NEWS

Local TV/Radio

NAB Turns to Gas Pumps for DTV Education

The gas pump campaign is one element of a massive consumer education campaign valued at more than $1 billion

Nov 20, 2008

-By Katy Bachman


mw/photos/stylus/25098-LOGO_Retro_TV_set.jpg
The National Association of Broadcasters turned to an emerging out-of-home ad platform to remind consumers about the pending transition to digital TV: the gas pump.

In mid-November, an NAB spot began airing on PumpTop TV's network across screens installed at 720 gas stations in 11 top markets including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas-Ft. Worth, San Francisco, Boston, Houston, Phoenix, Sacramento and San Diego. A Spanish-language version of the spot is running at selected gas stations in California, Arizona and Texas.

The gas pump campaign is one element of a massive consumer education campaign valued at more than $1 billion.

NAB's message at the pump will run until Feb. 17, 2009, the deadline for the transition.

"With television messages driving awareness of the DTV transition, our new partnership with PumpTop TV provides an exciting and innovative way for broadcasters to extend their consumer education efforts outside the home," said Jonathan Collegio, NAB vp for the DTV transition.

According to PumpTop TV, more than 70 percent of all consumers fill their tanks 1.5 times per week and spend an average of six minutes refueling.



NAB Turns to Gas Pumps for DTV Education

The gas pump campaign is one element of a massive consumer education campaign valued at more than $1 billion

Nov 20, 2008

-By Katy Bachman


mw/photos/stylus/25098-LOGO_Retro_TV_set.jpg

The National Association of Broadcasters turned to an emerging out-of-home ad platform to remind consumers about the pending transition to digital TV: the gas pump.

In mid-November, an NAB spot began airing on PumpTop TV's network across screens installed at 720 gas stations in 11 top markets including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Dallas-Ft. Worth, San Francisco, Boston, Houston, Phoenix, Sacramento and San Diego. A Spanish-language version of the spot is running at selected gas stations in California, Arizona and Texas.

The gas pump campaign is one element of a massive consumer education campaign valued at more than $1 billion.

NAB's message at the pump will run until Feb. 17, 2009, the deadline for the transition.

"With television messages driving awareness of the DTV transition, our new partnership with PumpTop TV provides an exciting and innovative way for broadcasters to extend their consumer education efforts outside the home," said Jonathan Collegio, NAB vp for the DTV transition.

According to PumpTop TV, more than 70 percent of all consumers fill their tanks 1.5 times per week and spend an average of six minutes refueling.
COMMENT
 


Post a Comment
Asterisk (*) is a required field.
*Username: 
*Rate This Article: (1=Bad, 5=Perfect)

*Comment:
 


  • Newsletter
  • Chat
  • Podcast
  • Column

CBS Wins Tuesday; Lackluster Start for Scrubs on ABC

2009-01-07

CBS scored an easy overnight Tuesday victory with its winning line-up of NCIS, bona fide freshman hit The Mentalist and Without a Trace.  But the season-premiere (and network launch) of ABC's Scrubs only proved that this sitcom should have ended two years ago.

More

More Newsletters

Do you eat, breathe and sleep TV, but don't want to start your own blog?
Share your thoughts and opinions with thousands of TV lovers everywhere at Marc Berman's PIFeedback.com, a forum about all things television. The Programming Insider posts the previous nights broadcast ratings results and weighs in on any number of TV issues, from the latest hits to the best of the classics.
Click Here to Chat

Click here to hear Marc Berman's morning review of last night's TV highlights and lowlights. Berman, aka The Programming Insider, offers tasty tidbits from his daily enewsletter, dishes on TV news (occasionally with a guest editor from Mediaweek) and previews upcoming shows to watch or avoid.

x

Mr. TV: I Remember Mama

I always dreaded the idea of writing this week’s column because I knew I would eventually have to.

More

More Column