If you have no idea what Buzzr is, or why it exists, this might
not mean a lot to you.
For those of us in
the know, Buzzr is a digital network churning out old, dusty programming. A
diginet is a cross between an old-fashioned broadcast network and a cable
channel, I suppose. I'm no broadcasting expert, but with the switch some years ago
from the traditional "airwaves" (that carried our local television
broadcasts) to the fancy new digital delivery (which old TVs need a converter box
to receive) it suddenly became feasible for our local stations to carry second,
third and fourth channels that are delivered locally.
The biggest
diginets nationally seem to be the channels that carry endless reruns of old
sitcoms, but there are several variations of them vying for viewership. Some
carry lots of movies, some carry one-hour dramas, none seem to broadcast the
short, somewhat brilliant half-season run of Jason Bateman's "It's Your
Move."
Diginets typically
carry content owned by their parent company, often a major movie and television
studio conglomerate.
Less than two
years ago I first heard about the planned launch of Buzzr by Fremantle, the
company that produces The Price is Right, Let's Make a Deal and Family Feud.
The company is the successor to Goodson-Todman Productions, a longtime producer
of game shows both notable and forgettable. Fremantle owns a variety of properties
outside of traditional game shows, and it owns the catalogs and rights of former game show production companies. Let's Make a Deal, for example, is not a
Goodson-Todman original, but Fremantle now has it under the corporate umbrella.
Buzzr launched in
the summer of 2015. If you were lucky, you had access to the channel the day it
launched. Like most startups, it rolled out slowly. In my market, Minneapolis,
we didn't get the channel until last September.
As a fan of
traditional game shows, I was happy to learn I would be receiving Buzzr locally
last fall. Sure, I've had occasional access to the former Game Show Network
over the years, but I didn't have a lot of access to it in its earliest years,
when it relied most heavily on classic game shows.
GSN, as it is now known, has expanded its spectrum in a variety of ways over the years, and although its parent company, Sony, is in the game show business, it has relied upon the Fremantle catalog throughout its existence. These days it seems to rely most heavily upon access to every Family Feud episode hosted by Steve Harvey, and it broadcasts those episodes during many hours of the programming week.
GSN, as it is now known, has expanded its spectrum in a variety of ways over the years, and although its parent company, Sony, is in the game show business, it has relied upon the Fremantle catalog throughout its existence. These days it seems to rely most heavily upon access to every Family Feud episode hosted by Steve Harvey, and it broadcasts those episodes during many hours of the programming week.
I haven't had GSN
access in years, and I didn't feel as if I was missing much. To have access to
classic game shows all day, every day, via Buzzr was a welcome opportunity. And yet Buzzr
has let me, and others, down in many ways.
I quickly learned
that blocks of its daily programming are repeated, which makes sense. Nobody is
going to watch the network 24 hours per day, so you might as well give people a
couple of windows of opportunity to watch Buzzr's core programming each day.
The problem, as we
all know, is that Buzzr broadcasts but a few weeks of any one program at a
time, and then seems to repeat that block of shows several times. Within a few
weeks of watching Buzzr you start seeing the same programs being broadcast.
Likewise, the weekend programming seems to recycle programming
from earlier in the week. If you watched Match Game during the week, you have
no incentive to tune in during the weekend.
I've read analysis
of why Buzzr does this. And it makes some sense. Fremantle may own the shows, and it owns the channel, but there's a value to those old programs,
and like any good corporation, its divisions have to operate like independent
entities. Buzzr can't simply take whatever it wants from the Fremantle library.
The value of the commodity has to be accounted for.
If the costs of
operating Buzzr aren't being covered by the revenue generated by the diginet,
then the diginet is a bad idea. Fremantle knows there's value in its
programming, as GSN is paying for the rights to broadcast Fremantle programs,
particularly Harvey's Family Feud.
I have no idea how
soon Fremantle is looking to operate Buzzr as a profitable diginet, but I have
to assume it has yet to reach that point. And I have to assume Fremantle isn't
willing to invest heavily into Buzzr. Therefore we see far too many
repeats, far too often.
