The New York Times has a piece on the impact that digital video recording, on-demand offerings, and web video services have had on advertising budgets for prime time television slots.
Apparently if people aren’t actually watching TV during prime time, it makes advertising “trickier to measure and pitch to marketers,” resulting in less ad revenue, giving the networks “no choice but to adapt.”
Boo hoo.
There are about a dozen shows set up to auto-record on my TiVo and of those shows, I might be able to tell you the exact time and date that two of them air (The Office is on at 9:00 on Thursdays and America’s Funniest Home Videos is on at 7:00 on Sundays — or is it 8:00?). I have no idea when new episodes of the rest of my shows air. I don’t know the day or the time.
Disrupt 2026: The tech ecosystem, all in one room
Your next round. Your next hire. Your next breakout opportunity. Find it at TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, where 10,000+ founders, investors, and tech leaders gather for three days of 250+ tactical sessions, powerful introductions, and market-defining innovation. Register now to save up to $400.
Save up to $300 or 30% to TechCrunch Founder Summit
1,000+ founders and investors come together at TechCrunch Founder Summit 2026 for a full day focused on growth, execution, and real-world scaling. Learn from founders and investors who have shaped the industry. Connect with peers navigating similar growth stages. Walk away with tactics you can apply immediately
Offer ends March 13.
So the question becomes; does “prime time” even matter. Sure it does. It matters for sports events and it matters for people who don’t have digital video recorders, on-demand, or internet access. Once they die off, though, (old people, not sports) television networks might as well make everything on-demand, with new episodes being made “available” at a certain day and time.