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Linda
IMWAN Admin |
Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 4:57 pm |
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Helpful Librarian
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Quote: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV?
Viewership at each of the six largest broadcast networks was down last week compared to the same week a year before. But given how television is changing, it's hard to say whether that means viewers are rejecting the programming choices.
Declines at ABC, Fox, Univision and the CW were all double-digit, the Nielsen company said. NBC was down 6 percent and CBS, off 1 percent, was relatively flat.
Nielsen's measurement, however, reflected people who watched programs the same night they aired. That doesn't take into account people who recorded shows to watch at a later date, people who watched on demand or those who streamed episodes onto their devices.
"Logically, if you have an opportunity to watch a show on your schedule as opposed to the network's schedule, you're going to watch it on your schedule," said Brad Adgate, an analyst for Horizon Media. "The opportunities to do that continue to expand."
Some new shows, like NBC's "Blindspot," are obvious new successes. Others - think the premiere of NBC's comedy "Truth Be Told" last week - have a pretty clear negative verdict already. For many programs, networks will need more information from more sources before they know whether or not they made a good investment.
Increasingly, the weekly list of Nielsen's top programs is weighted toward programming that rewards live viewing. Twelve of Nielsen's 20 most-viewed programs last week were either live sports, news or competition programs like "The Voice." Two others - "Empire" and "The Walking Dead" - are the type of water-cooler shows that fans are anxious to see as quickly as they can.
For the week in prime time, CBS averaged 10.4 million viewers and NBC had 8.4 million. ABC had 6.1 million, a drop of 23 percent primarily because its Saturday night college football game wasn't nearly as popular as last year's. Fox had 4.2 million, Univision had 2.1 million, the CW had 1.53 million, Telemundo had 1.51 million and ION Television had 1.1 million.
Buoyed by postseason baseball, TBS led cable networks with an average prime-time viewership of 5.14 million, ESPN had 3.1 million, CNN had 2.12 million, the Disney Channel had 1.64 million and Fox News Channel had 1.56 million.
NBC and ABC were in a virtual dead heat in the evening news ratings, the closest ABC has been since Lester Holt took over as the full-time NBC "Nightly News" anchor. NBC's newscast averaged 7.84 million viewers, ABC's "World News Tonight" had 7.81 million and the "CBS Evening News" had 6.6 million.
For the week of Oct. 12-18, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: NFL Football: New England at Indianapolis, NBC, 22.82 million; "NFL Pre-Game Show," NBC, 16.3 million; "NCIS," CBS, 16.04 million; Democratic Presidential Debate, CNN, 15.79 million; "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 14.96 million; NFL Football: Atlanta at New Orleans, CBS, 14.78 million; "60 Minutes," CBS, 13.79 million; "Democratic Debate Preview," CNN, 12.69 million; "Democratic Debate Analysis," CNN, 12.67 million; "NCIS: New Orleans," CBS, 12.47 million. http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/ ... 0-16-14-57
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Steven Clubb
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 6:28 pm |
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#NeverThor
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Joined: | 01 Mar 2005 |
Posts: | 26316 |
Location: | Dorne |
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I haven't watched TV in years... and I'm watching more TV than ever.
The ratings are stuck in the 20th century.
_________________ I reserve the right to be spectacularly wrong.
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(T)Eddy
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 6:32 pm |
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Hold yourself together, (T)Eddy----it's only IMWAN
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Joined: | 02 Jul 2009 |
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New viewing habits are a big reason why sports ratings---especially the NFL---has climbed so high recently. People don't mind watching Dr. Who or The Walking Dead on DVR delay, but many people want to watch the big game as it happens. Back in the day, the Super Bowl used to be the highest rated TV show of the year, but it wasn't in the same category as the final episode of M*A*S*H. Now the Super Bowl is the most watched event in television history---every single year.
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Jeff
IMWAN Mod |
Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 8:52 pm |
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The Modfather; Wizard of WAN
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Joined: | 05 Oct 2006 |
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Sports are literally the only thing I watch real time. TV series I wait until the whole season is there, and binge it, without commercials. Commercials are so overwhelming I can't imagine how anyone can stand it. I have plenty of backlog of movies and TV (plus Netflix) so I'm never just waiting around for a show to be "ready" for me.
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Li'l Jay
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 8:59 pm |
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It scorched
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Joined: | 28 May 2006 |
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Bannings: | One too few . . . |
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I thought it worked well what AMC did with it's popular shows -- in the final season, have a live "after show" with one of the stars as a guest, or just another celebrity guest, to talk about the episode that just aired. It makes it more "event television" to experience it when aired, and then have the live discussion. And you can't do that if you're delay-dvr'ing.
I still thing there's more ground to be made by the networks working in tandem with the basic cable channels. You can start a show on basic cable, then "promote" the hits to the network, but then have an "after show" on the basic cable channel. All kinds of ways to combine the large audience, event tv feel on a major network, but use the basic cable channel as a proving ground and support network.
_________________ Rom's kiss turned Rogue a hero.
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RobertSwanderson
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Tue Oct 20, 2015 9:03 pm |
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Bigger and Better!
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Joined: | 01 Jan 2007 |
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Nielsen is an outdated research model. They're still using hand written diaries in most markets. They also lost their accreditation from the FCC.
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James C. Taylor
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 8:07 am |
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a k a LightningMan, lover of bountiful pulchritude
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Joined: | 16 Aug 2004 |
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I don't mind commercials(and will actually stop and watch some of them), but I time shift almost everything except sports and live news events. If they cannot begin to calculate that viewing, ratings will become meaningless.
_________________ Affecting the universe...with my mind!
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Serge
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 11:41 am |
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:: insert clever title here ::
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Joined: | 22 Aug 2004 |
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I've become used to watching most shows via Netflix that if I do watch something with commercials, it's a little jarring to not fade out/fade in back to the program immediately.
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JohnG
ICE Mod |
Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 12:04 pm |
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Boney Fingers Jones
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Joined: | 03 Aug 2006 |
Posts: | 40800 |
Location: | Sunny Massapequa Park, NY |
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I avoid the commercials so all my viewing is on a DVR, not sure if that viewing is counted.
_________________ "Every day a little sadder, A little madder, Someone get me a ladder."
ELP
“You can't have everything. Where would you put it?”—Steven Wright
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Stumpy Joe
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Post subject: TV network ratings drops: Are people watching less TV? Posted: Wed Oct 21, 2015 1:31 pm |
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Proud enemy of the United States--again!
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Joined: | 29 Apr 2014 |
Posts: | 1538 |
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DVDs have spoiled me: No commercials, no superimposed logos or scrolling text, and no commercials--and I'll never be able to watch everything that's out there. What more coud I ask for?
Oh yeah--a pause button!
(Actually, the last time I praised DVDs for lacking commercials, somebody immediately complained about having to sit through 14 seconds of FBI warnings. Gotta love those first-world problems.)
_________________ "I'm joking, of course."--Lt. Robert "Bob" Hookstratten
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