> Yes, actually most kids my sons age - 20 ish don't watch tv 
> at all. They might watch YouTube occassionally but mostly 
> they are either watching DVD's on their wide screen laptops, 
> or creating their own content with digi-cams, photoshop 
> artwork, websites or generally out and about

Speaking as someone in this age-group (although possibly atypical given
my tech background), its not that we don't watch TV, its just that TV
programs aren't good enough to keep our interest. My flatmate makes time
for Torchwood each week - I have a habit of forgetting its on so end up
either setting our TV up to record it, then watch it later, or I pick it
up from a torrent site. The whole concept of remembering when a show is
on and watching it is now totally alien to me - I want content on
demand, and youtube delivers that. Its just that its generally trashy
content on there, and whilst you can sometimes spend hours watching what
fun people have with... Y'know... Putting firecrackers down their pants
or whatever.... Its not exactly the kind of high-brow stuff people want
from a proper broadcasting outfit. Youtube is generally
lowest-common-denominator content, but the trend is definitely towards
not being told when in our busy day we're going to take time to watch
something when the technology to watch it when we want to is so
pervasive. Increasingly, television as a medium is going to fall by the
way-side as other newer mediums take over. These are predominantly going
to be to some extent internet-driven. That doesn't mean that the
programmes are going to end, but they are going to evolve. Ten years
ago, choosing which angle you viewed a football match from would have
seemed insane, nowadays you just have to press a button on your remote.
Ten years from now, who knows what will be possible, but as some level
of abstraction, there's still going to be sound and pictures being
transmitted.

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