The problem is
that Buzzr isn't giving me enough reason to tune in on a weekly basis. I should
be able to count on a new one-hour block of Match Game or Family Feud every
weekday, for years to come. I don't need four hours of unique Match Game
episodes every day, but it's foolish that Buzzr has broadcast countless hours of Match
Game since its inception, using the same few months of programming from 1978. Instead of
building loyalty to its network, Buzzr is discouraging me from sticking around.
No, I haven't
memorized those episodes, but even if I don't remember the exact outcome, I'm
not interested in watching the same contestants I saw a month ago.
Perhaps plenty of
people don't mind watching the same parade of celebrity couples on Tattletales
every month, but knowing there are thousands upon thousands of hours of
programs in the Fremantle library, the fact that Buzzr keeps recycling the same
1 percent of that library is annoying, and off putting.
Buzzr occasionally
comes up with a good idea or marketing gimmick, yet finds a way to turn some of those into failures, too.
I was following
Buzzr's Facebook feed before the channel was available in Minneapolis. Shortly
before the channel was added in my market, Buzzr asked viewers which shows it
should add from its library to a three-hour Sunday night block. There were six
choices, and three would make it to broadcast. I was a fan of Sale of the
Century, so I was glad to see that it was one of the shows added.
I was also curious
to see Double Dare, a 40-year-old show hosted by Alex Trebek that was also
voted into the Sunday night lineup. Monty Hall's short-lived revival of Beat
the Clock rounded out the trifecta. Buzzr started showing one-hour blocks of
each show twice on Sunday nights. With little exception, that's the only time
of the week those shows have been broadcast on Buzzr.
According to
Wikipedia, Double Dare lasted just 96 episodes. At two episodes per week,
Double Dare doesn't have a deep enough catalog to last for an entire year. But
that's fine. It was an interesting enough show that I was hooked. I was looking
forward to making sure I caught the one-hour block of Double Dare during one of
its two Sunday night broadcasts each week, and it would take me nearly a year
to see all 96 episodes. It became appointment viewing.
And of course
Buzzr failed again. Just like Match Game and the rest of the weekday offerings,
Buzzr trotted out a small portion of its Sunday night lineup and started
repeating the episodes. Buzzr turned Sunday nights into appointment viewing for
me, and then it decided it didn't need to keep me around any longer.
News flash: There
are only so many of us who will sit through broadcasts of old game shows. It's
a niche market, and Buzzr is turning away that limited commodity with its
questionable business plan.
And as of today
Buzzr seems to be upsetting most of those who want to comment on its Facebook
page. Buzzr just completed a major juggling of its already suspicious schedule.
Buzzr is promising "fresh" episodes from its archive, and is doubling
down on its Match Game and Family Feud offerings. (Almost all of its Feud
broadcasts have been from the Richard Dawson era. Only for a special occasion
will Buzzr trot out a Ray Combs episode, and it won't touch anything produced
since the late 1990s.)
The increased Family Feud and Match Game broadcasts might seem
like good news, but Buzzr seems to think that cutting out chunks of its
previous weekday offerings in order to give us more Gene Rayburn and Dawson is
a good idea. I'd rather have a "fresh" variety of shows instead of
more Match Game every day. But who needs variety, right?
And while there's
an audience for Buzzr's black-and-white celebrity panel question-and-answer
shows of the 1950s and '60s, I gotta believe it's a fraction of the audience
for old Match Game episodes, yet Buzzr now insists of dedicating two of its
three prime time hours to the black-and-whites, which of course get repeated in
the following three hours.
Yeah, I'll still
stumble upon Match Game and watch, but Buzzr is no longer a go-to channel for
me. They've managed to alienate me, and I'm a big fan of a lot of classic game
shows. It's hard to believe the channel is failing me 11 months after it was
added in Minneapolis. I never would have guessed.
Can Buzzr be
salvaged? Perhaps, but I'm not expecting it. There are things that would make
Buzzr a more appealing channel, but I don't expect to see any of them happen at
this point. In some cases I can only guess why, but I'll try.
