Sunday, July 6, 2008
NextNC.com
Northern Colorado Entertainment
 home  life  get out  stay in  sidetrax  contact us 
Case of the disappearing TV viewer PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by Aaron Barnhart, MCT   
Monday, 14 May 2007

This site requires Flash 8. Download for free here.
It's upfronts week again — time for the major TV networks to unveil their fall schedules and begin their annual mating rites with major advertisers.

It will be a heady time for the producers whose months of script-writing and scene-shooting are rewarded when their pilots are picked up. It will be a bummer for fans of shows that are left off next season's prime-time grids.

Usually the talk of upfronts is about winners and losers. Advertisers will buy an estimated $8 billion in commercial time. It's usually a sure thing that networks that had good seasons will negotiate a bigger piece of the commercial time pie, while others are forced to accept smaller slices as the price of declining ratings.
But this year all the networks are looking like losers.

Some 2.5 million people have suddenly stopped watching ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, according to David Bauder in a much-discussed Associated Press story, who called it "TV's worst spring in recent memory."

An average of 37.6 million people watched prime-time network TV in March and early April, down from 40 million viewers a year earlier. With very few exceptions (like Fox's brilliant drama "House"), ratings for nearly every top show are down.

The falloff in audience has been especially alarming in the cases of Fox's "24," ABC's "Lost " and CBS' "Survivor." As for last year's big fad — serial thrillers packed with tune-in-next-week cliffhangers — well, let's just say a lot of people didn't tune in next week.

Most of the new serials are already gone, while the two supposed "hits," NBC's "Heroes" and CBS' "Jericho," which is set in mythical post-apocalyptic Kansas, are losing steam. In fact, "Jericho" is said to be on the verge of cancellation.

So this week, look for networks to get back to basics. The hottest show idea going is that old standby, the spin-off. ABC has one in the works featuring Kate Walsh, known as Addison on its Thursday-night hit "Grey's Anatomy." And Fox has a band version of "American Idol" in the works.

First out of the gate at the upfronts this week was NBC, with a star-studded presentation Monday at Radio City Music Hall. ABC, CBS, the CW network and Fox, in that order, will follow later this week.

What exactly is causing network viewers to vanish is a bit of a mystery. (The AP's Bauder gathered a whole host of excuses, from kids' obsession with video games to changing the start of daylight-saving time.)

One culprit, for sure, is the DVR, or digital video recorder. DVRs, which include TiVo boxes, are in about 17 percent of homes, according to Nielsen. With their one-touch recording and vast hard drives, DVRs allow millions of people to skip appointment-TV altogether.
These viewers don't appear in the traditional ratings, because Nielsen measures DVR-use separately. The chairman of CBS, Leslie Moonves, said earlier this month that "a big chunk of the viewing pie" is being lost to DVRs.

Even worse for executives like Moonves, the people who use DVRs really enjoy using the fast-forward button on their remotes to skip over the ads.

This may not seem like a concern for the average viewer, except that somebody has to pay for those big-budget network shows. That would be the sponsor. And this spring, unless the networks do some particularly nifty song-and-dance routines — not on stage at Carnegie Hall but in their closed-door negotiations — their advertisers are going to take a pile of their money someplace else.

So what, you say: I watch cable anyway. Oh, do you? Well, cable ratings are up only slightly year-to-year, which means not enough folks are joining you to account for the drop in network viewers.

And if you think cable programs are just as good as network programs, you're leaving one important factor out. As any long-suffering fan of "The Shield" or "The Sopranos" or "Monk" will tell you, cable programs tend to vanish for six to nine months at a time because cable channels can afford only 10 or 12 or 13 episodes for the season, instead of the network-standard 22 episodes. Everything about cable is smaller than network TV: the audiences, the production budgets and the number of shows.

Still, the networks have managed to keep jacking up their rates over the years, and advertisers have paid ever more handsomely for commercial time. As a result, we the audience have been rewarded with the best lineup of prime-time entertainment perhaps in our lifetimes. But for the first time in a long time, there is real worry in New York that the good times may be coming to an end.

Last season the big four networks were being watched during prime time, on average, in just 44 percent of homes, according to historical Nielsen data. Twenty-five years ago, when there were only three big networks, they were viewed, on average, in 83 percent of homes.

