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It doesn’t
matter that 50 Cent is on your iPod. And it makes no difference that
you’ve filled your closets with retro garb from Izod. MTV will
remind you today that you’re old.
More than a few gen-Xers
are grumbling that one-time music network MTV has lost its way.
Shows like “Newlyweds” suck, they complain, and “Real World,”
recently renewed for five more seasons, pales in comparison to the
original New York version that brought reality to television nearly
a decade before sister network CBS rolled out “Survivor.”
And baby boomers, sentimental as they may be about
their generation's pop icons, lambaste the network’s uncomfortable
third round of the “Osbournes.”
But deep down even the most
ardent MTV hater knows the network continues to skillfully,
remarkably, tap into the current interests of teenagers and college
kids who in a few years will bemoan the sad state of the network
they once loved. Indeed, going
into the upfront ad-selling season, MTV will have no trouble proving
that it still excels at tapping into the interests of young people.
MTV, with a median viewer
age of 21.6 years, is the top-rated network in the 12-24 demographic
it targets with primetime shows like “Real World” and “I Want
a Famous Face,” which kicks off its second season later this
month, and its afternoon show “TRL.”
“There is a giant amount
of intuition that goes into [developing] our programming,” says
Brian Graden, president of entertainment at MTV Networks Music
Group. “We have programmers here at
MTV who live and breathe youth culture. They are motivated by their
own DNA to find what’s next.”
MTV always has a constant
slew of programs in development that are hoped to become the next
thing fickle teens want to watch. To that end, the network will
premiere the travel show “Trippin’” with “Charlie’s Angel”
Cameron Diaz on March 28 and reality show “Meet the Barkers”
with Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker in April. And “Newlyweds”
gets a spinoff with Nick Lachey.
The network also picked up
reality show “My Super Sweet 16” and reality-drama “Laguna
Beach” for second seasons.
The network's identity
MTV
is more than a cable network. It’s an easily identifiable brand
that advertisers know reaches the coveted but tough-to-find young
adults the broadcast networks have for years struggled to attract.
“MTV has a great story
because they pretty much own the young-20s college-age niche,”
says Jordan Breslow, director of broadcast research at MediaCom. “They
obviously got away from music videos, which was their bread and
butter when they first started. But there are other places to get
that. People are streaming them from the internet, and Fuse network
is now what MTV was when it started.”
The
network's target audience
MTV,
its music-focused offshoot MTV2, and its online site target people
12-24 almost to the exclusion of other demographic groups. Still,
MTV is a high-rated network in most other demos.
“Our notion is to stay
perpetually young,” says Graden. “Viewers at a certain time in
their life may watch a lot of MTV and then perhaps move on to other
things. That is why our median age has stayed around 21.”
The
network's ratings
MTV isn’t merely a
targeted cable network. From the perspective of viewers, it’s
simply a network like Fox and the WB are networks.
In fact, MTV shows such as
“Real World: Philadelphia,” the series’ 15th installment, and
specials like “They Wanted a Famous Face” pull ratings among
18-24s that are comparable to those for programs like Fox’s “The
Simpsons,” the WB’s “Gilmore Girls,” UPN’s “America’s
Next Top Model,” and even CBS’s “Survivor: Palau.”
In the week of March 7, MTV
had three shows, including top-10 ranked “Real World,” among the
30 highest-rated cable and broadcast programs in the 18-24
demographic.
The
network's competitive set
MTV is the
highest-rated network among people 12-24. But it stands on top, not
alone. Other networks are competitive in the demo, including the
comedy-focused TBS, Comedy Central, Nick at Nite, Cartoon Network’s
Adult Swim, Spike TV, USA, BET and ABC Family.
What’s new for 2005/06
MTV
will continue to roll out new shows pretty much all year round and
it has annual events like its Music Video Awards and the MTV Movie
Awards.
Graden says MTV’s new and
upcoming programs are moving beyond pure unscripted reality shows.
“Our next wave of
programs tend to be adventurous. Some are reality hybrids with
integrated writing and acting along with reality elements,” he
says. “'Laguna Beach' was shot like a drama, so it blurred the
lines between reality and drama. We try to not to repeat ourselves.”
The
network's upfront outlook
MTV’s story this upfront is likely
to be a familiar one. And that’s not a bad thing.
The network will focus on
its young viewers, hot new shows, good ratings and the seemingly
endless cross-promotional deals offered by its parent company,
Viacom. MTV will offer advertisers packages with MTV2, which has a
slightly more male skew than the flagship network, and its online
site. But there are many other deals available with Viacom’s other
properties, including VH1, Comedy Central and young-skewing
broadcast network UPN.
The final prognosis
On a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being
excellent: 4.5.
MTV is sitting pretty. It has
strong ratings in a demographic advertisers are hard-pressed to find
elsewhere. Moreover, several of its new shows, like “My Super Sweet 16,”
have generated some of the network’s best ratings.
Still, MTV faces minor challenges
as it meets with media buyers this upfront. Its current lineup is heavy on
female-targeted programs, tipping its typically even balance of male and
female viewers. And media buyers say because the network is constantly
burning through programs there’s often an uneasy sense that the next
step MTV takes will be the one that trips it up.
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A LOOK
AT MTV
Launched in 1981 |
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|
Parent company |
Viacom |
|
No. of subscribers |
88.1 million homes |
|
Median viewer age |
21.6 years old |
|
Average primetime
viewers* |
984,000 people |
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Average total-day
viewers* |
571,000 people |
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Avg. primetime 18-34
viewers* |
407,000 people |
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Avg. total-day 18-34
viewers* |
242,000 people |
|
Target audience |
Teenagers, adults 18-24 |
|
Main competitors |
Young-skewing cable
networks like Fuse, Comedy Central, Adult Swim, and broadcast
networks Fox, UPN, and the WB |
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Upfront presentation (in
New York) |
Tuesday, May 3 |
| *
Nielsen Media Research, fourth quarter 2004 |
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