The line graph demonstrates the price for three ways of watching movies over a period of 6 years, from 2005 and 2011, whereas the diagrams compare the market share of them at the beginning and at the end of it.
It can be clearly seen from the graph that there were three ways to watch TV, and the cinema ticket was the most expensive throughout the whole period. However, the proportion of it on the share of the market experienced a downward trend, as did the share of DVD rental, while legal downloading showed significant growth.
Over the mentioned period, the cost for going to the cinema and the cost for watching DVD both increased without major fluctuations, whereas the price for legal download was the one that saw a decline before a subsequent sharp rise. In 2005, the cinema ticket cost 9 pounds, and the expense for the DVD player was only 6 pounds. Both prices grew gradually till they reached their peaks in 2011, 14 pounds for ticket and 8 pounds for DVD. At the same time, the price for legal downloading fell till 2007 and stopped at 3 pounds; nevertheless, it started to rise for the next four years and ended up being 9 pounds.
The pie charts demonstrated that the shift in the percentage of market share of legal download was the largest one, it expanded from 5% in 2005 to 56% in 2011. On the contrary, the market share for DVD renting declined from 59% in 2005 to 26% in 2011. Similarly, share in the cinema ticket market halved.
