I guess they found a loophole. I noticed they very much like to put a commercials right before the show ends, and after it ends they put another one. There's also tons of previews of their own shows (i guess that don't count as commercials) weidly sandwitched between commercial blocks - and that could alternate for a long time. Maybe something like that.
I remember debacle about the volume of the commercials, stations tend to put them up much louder than shows, so people were getting blasted with decibels out of nowhere, this was forbidden too, so they also circumvented that by some kind of sound frequency trick so the commercials are still perceptively louder than shows.
Or maybe they just are ignoring it altogether, polish television regulating organ is very slow and blind unless international scandal blows in their faces.
EU regulations are not waterproof and the European countries tend to do a lot of “looks good on paper” type of laws, where they wax about equity and welfare. But in the end its just a prettier package for an ugly system.
pretty sure theres EU regulation that should limit the ads to a certain percentage of the show. Except in cases the show is a comercial itself.
So is Poland not following EU regulations?
I guess they found a loophole. I noticed they very much like to put a commercials right before the show ends, and after it ends they put another one. There's also tons of previews of their own shows (i guess that don't count as commercials) weidly sandwitched between commercial blocks - and that could alternate for a long time. Maybe something like that.
I remember debacle about the volume of the commercials, stations tend to put them up much louder than shows, so people were getting blasted with decibels out of nowhere, this was forbidden too, so they also circumvented that by some kind of sound frequency trick so the commercials are still perceptively louder than shows.
Or maybe they just are ignoring it altogether, polish television regulating organ is very slow and blind unless international scandal blows in their faces.
the loudness thing is indeed a trick to boost perception without breaking rules on peak amplitude.
On the length thing, is weird: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_advertisements_by_country#Europe
https://web.archive.org/web/20080609032858/http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/expert/infopress_page/037-12884-316-11-46-906-20071112IPR12883-12-11-2007-2007-false/default_nl.htm
EU regulations are not waterproof and the European countries tend to do a lot of “looks good on paper” type of laws, where they wax about equity and welfare. But in the end its just a prettier package for an ugly system.