In that same period, newspaper readership dipped from 67 percent to 54 percent of American homes. (To those who say I'm comparing apples to oranges, you're right: I didn't even factor in the readers we get from the Web.)

If there's one thing that's certain in this most uncertain of times, it's that the people who bring you network TV will have something to say about all this. So stay tuned.
___

TOP 10 TIME-SHIFTED SHOWS
Here are the programs watched off DVRs the most. "The Office" had the biggest spike in its audience (31 percent) when time-shifters were included.


1. "House

2. "Lost"

3. "American Idol" (Tuesday)

4. "CSI"

5. "24"

6. "Survivor"

7. "The Office"

8. "Desperate Housewives"

9. "American Idol" (Wednesday)

10. "Prison Break"

Source: Nielsen Co. data for April 2-8

Comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

 


City:
Event Type:
Venue:
Date:
 Show me:
 Located In:
 Named:
City/Zip:
Powered by Fandango
 Search:

Enter name or type of business
 Location:

Enter city & state, or zip code


FullMetal Alchemist (48)

FullMetal Alchemist"Humankind cannot gain anything without first giving something in return. To obtain, something of equal value must be lost. That is Alchemy's first law of Equivalent Exchange. In those days, we really believed that to be the world's one, and only truth."
FullMetal Alchemistread more >>

3 Wise-asses (15)

3wiseassesWe're not that bright, even though in our own little world, we're geniuses. We like 80s hair bands and one-hit wonders, but among us we have respectable tastes, too. Metallica, Iron Maiden, U2. Pursuit of all things trivial is a lifestyle, not just a game. We like some sports, love other sports, and can find something to say about anything. We watch TV and movies and we've read a book or two, even a few classics (Yes, Classic Comics count!) We call it insight, you call it what you will.
3wiseassesread more >>

A Breath of Fresh Air (60)

felixFelix Wong is an outdoor enthusiast living in Fort Collins. A mechanical engineer by day, he is especially passionate about bicycling, running, and backpacking.
felixread more >>

I go 70, 30. (43)

PikachuHola Amigos! I'm Sandra. I like to believe that people are 70 percent good and 30 percent dumb. I'm stickin to that story. Reading this blog might make you want to be good, but probably just dumb.
Pikachuread more >>

jwood38 (26)

jwood38
jwood38read more >>

Dono (15)

DonoDonovan Henderson is editor of NEXTnc.
Donoread more >>

Fun with Nextnc (34)

twitch232

Here at Nextnc we have some characters. Get a sneak peak behind the curtain and find out what amusing antics our staffers get themselves into on a weekly basis.

twitch232read more >>

Ravings, rantings, and gibberish. (36)

DrewWhat is up FoCo? I am a recent college graduate of Minnesota State University Moorhead. After recieving my B.A. in English and Mass Communications this past August I moved down to Colorado. I enjoy long walks on the beach, candlelight dinners, and heavy metal. My hobbies include reading and writing, music, movies, and getting drunk. Some of my favorite contemporary authors include Bret Easton Ellis, Chuck Palahniuk, and Kurt Vonnegut. My top movies are anything directed by Kubrick. I enjoy listening to anything that rocks. Right now I am just trying to get to know Colorado and FoCo better. Mostly in order to find the best drink specials on each day that ends in Y. So if you know where I can get a cheap drunk on, let me know! --Drew
Drewread more >>

A Frustaci Thing (24)

ErinLife's little morsels of inspiration, observation and encouragement seen through the eyes of the Nextnc reporter.
Erinread more >>

All Growed Up (24)

Is Everybody In?

Ms. Giles currently lives in Colorado where she stars in her own private reality show. She writes aphoristic accounts of her life, taken completely out of context, and embellished with characters and situations disguised to resemble something close to interesting.

Is Everybody In?read more >>

Cody Futures (2)

Cody

over and out

Codyread more >>

Good Ole Turlet... (4)

fullboat101My name is Michelle Turley and I'm 28 years old.  I live in Severance with my hubbie, Brandon.  We have 2 dogs and a cat.  We enjoy camping, four-wheeling, and just being in the mountains.  I like to cook, clean (go figure), flea market, and play poker. I have so much to say about poker... 
fullboat101read more >>

the king (2)

the king
the kingread more >>



talk to usterms & conditionsclassifiedsRSS 2.0

(C) 2008 NextNC.com