Equity,
Thanks for taking the time to respond the way you did. My logic behind the ing or verb, is that when it has to do with some sort of occupation, hobby, or service, it can serve well as an effective "poor mans substitute" to the root word and still work, especially when in virtually every case the root word or noun is a premium name that cost way more then $25 per year to register. These are all words I have acquired ending in ING so far:
adopting
animating
communicating
cooling
detailing
developing
digitizing
distributing
domaining
joking
phonecasting
moviemaking
photographing
preaching
sending
televising
towing
tubing
linking
walking
canoeing
planting
Now I'm not claiming that entire list above are winners but in almost every case .TV was the only TLD left to register. Now to me when you have a verb that describes something, has decent search results and can have a dedicated channel, it seems worth the $25 fee to me to take a flyer on it. In some cased I plan on developing myself. The premium factor is big part of these buys as well. Granted, when someone is going to pay big money to have a tow.tv, when I can have towing.tv for $25 and still have the word "towing" with a OVT of 268,883 How can I pass that up? Now most OVT aren't close to that high, but my point is that If 25% of the list above hits, then they pay for all the others.
Is my logic wrong? Don't get me wrong, i do have a number or nouns in my portfolio and agree that they are the most valuable in many cases, but what if the noun is a premium? To me the verb works good in this case, especially with the .TV TLD and that fact that you are describing the content on the channel in a single and rare single word from the standpoint that all others are taken for basic registration fee.
As far as the "ed" ending i agree for the most part except in cases where you develop. I think broadcasted was worth the flier because it is a word that describes the essence of what the .TV tld is about and lends itself well to development.
Please slam my way of thinking if you do not agree.