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> cable carried local channels from the beginning and local channels had ads

Cool, so we can both agree this is 100% non-factual, revisionist history:

> Cable TV once had the same allure: Freedom from ads.

Like, we're both agreeing that at the start, 100% of cable's channels had ads, 100% of channels had ads for decades, and throughout the entire history of cable the vast majority of channels had ads?

> What you're essentially saying here is that the vast majority of cable channels would _interrupt_ their programming to show ads.

I have never once made the claim cable would interrupt regular programming of OTA networks to insert their own ads. But, well ackshully, many networks did end up having cable override the ad breaks for the OTA broadcasts and run their own ads, so in a way this actually was reality for some channels in some areas at certain points in time.

What I have been arguing is cable TV, from day one and for decades every channel on it, had ads. That the majority of channels available to cable subscribers have always been filled with ads. That the majority of the first cable-only TV channels had ads from day 1 (TBS, CNN, USA, ESPN, Nickelodeon, AMC, etc).

The majority of cable-only TV channels had ads. Arguing otherwise is arguing revisionist history not based in reality but in your own fantasy dreamland.

> you're going to have to define many here because I don't think your definition and mine align.

I dunno, I'm seeing a few people making the argument that cable TV never had ads or was free of ads at the start, and I often find convention centers crowded of people arguing for the flat earth and personally know several moon landing skeptics. My experience is flat earth has more supporters than the "cable never had ads" group.

> That was not my experience

Ok cool, and many people also experience a flat earth.

> I once had someone correct me and say cable also has ads. I had to look it up and sure enough, it apparently does now.

You've absolutely made the argument cable only recently started to show ads. You've tried stating things like the Sci-Fi channel didn't have ads when it did from day one. "it apparently does now" makes no sense when you then also agree that the majority of cable has had ads since the beginning.



> I have never once made the claim cable would interrupt regular programming of OTA networks to insert their own ads.

And the reason this is a "well akshually..." is that when people talk about cable not having ads, they mean programming didn't get interrupted to deliver ads.

It's also why those who are arguing "well cable always had ads" don't have a leg to stand on, because streaming services _are_ interrupting content to display ads.

> You've absolutely made the argument cable only recently started to show ads.

That's why you don't cherry pick quotes.

what I actually said

> I have not carried cable since Cox wouldn't allow me to watch the sci-fi channel without renting hardware per month (the refused to let me purchase the box outright).

> __I STOPPED PIRATING__ when netflix started streaming, but now I'm back to pirating because fuck these greedy bastards.

stop and think about that timeline and tell me I said recent. Netflix started streaming late 90's/early aughts.

I haven't paid for cable since the mid-90's.


> cable not having ads

> programming didn't get interrupted to deliver ads.

Two different things. "Cable not having ads" means cable didn't have ads, which we've now agreed on many, many times that cable absolutely carried ads. And yes, on channels like ESPN and USA and Comedy Central and Cartoon Network and CNN and what not there were ad breaks in shows, even at the beginning of those channel's existences. And once again, the majority of channels on cable were just retransmissions of OTA networks, which once again as we've agreed on had interruptions in the programs for ads.

Cable.

Had.

Ads.

Since.

Day.

One.

The majority of content available on cable had ads, since day one.

Any argument otherwise is denying reality.

> Netflix started streaming late 90's/early aughts

Laughable you're going to argue timelines with me here. Netflix streaming services didn't launch until 2007. 2007 is not the late 90s nor the early aughts. Once again showing me you're delusional and have poor recollection of history, or just trolling. I'm supposed to trust your recollection of the history of cable over the piles of written articles from the times in question and my own lived experiences when you're arguing Netflix was streaming in the 90s?

> That's why you don't cherry pick quotes.

Adding in the context of needing a cable box is what drove you to quit doesn't make this statement any closer to reality:

> I once had someone correct me and say cable also has ads. I had to look it up and sure enough, it apparently does now.

Emphasis added. Apparently cable has ads now, who knew. As if that's some kind of recent (from at least the late 90s+) phenomenon. When you've agreed in this thread multiple times cable TV has had ads since the beginning.

Adding in the context of "I haven't paid for cable since the mid-90's" as an argument that cable somehow didn't have ads in the 90s but does now still just shows you're delusional. USA and Comedy Central and MTV and CNN and Sci-Fi and Cartoon Netowrk and the like all had ads which interrupted programming in the 90s. That was cable. It had ads. The ads interrupted the shows on the vast majority of channels. I was there, I saw it, I lived it. I have multiple sources talking about advertising in cable channels going back to the early 80s. Shit I've got VHS tapes on my shelf here from recordings of things like The Daily Show and Dragonball Z from the 90s which cut to ad breaks in the middle of the shows. You're telling me the things I can see with my own eyes, right now, aren't real!


> Two different things.

you don't get to tell people what they meant. That's why your responses are a "well akshually...".

> Emphasis added. Apparently cable has ads now, who knew.

I used to do drugs. I still do, but I used to too.


> you don't get to tell people what they meant.

If I start saying "apple" to mean the orange colored citrus fruit, I'm just wrong.

Saying there are no ads, when there were ads, is just wrong.

> I used to do drugs. I still do, but I used to too.

Probably doing too many to notice all the ads on cable in the 90s then I guess. Because they were there.


> Saying there are no ads, when there were ads, is just wrong.

right, and Cox Cable has a competitor because there's a dialup service available that competes against the fiber.

That's not how English works, that's not how people work. That's how computers work.

You are communicating with people, not computers.

> Probably doing too many to notice all the ads on cable in the 90s then I guess. Because they were there.

it's a mitch hedberg joke. I was making fun of your insistence that my usage of the word 'now' means it couldn't have also been true for a long while in the past.


I go to a restaurant. I ask the waiter, "does this sandwich have mustard on it?" The waiter responds "No, this sandwich does not have mustard." I order the sandwich and find it has loads of yellow mustard on it. I go to the waiter and ask what gives, and he replies "well, it doesn't have any Grey Poupon."

Was the waiter correct in telling me "this sandwich does not have mustard"?

Is saying "there were no ads" when the fact is there were ads correct? Even if we were to just scope it to pre-roll ads, the argument that cable offered "freedom from ads" overall is untrue. Because there were still ads on most cable content, whether that be interruption style ads (which did exist) or pre-roll.

Saying the point of cable was freedom from ads is rewriting history. Most of cable had ads from day one. A few channels didn't correct. But that's not all of cable, and that was never the main point of cable.

And I did get the reference to the joke. It still doesn't change the fact the Sci-Fi channel had ads since its inception and yet you somehow didn't notice until recently, which was my whole point.


when your entire argument becomes about a made-up scenario you know that you've lost the point.

"well what if ads were defined in this way, wouldn't the conclusion be that I'm rite!!!!!".

they're not defined in that way.


> when people talk about cable not having ads, they mean programming didn't get interrupted to deliver ads.

When your entire argument becomes the massive logical inconsistency of "it's not ads because it's not this one type of ad" (see: it's not mustard because it's not grey poupon), misremembering history (Netflix was streaming in the 90s), and yet is also still ignoring facts (most basic cable channels did have interruption style ads), you know you're detached from reality.

According to sources above cable networks made $45M in advertising in 1980 in 1980s dollars, 138M in 2023 dollars. Just a few years into major nationwide networks really getting into it and cable still being a pretty niche market. Somehow they were making millions in ads not having ads according to your logically inconsistent reality.




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