Working people still go to bed at 11-ish, they still want some fresh but mindless content on the tv to wind down.
Problem is working people are increasingly just not having Cable at all, due to both the price of it, the increasing work hours, and the flexibility streaming offers over it.
They can just throw on their favorite cartoon from their childhood, or mindless nonsense like Family Guy at any time they go to bed and get it for 10% of the cost of a cable package to watch Late Night Shows on. And even if those go on Streaming, its still a far bigger uphill battle to compete against nearly every show in existence versus "the literal nothing on of Late Night time slots."
You must be a youngster if you've never heard of rabbit ears!
People put a spare TV in their bedroom and watch broadcast because an extra cable box costs extra.
Tired at the end of the day, they don't want to have to pick out and line up a show out of nearly every show in existence, especially not one they actually like and might keep them up.
This. The only reason I ever watched those late night shows was because they were on broadcast, NOT cable TV. Problem is I don't watch TV at all any more. There hasn't been anything worth watching a decade. It's boomers keeping those shows alive now.
Problem is working people are increasingly just not having Cable at all, due to both the price of it, the increasing work hours, and the flexibility streaming offers over it.
They can just throw on their favorite cartoon from their childhood, or mindless nonsense like Family Guy at any time they go to bed and get it for 10% of the cost of a cable package to watch Late Night Shows on. And even if those go on Streaming, its still a far bigger uphill battle to compete against nearly every show in existence versus "the literal nothing on of Late Night time slots."
You must be a youngster if you've never heard of rabbit ears!
People put a spare TV in their bedroom and watch broadcast because an extra cable box costs extra.
Tired at the end of the day, they don't want to have to pick out and line up a show out of nearly every show in existence, especially not one they actually like and might keep them up.
This. The only reason I ever watched those late night shows was because they were on broadcast, NOT cable TV. Problem is I don't watch TV at all any more. There hasn't been anything worth watching a decade. It's boomers keeping those shows alive now.
And since I mostly watch older stuff those free streaming services have endless libraries of old shows and YouTube has a lot of old obscure shows
They still sell antennas for local broadcast, it just looks like a flat board instead of rabbit ears.