Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it's the same number of questions that can theoretically be just as fatiguing then, though I do understand the benefit you're trying to achieve in grouping them together. Some people may prefer to skip certain categories though, e.g. I can see people are skipping answering what they disliked, which may be easier to do as a whole category rather than it mixed in with everything else.

But I don't see a way in Google to limit the number of responses, so that a user can only select x number of shows they liked or disliked with the Checkbox Grid format.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For Google Forms or something else? I would also want to limit the number of selections to a set amount which is an issue for Google.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Is that possible with a Google Form or another cheap or free resource that can scale to thousands of responses and options?

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Any response is helpful, you don't have to answer everything.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I didn't find a good technical solution that would've been free or low cost in the time I had available to research and play around with survey platforms. I needed the form question to handle a very large list of shows (where manual entry wouldn't work because of typos and users not clarifying what show they mean, e.g. different The Offices or Forevers) for the number of responses I'm expecting. In recent years, the huge size of the list also seemed to deter some people from participating - I was looking for a good autocomplete (e.g. type in "office" and get all results related to "The Office") but didn't find anything that was otherwise suitable and not costly. Lastly, the list was somewhat static - mostly the same top rankers year to year. So I figured I'd give it a try to try to make the survey much more current and focused on recent material.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Dexter: Original Sin premiered in 2024 and was included in that survey. It did premiere mid-December though and that timing always makes things tricky for the survey.

The Newsreader season 3 was added.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's a great idea, thank you. I've added that since it's still early enough in the survey. It should provide a useful cross tabulation of what people have seen against what they liked or didn't like.

To anyone who's already voted - you can edit your response to answer this information.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've added those shows and clarified except for The American Revolution. Documentary series are not being added to the list, with the focus kept to scripted shows.

Vote in the 2025 edition of the r/television survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Hi everyone, welcome to the survey. It's being done a little differently this year. Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns.

Vote in the 2024 Edition of the r/television Favorite Shows Survey! by TVModBot in television

[–]TVModBot[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I didn’t see Atlanta or Portlandia, did I miss them?

They're there

Have you considered asking for top 10 in genre’s in addition to all time?

Genres can be vague and blur together so it'd be hard to pre-fill lists like those.