{"title":"西班牙电视法规和足球比赛观众,影响看电视效用的因素,以及媒体报道如何影响澳大利亚公司的财务回报","authors":"H. Martin, Adam D. Rennhoff","doi":"10.1080/08997764.2015.1004894","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This issue has two articles with significant contributions to our understanding of television viewing, and a third article with a new perspective on how media coverage affects corporate reputations. The first article is an empirical examination of Spanish television regulations requiring free broadcasts of sports events that are of general interest to the country’s population. The study uses panel data analysis of television ratings from free broadcasts of soccer matches to test the effects of the policy. The second article develops a Bayesian model of utility from television viewing that includes social externalities and whether viewers watched previous episodes of a TV program. This study develops a simulation from the model that results in recommended strategies for television programmers. The third article examines the effects of media coverage on the corporate reputations of publicly traded Australian firms. The study uses the tone of media coverage to group companies by reputation, and then examines each group’s risk adjusted returns before, during, and after the global financial crisis of 2007. The first article is “Are Broadcast Sporting Events of ‘General Interest’? A Regional Panel Data Analysis of TV Ratings for Spain’s La Liga,” by Levi Pérez, Víctor Puente, and Plácido Rodríguez. This study examines a Spanish policy that regulates the broadcast of sporting events on free and paid television channels. Spanish regulations require that sporting events of “general interest” appear on free television. Spanish regulations also give the free channel priority over paid channels when selecting which matches will be broadcast free. This has spurred a debate about how to find the best balance between the intellectual property rights owned by pay television channels and serving the information needs of Spanish audiences. There are no surveys that identify soccer matches of “general interest,” defined as matches that appeal to audiences across 10 different regions of Spain. The authors therefore used panel data analysis of 4 years of ratings to identify matches of general interest. 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Spanish TV Regulations and Audiences for Soccer Matches, Factors Influencing Utility from Watching TV, and How Media Coverage Influences Financial Returns for Australian Companies
This issue has two articles with significant contributions to our understanding of television viewing, and a third article with a new perspective on how media coverage affects corporate reputations. The first article is an empirical examination of Spanish television regulations requiring free broadcasts of sports events that are of general interest to the country’s population. The study uses panel data analysis of television ratings from free broadcasts of soccer matches to test the effects of the policy. The second article develops a Bayesian model of utility from television viewing that includes social externalities and whether viewers watched previous episodes of a TV program. This study develops a simulation from the model that results in recommended strategies for television programmers. The third article examines the effects of media coverage on the corporate reputations of publicly traded Australian firms. The study uses the tone of media coverage to group companies by reputation, and then examines each group’s risk adjusted returns before, during, and after the global financial crisis of 2007. The first article is “Are Broadcast Sporting Events of ‘General Interest’? A Regional Panel Data Analysis of TV Ratings for Spain’s La Liga,” by Levi Pérez, Víctor Puente, and Plácido Rodríguez. This study examines a Spanish policy that regulates the broadcast of sporting events on free and paid television channels. Spanish regulations require that sporting events of “general interest” appear on free television. Spanish regulations also give the free channel priority over paid channels when selecting which matches will be broadcast free. This has spurred a debate about how to find the best balance between the intellectual property rights owned by pay television channels and serving the information needs of Spanish audiences. There are no surveys that identify soccer matches of “general interest,” defined as matches that appeal to audiences across 10 different regions of Spain. The authors therefore used panel data analysis of 4 years of ratings to identify matches of general interest. The dependent variable was the number of viewers watching weekly free soccer matches in all 10 Spanish
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Media Economics publishes original research on the economics and policy of mediated communication, focusing on firms, markets, and institutions. Reflecting the increasing diversity of analytical approaches employed in economics and recognizing that policies promoting social and political objectives may have significant economic impacts on media, the Journal encourages submissions reflecting the insights of diverse disciplinary perspectives and research methodologies, both empirical and theoretical.