'Gossip Girl' stream pulled

CW site won't offer new episodes

By Andrew Wallenstein
hr/photos/stylus/23240-Gossip_Girl278x150.jpg

"Gossip Girl"

The CW network is taking aim at an unlikely competitive threat: its own Web site.

The network said Thursday that episodes of its series "Gossip Girl" will not be streamed on CWTV.com when "Gossip" returns Monday with original episodes through season's end. The first 12 episodes of the season, which will remain on the site, were made available free to viewers about a week after their original airdate.

The CW is trying to avoid being a victim of its own success: "Gossip" has proved to be a big draw on CWTV.com, with each episode said to be generating hundreds of thousands of streams. Episodes routinely rank among the most downloaded on iTunes, which also will continue to offer new episodes.

CW is taking the counterintuitive step of limiting "Gossip" to test whether its online window is cannibalizing the TV audience.

"While the buzz on the show has remained strong, we decided to have it be that you can only get it on our airwaves," said a CW spokesman, who deemed the withdrawal an "experimental" move. "We'll see if that at all impacts the numbers."

Yanking "Gossip" online is a stark departure from what most TV programmers are doing this season. Full episodes have been made ubiquitous online and seeded with advertising; executives tout them as purely additive measures toward maximizing their audience back on air.

But in targeting the younger demographics that tend to consume more programming on the Web than older viewers, the CW might be more vulnerable online than other TV networks with broader, older-skewing audience bases. If teens are being conditioned to catch "Gossip" online at their leisure, that could lessen the lure of appointment viewing in primetime.

The CW will do what ever it takes to protect its freshman series. Monday's episode will be its first original installment in three months because of the WGA strike and its first in a new slot since moving from Wednesdays at 9 p.m. to Mondays at 8 p.m.

Ironically, the CW cited the success of "Gossip" as one of the reasons the series received a full-season pickup in October.

'Gossip Girl' stream pulled

CW site won't offer new episodes

By Andrew Wallenstein
hr/photos/stylus/23240-Gossip_Girl278x150.jpg

"Gossip Girl"

The CW network is taking aim at an unlikely competitive threat: its own Web site.

The network said Thursday that episodes of its series "Gossip Girl" will not be streamed on CWTV.com when "Gossip" returns Monday with original episodes through season's end. The first 12 episodes of the season, which will remain on the site, were made available free to viewers about a week after their original airdate.

The CW is trying to avoid being a victim of its own success: "Gossip" has proved to be a big draw on CWTV.com, with each episode said to be generating hundreds of thousands of streams. Episodes routinely rank among the most downloaded on iTunes, which also will continue to offer new episodes.

CW is taking the counterintuitive step of limiting "Gossip" to test whether its online window is cannibalizing the TV audience.

"While the buzz on the show has remained strong, we decided to have it be that you can only get it on our airwaves," said a CW spokesman, who deemed the withdrawal an "experimental" move. "We'll see if that at all impacts the numbers."

Yanking "Gossip" online is a stark departure from what most TV programmers are doing this season. Full episodes have been made ubiquitous online and seeded with advertising; executives tout them as purely additive measures toward maximizing their audience back on air.

But in targeting the younger demographics that tend to consume more programming on the Web than older viewers, the CW might be more vulnerable online than other TV networks with broader, older-skewing audience bases. If teens are being conditioned to catch "Gossip" online at their leisure, that could lessen the lure of appointment viewing in primetime.

The CW will do what ever it takes to protect its freshman series. Monday's episode will be its first original installment in three months because of the WGA strike and its first in a new slot since moving from Wednesdays at 9 p.m. to Mondays at 8 p.m.

Ironically, the CW cited the success of "Gossip" as one of the reasons the series received a full-season pickup in October.

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DENVER -- New figures from NPD Group suggest that the Amazon DRM-free digital music service is doing more to grow the overall digital music market as opposed to simply stealing customers from iTunes.

The research group says only 10% of Amazon customers had previously bought music from Apple's iTunes service. While many tagged the Amazon service as an "iTunes killer" when it first launched, the music industry's hope all along was never to cannibalize iTunes sales but rather encourage new digital buyers. NPD's data suggest exactly that is happening.

"The fact that Amazon's early growth does not appear to be at the expense of Apple iTunes is a healthy indication that the digital music customer pool can expand into new consumer groups who have not yet joined the iTunes community," said NPD analyst Russ Crupnick in a statement.

NPD says Amazon is now second only to iTunes in the a la carte digital download category (for those keeping score). The company did not disclose how many users Amazon has attracted in total, however it did say iTunes volume is 10 times that of Amazon.

Some interesting demographic breakdown has emerged between the two services as well. NPD says 84% of Amazon customers are male, compared to 44% of iTunes, but only 3% of Amazon customers were teens, compared to iTunes' 18% (the latter attributed primarily to the popularity of iTunes gift cards.)

NPD says Amazon's growth is likely more due to existing Amazon customers adopting the new service rather than due its lower pricing or DRM-free policies.

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