Demographics


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    All industries, at least in capitalist economies, sell something. The television industry may produce TV shows, but what they sell is you. Or, more accurately, they rent you in fifteen-/thirty-/sixty-second increments to people who want to tell you something, and most often want to sell you something.

    The shows exist to create a product (the viewing audience) that the networks can sell. And, like producers of livestock and cheeses, they grade the product by types. These types are called demographics, from the Greek words for "people" and "writing". The demographics one falls into are based on several factors, such as age, sex, race, income, and geography. Note that not all components are included in every description. As different kind of people buy different kinds of products (for example, you won't be finding people in the 2-11 demographic that interested in buying cars), advertisers are only interested in the demographics that are likely to actually buy their products.

    Shows are described to potential advertisers in terms of the demographics they appeal to, as in "This show has a strong following among eighteen- to twenty-four-year-old males."

    Demographics are a component of the ratings system. It doesn't matter if a high number of people tune in every week if they aren't interested in what the advertisers have to sell.

    Changing which demographics a show appeals to is often the cause of Executive Meddling. It is a reviled indicator of the increasingly mathematical and cold process by which television is produced.

    Most anime is also produced in this way, depending on which magazine is the possible source material. Nonetheless, the demographics Shojo and Shonen are sometimes mistaken as pure genres.

    Demographics started to be identified in the late 1960's, early 1970's. In a "What If?" scenario, some people believe that if this process was known earlier, Star Trek: The Original Series might have lasted longer. Despite the mediocre total number of viewers, Star Trek hit the golden demographic range of 18-45 male adults and the doctors/scientists/teachers intellectual market dead on. This knowledge that this series was nailing the exact audience advertisers drool for is what kept reruns going for several years.

    See also Fleeting Demographic, Periphery Demographic, and Multiple Demographic Appeal.

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