One way to fix
Buzzr is obvious, quit repeating episodes every four or six weeks. Commit to a
"fresh" six- or eight-hour block each weekday and repeat it three or
four times. Make it easy for viewers to know when they can find their favorite
show, so they get three opportunities each weekday. Eight hours of
"fresh" programs each day would allow for the two-hour
black-and-white block and six hours of technicolor goodness. Give us an hour of
Match Game, Family Feud, Let's Make a Deal, Press Your Luck and Card Sharks,
and fill out that sixth hour with one half-hour of Sale of the Century, Tattletales
or something else and you'll have plenty of us tuning in regularly. Sure, Press
Your Luck will run out long before Match Game, but that's life. Either repeat
the entire Press Your Luck run over again at that point or insert a new
Fremantle property for a year or two before starting over.
So Buzzr would
have to access more of that valuable Fremantle catalog. So what? You have to
spend money to make money. Prepare to lose money for a few years in order to
make money, particularly if Buzzr is intended to be a viable long-term diginet.
If Buzzr doesn't build an audience, it won't make it. And as I noted, it's a
limited audience that Buzzr is trying to capture. Most youngsters are not going
to take a second look at programs their grandparents enjoyed as young adults.
The more obvious
way to generate steam for Buzzr is to draw upon the elephant in its catalog.
The Price is Right is nowhere to be found on Buzzr. The show had a short run on
GSN, by all accounts, and it is a non-starter on Buzzr. I'm going to guess
there are two reasons for it. One, I suspect Bob Barker has some power to
control how his episodes are rebroadcast. It's well known he has blocked the
airing of old episodes that featured fur coats as prizes. I'm guessing that as
long as he is alive, and perhaps even after he dies, Fremantle is a bit
handcuffed by the fact that Barker eventually gained executive producer duties
for the show.
And I suspect that
Fremantle's agreement with CBS limits its ability to recycle past episodes.
Even if the Barker episodes are off limits, recycle Drew Carey episodes from
the past few years, and use them in prime time. That way they don't interfere
with the CBS daytime airing. That would be the single-best way to draw people
to Buzzr, but somehow that isn't happening.
Ditto for Let's
Make a Deal. The CBS version has been on the air for several years now. Run
episodes from past seasons in prime time each night and I guarantee more people
will tune in to Buzzr than will tune in to see coma-inducing black-and-white
celebrity panels from 50-plus years ago. Buzzr has given us classic Monty Hall episodes of Let's Make a Deal, so the title doesn't appear to be blacklisted from Buzzr. Find a way to to bring Wayne Brady to Buzzr each night, even if it means promoting the new episodes via local CBS affiliates. Business folk like to call that "synergy."
Casual game show fans have no idea why shows like Joker's Wild, Tic Tac Dough, Wheel of Fortune or Jeopardy! aren't on Buzzr. The simple answer is that they're not Fremantle properties, and the assumption is that Buzzr will only show Fremantle programs. There may not be a lot of game shows available for Buzzr to lease, a la GSN, but spending a little cash on the most recent rendition of Hollywood Squares wouldn't hurt ratings, and would give viewers something a little more modern than programs that last aired in 1985. Oldies are sometimes goodies, but not every oldie needs to be 30 years old.
Casual game show fans have no idea why shows like Joker's Wild, Tic Tac Dough, Wheel of Fortune or Jeopardy! aren't on Buzzr. The simple answer is that they're not Fremantle properties, and the assumption is that Buzzr will only show Fremantle programs. There may not be a lot of game shows available for Buzzr to lease, a la GSN, but spending a little cash on the most recent rendition of Hollywood Squares wouldn't hurt ratings, and would give viewers something a little more modern than programs that last aired in 1985. Oldies are sometimes goodies, but not every oldie needs to be 30 years old.
Buzzr will never
be everything to everybody. No matter what it airs, or when it airs the
episodes, there will be people who don't like what it offers, or how it
presents the programming it broadcasts. But to this point Buzzr seems to be
doing just about everything wrong, and if you don't fix something that is
broken, it will soon become worthless.