It’s now mid-March. Do you know when your favorite TV/video shows are on -- and/or when they’re coming back in the next year? How much prep will you have to do so you don’t miss the
next round of, say, Showtime’s “Masters of Sex”?
Sure, once your favorites are available, you can usually watch them on-demand on your choice of device. But
it’s becoming harder and harder to keep up, now that pay channels/streaming services typically air 13 episodes of a show each year on seemingly random timetables. Broadcast shows likewise have
odd scheduling breaks, creating a major loss of continuity for what’s supposed to be one full season.
So if you’re (like me) panting for your next dose of “Sex”: Google
it right now -- or just go to the Showtime Web site -- and you’ll find that the closest to an exact date for the start of season 3 is summer 2015. Talk about extended foreplay.
I’m
old enough to remember when you scheduled your daily viewing by checking TV Guide or your local newspaper’s TV listings. Now -- especially since everyone has her own niche bubble of
favorite shows -- you practically need a Ph.D. in small-screen entertainment to keep track.
advertisement
advertisement
Networks might want you to stay aware of their scheduling by signing up for email
blasts, becoming Facebook friends of a particular show, and/or keeping alert for on-air promotions. But who has enough time/and or forethought to make that extra effort? And who thinks in terms of
networks anymore, anyway? Truth be told, I’m hardly watching any channels regularly now, so I usually miss out on network promos.
It’s often by sheer coincidence --
or the TV gods -- that I find out in advance when a show is coming back. For example, I discovered that there would be a winter 2014 season of one summer favorite, TNT’s “Major
Crimes,” only because I read an Entertainment Weekly article in my veterinarian’s waiting room.
Like me, you probably have a professional reason to keep up with the TV
biz -- you’re reading this column, after all. But if tracking your favorite shows is a problem for you, consider the lot of TV “civilians” who don’t read MediaPost and
other entertainment-related trades for hints of what’s coming up on their various screens.
I know someone whose pay subscription includes “everything” -- most cable networks
available, including premium channels -- yet she often decides what to watch next by going to the public library, checking out whatever DVDs of shows are available for free. OK, her husband watches
the “everything,” so somebody’s taking advantage of the cable subscription -- but hers is still an odd, damn-the-new technology solution to the problem of winnowing down too many
choices.
TV/video is becoming less of a mass medium every day, much more long-tail and niche -- more like the Internet, in other words. Still, whether we think of this world as the Wild West
-- or, more pleasantly, as a wildflower garden -- it’s still way too easy to get lost in it.