Mon Nov 26, 2007 3:47PM EST
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Is that hurtling car gonna crush Bruce Willis? Find out—right after these messages.
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I heard about this awhile back. From what I had heard, the idea was to offer two price points: one with embedded commercials and one without. As far as advertisements at the theaters: previews are attached to the movies as a way of generating interest in the studio's upcoming films. Actual advertisements before hand are commercials that generate revenue for the theaters.
I purposely watch non-commercial tv channels and buy dvds to NOT see ads. Any DVD company that starts doing this will lose my business and I'll start pirating instead. Right now I am against pirating of music and movies from online, but this would make me start.
I can't believe that Ads on DVDs before your show has become acceptable.. Imagine them doing the same thing to your music CDs having to listen to previews of 4-5 different artists before you can finally listen to the artist you purchased. No wonder people pirate.
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26 Posted by scottsmind on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:08PM EDT Report Abuse
Trailers before movies are generally a waste of time as I've seen them almost all of them on the internet way before I see them on DVDs or in cinema. Redundant trailers and far more annoying commercials are a good indicator of how mainstream business ignores what the customer wants and the customer increasingly moves towards pirated media. If the companies refuse to give consumers what they want, consumers will head towards a solution that provides them with what they want. In this case, a movie. Not a movie with over-exposed-trailers, annoying commercials and red scare style warnings about piracy. Just a movie. Big media business thinks about the piracy issue in a right/wrong moral context but it would be more productive in a business sense to evaluate how they're consistently failing their customers.