Programmatic Is a Pipe, Not a Pixel—Local Linear Wants In
In an op-ed response to a prior TVNewsCheck column, ITN executive Craig Sulema argues that “programmatic” for television should be defined by automated workflow and platform-based access to supply rather than impression-level ad delivery and deterministic targeting. The article cites ITN integrations with Magnite (to transact local linear TV inventory via SSP-to-DSP infrastructure alongside CTV/digital video) and Comscore (to support planning and transacting against advanced audience segments) as evidence that local linear can operate within programmatic ecosystems today.
Key Takeaways
- ITN’s Sulema challenges a digital-first definition of programmatic that requires impression-level decisioning and 1:1 delivery.
- The proposed litmus test: whether inventory is accessible, transactable, and executable via standardized programmatic infrastructure (SSP-to-DSP).
- ITN says local linear is already being bought programmatically through Magnite, using the same pipes as CTV and digital video.
- Comscore integration is positioned as a bridge to audience-based planning/transacting for local linear—without claiming true 1:1 precision.
- The strategic risk Sulema flags: a narrow definition sidelines non-digital supply and slows linear’s integration into omnichannel buying.
Why It Matters
This is the definitional battle that determines budgets. If “programmatic” equals impression-level addressability, local linear stays a second-class citizen in omnichannel platforms—and agencies keep routing dollars to CTV where the tooling is native. If “programmatic” instead means standardized access + automated execution, then the prize is supply liquidity: local broadcasters become selectable inventory inside the same DSP motions buyers already use. The emerging meme is “pipes over pixels”: whoever controls the pipes (SSP/DSP integrations, data attachments, workflow) controls the next wave of TV demand—regardless of delivery granularity.
Read full article at tvnewscheck.com
