinkle, every pimple and every blemish," Portela says.

Make-up artists have to be more precise with their work, and set designers have to fix every paint chip.

Scott
01-17-2006, 09:20 AM
Too bad for the majority of those 16 million HDTV owners will have no clue that their TV will be tuned into their SD affiliates--and wondering what the hype is about "that there HDTV..."

snodgrass23
01-17-2006, 04:10 PM
Too bad for the majority of those 16 million HDTV owners will have no clue that their TV will be tuned into their SD affiliates--and wondering what the hype is about "that there HDTV..."

That's exactly the first thing I think anytime I hear that. There needs to be more info for those people on what they need to do to get it on their nice new tv. There's lots of hype on the TV's when you buy them, and lots of shows say they are available in HDTV, but unless you ask for it there's not enough info out there to help people connect the two.

rossl
01-18-2006, 03:22 PM
Too bad for the majority of those 16 million HDTV owners will have no clue that their TV will be tuned into their SD affiliates--and wondering what the hype is about "that there HDTV..."

I spoke to someone the other day who has had a HDTV + TW HD cable for over a year and didn't know that HD was available over-the-air.

Clueless!

whitllam
01-18-2006, 06:20 PM
Most people don't know that HDTV is available OTA because for some reason, they think it's impossible to broadcast something digitally that is as clear as HD over the air "the same way" it was done 50 years ago - by using rabbit ears and loops. All the time, when people come over to visit, they ask me why I have an antenna on a shelf in my living room and I explain everything to them and they still can't believe it's possible. :roll:

Scott
01-18-2006, 08:17 PM
Most people don't know that HDTV is available OTA because for some reason, they think it's impossible to broadcast something digitally that is as clear as HD over the air "the same way" it was done 50 years ago - by using rabbit ears and loops. All the time, when people come over to visit, they ask me why I have an antenna on a shelf in my living room and I explain everything to them and they still can't believe it's possible. :roll:

You're absolutely right. I can't count the times that I've had people over and they just give the deer-in-the-headlights stare as I try to explain that I have my antenna in the attic pulling in the local channels. They usually say "your satellite dish, right?" :roll:

People are completely clueless when it comes to HDTV. I'm reminded of the time that snodgrass and I were invited to the HD truck for a Blue Jackets' game. The engineer told us that the switch from SD to HDTV is very similar to when everything was going from black and white to color--yes he's been doing it that long--how everything was just sort of a shot in the dark. But it also is a sad reminder of just how long we've been using 60 year old technology.

Robbiee19
01-19-2006, 07:37 AM
I know one thing my sisters and bother love coming over to watch the football and hockey in HD. I love it because they begrin the Massie's Pizza!

But you all are right about people being completely clueless on HDTV. Just love it when I have someone new over and they see the 61" for the first time with the HD picture. They are just blown away with it. My Dad comes down from Akron for the Masters every year now just to see it on my TV.

DublinDoodah
01-19-2006, 11:14 AM
As more consumers snap up HDTV sets, advertisers are adopting often more costly and complex HD sales pitches.
This is something I've often wondered about. When you consider how much it already costs an advertiser to produce and air a commercial, why is HD a big deal? Why is HD so much more costly and complex?

Also, why is it that all the commercials on Discovery are HD, but the same commercials on OTA channels are SD? I had just assumed that many commercials are HD and that the local broadcasters could not cope with them (or were too lazy to deal with them).