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Getting your player ready...

There’s finally some new life in old media.

After pummeling traditional media companies for nearly two years, the advertising recession is showing signs of a recovery. TV networks — including Fox, CBS and ABC — as well as leading cable channels such as TNT, TBS, USA, Bravo and Fox News Channel have benefited the most as advertisers have been snapping up available commercial spots and agreeing to pay significantly higher prices than they did just five months ago.

“In challenging times, people go back to what they know, and what they know best is television,” said David Levy, president of sales for Turner Entertainment, which includes TNT and TBS. “It is a little too early to declare victory, but the market is definitely improving.”

The welcome news is the result of stronger-than-expected demand for TV advertising in the “scatter” market, in which advertisers frequently have to pay premiums for scarce available commercial time.

It also represents something of a win for the networks, which gambled over the summer that demand would pick up later in the year and held back a larger percentage of their inventory than in previous years, hoping to capitalize on the improved economy.

Fourth-quarter commercial sales have been propelled by retail chains hoping to ignite their holiday sales; technology giants Microsoft and Apple, which have new products to promote; cellphone carriers such as Verizon, AT&T and Sprint, which are battling for customers; and even financial interests such as American Express, according to television executives and advertising buyers surveyed last week.

Such strong demand has made up for the weaker orders from other mainstay advertisers, including automakers, still reeling from weak sales, and Hollywood movie studios, which have fewer new movies to hype.

A fourth quarter described by one top network-sales executive as “gangbusters” amazed even veterans who have lived through several economic cycles. Only five months ago, the industry was bracing for another dismal year as TV-network-sales teams were engaged in protracted negotiations with advertisers that were demanding that the networks roll back prices as much as 20 percent.

Networks eventually agreed to trim rates about 5 percent to 8 percent to mollify advertisers and begin unloading their time.

But now, in some cases, advertisers have agreed to pay rates 10 percent to 35 percent higher than those established in June and July, when the networks sold the bulk of their time for the new TV season. In addition, advertisers that placed their orders in the summer are honoring their commitments.

“We have all been surprised that the ad market has come back this soon,” said Gary Carr, executive director of national broadcast for the advertising outfit TargetCast. “But . . . cars still have to be sold, and studios still need people to go see their movies. Advertisers have begun releasing the money that they have been holding onto all year.”

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