Loud ass commercials

MeTheTwerd:)

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I blame the TV show studios. Sometimes they send out shows with a very quiet sound track so you have to turn it way up to hear it, then the commercials seem to be way loud. Most broadcasters set their output to a certain gain, queue up all the shows, then let it run with minimal supervision.

I used to get this question a lot when I worked at Time Warner Cable.
 
Ya, I feel the pain of the OP. ESPECIALLY when I'm just dozing off (normally fall asleep with the TV on).
Havok is correct, there is pending legslation dealing with this, but methinks the advertising agencies have some pretty powerful lobbyists, so I wouldnt expect any change.

Methinks that it will be up to the TV makers to solve this issue. It shouldnt be that hard, they already can make all the channels stay at the same volume.
 
By Ted Hearn -- Multichannel News, 6/13/2008

Washington—The Federal Communications Commission would be required to regulate the volume of television commercials for excessive loudness under a House bill recently introduced by Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.)

Eshoo, a member the Energy and Commerce Committee who represents Silicon Valley, wants the FCC to regulate “excessively noisy and strident” ads on broadcast TV, cable television and satellite television. The bill would exempt radio stations and the Internet.

“We're still studying it,” said Dennis Wharton, executive vice president of media relations for the National Association of Broadcasters.

Dan Brenner, senior vice president of law and regulatory policy at the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, said he looked into volume changes on television when he worked at the FCC in the early 1990s.

In his research, Brenner found that people might mistakenly perceive that ads are louder than regular programming. This happens, he said, when regular programming ends at a low-volume moment just before cutting to a commercial set at a normal volume level.

“Maybe the FCC has more research, but when I looked at it—this was 15 years ago—that was the problem, that you couldn't really actually measure loudness because it all depends on what came before the so-called loud commercial,” Brenner said.

Brenner said he was unaware that the cable industry deliberately elevated the volume of its commercials.

“I've never heard of that,” he said.

Eshoo's bill would give the FCC one-year to adopt regulations that would ensure that the loudness of TV ads was not “substantially higher than the program material that such advertisements accompany.”

Eshoo named her bill the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act or the CALM Act. She has one co-sponsor, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.)

“Most Americans are not overjoyed to watch television commercials, but they are willing to tolerate them to sustain free over-the-air television. What annoys all of us is the sudden increase of volume when commercials are aired,” Eshoo said in a prepared statement. “My legislation will reduce the volume of commercials in order to bring them to [the] same level as the programs they accompany.”

Eshoo's bill contained no findings regarding the prevalence of volume manipulation in TV ads, no statements about who is responsible for the practice, and no language regarding the bill's impact on the First Amendment.

Courts tend to strike down laws that impose burdens on speech when less restrictive alternatives are available. TV volume regulator devices, for example, are available for consumers to purchase on an individual basis.

One such device, called the TV Sound Regulator, sells on the Internet for $49.95.

Adonis Hoffman, senior vice president and counsel of the American Association of Advertising Agencies, said it's possible the FCC already has the authority to regulate volume levels on TV.

“If so, that might obviate the need for any new legislation. But if there are new standards to be developed, the advertising industry would want to be a part of that process and would certainly comply with the new rules,” said Hoffman, a former FCC official under Democratic chairman William Kennard.

In January, the FCC released a report showing that it had received complaints from consumers about the “abrupt changes in volume” during transitions from regular programming to commercials.

Eshoo Wants Loud TV Ads Regulated By FCC - 2008-06-13 13:53:00 | Multichannel News

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I'm not siding with one camp or the other on this one but I thought the part in bold made a lot of sense. When you think about the nature of a television program vs. the nature of an advertisement, it's not surprising that an ad may seem louder even if it's not.

Even if the ads are louder than the program, you're watching an advertising medium so I really don't know what you're expecting. TV is not there to entertain you first and show you some ads for crap as an after thought. IT'S THERE TO SELL YOU CRAP. PERIOD. The shows you watch are only meant to keep you there long enough to show you more commercials for crap.

If it's that big a deal, buy one of these: TV Volume Regulator - VR-1 - Smarthome
 
This only sets the upper bounds. They'd have to normalize everything to the same gain to avoid content being too soft... but this would destroy 5.1.

The best way would be to mandate that production adjust the levels to a set mark during mastering.
 
Some T.V.'s come with a feature that can help with it. I wanna say its called soundrite or something of the sort. I dont have it on the TV where I'm at right now... but It was on my dad's TV. It helped a lot.

There are still drastic differences between channels, but usually the sound between commercials and programing is good.
 
Billy fucking Mays anyone?

Those god damn commercials, and you know what else pisses me off? The ShamWow motherfucker, his voice makes me want to die of a stroke 10 times over.
 
Billy Mays never got to me. I'm not saying that because he's dead*. Billy Mays' loudness affect was just as much his appearance, the tone of his voice, that big-ass smile, the cadence of his pitch and that thick ass Van Dyke. He was intense, but the actual volume wasn't bad.

I know this because I was watching Sports Center, they cut to a Billy Mays KaBoom!!! commercial and I snickered, because I buy KaBoom!!! and use it regularly. Then, immediately after the Billy Mays commercial, a shitty fucking life insurance commercial thunders in and my ears are bleeding. I remember thinking, the assholes who made this commercial better have a good life insurance policy 'cause I'm gunna shank these mother fuckers for waking up the neighbors. That god damn advertisement was so loud, it set off car alarms in the parking lot.

The jury is still out on the ShamWow dude. He just acts like a dick. Especially on the SlapChop pitch. The guy comes across as an asshole salesman who would try to sell you sticks and stems while claiming it's sticky, and call you are retard for questioning the quality of the bag. But his story goes a little deeper. You see, the ShamWow dude is an ex-Scientologist. Evidently, Scientology tried to derail a comedy movie he was making. (TOW) wikipedia.org says he sued them in 2004, whereas
 
I know what you mean lol, but the only ones that really do that around here are the commercials for something local like the cable or home phone garbage.
 
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