(24-06-2015 23:46 )BigBen Wrote: ...clearly the mass market is no longer there. ...
... years gone by, aspiring models would kill to get onto a babeshow. They could pick and choose from an array of any one who thought they could be a model. Right now, aspiring models can make just as much from their own home on a cam site, working to a schedule that suits them with no producer or boss directing their actions....
Ultimately I don't see a way for the downward trend to cease, unless regulation is relaxed and then with their tv exposure the channels could compete on a more level playing field... right now the babeshows simply do not represent any sort of value.
Indeed, some very good points from BigBen.
To play devil's advocate a little though: I might even question a revival on the terms you propose. Is the mass market just not there for the current babeshow output or is it no longer there
at all?
I now begin to wonder about the shows' prospects even if Ofcom's restrictions were removed. Is the potential audience even still out there in the way it was in the shows' prime? The world has indeed moved on. We are no longer of the lad mag culture. It may be difficult to convince masses of the new generation to blow their £30 or £50 on a TV call no matter
what the girl is up to onscreen. The form may just be seen as a little passé now.
And one thing is for certain, taking Ofcom rules away will not return the vitality, exuberance and quality to the babe line-up all on it's own. Only one thing will bring in better quality, more hungry, girls. Ones who are prepared to put in a proper shift every time and really
compete to earn more than the next girl. Only the prospect of making a shit load of money in a buzzing, vibrant, and thoroughly revitalised, industry will do that.
In other words, the callers will have to return first. And
lots of them. Are we
really sure that they would indeed come back in the volumes of five years ago even if Ofcom were singing a different tune?
You are, of course, correct that there is a market (and a thriving one) for webcam girls online. But does that really translate into freeview and Sky viewers if TV moved closer to those content levels?
The range of babes and the full interactivity on offer can not be aped atm on TV for instance and, more importantly the volumes of punters needed for an individual cam show online to be a success is, of course, dwarfed by the amount required to do the same on TV. Webcamming online will always be a niche (albeit a larger one in a larger pond) in the same way as babe shows have always been on TV. Both pass by a majority of the life-blood casual viewer/surfer and always will. Their fortunes are indeed heading in different directions though as you say. I'm just not 100% sure the babe shows' decline is in fact reversible.
Don't get me wrong, I hope the above musings are entirely too negative and will live to be proved wrong, but, regrettably, more and more these days it seems to me to be a distinct possibility.
(24-06-2015 22:51 )zerowow Wrote: I don't really buy the lack of motivation argument...
Do you think the majority of the current crop of dayshow babes would be happy to see the current rules abolished and the old audience return (if it would as you imply)?
I think the majority of girls would depart quicker than you can say Jack Robinson at any sign of a change in the current tone of shows. It's nothing to do with them conserving "resources". They simply wouldn't want to work any other way.