[opendtv] As Internet takes hold, broadcast news loses 1 million viewers each year
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 08:16:07 -0400
Via Broadcast Engineering's Behind the Headlines e-newsletter
http://broadcastengineering.com/news/news-loses-1million-viewer-0820/?r=1
As Internet takes hold, broadcast news loses 1 million viewers each year
Aug 20, 2007 11:27 AM
While it's no secret that the Internet is rapidly becoming a major
new distribution outlet for news, a Harvard study documents the rapid
shift in the habits of the news audience. At greatest risk are local
newspapers, with small and mid-size television stations not faring
much better.
The new research, released last week by the Joan Shorenstein Center
on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University's John
F. Kennedy School of Government, focused on 160 Web sites over a
one-year period.
The Web sites of national television networks, such as CNN, ABC, CBS,
NBC, MSNBC and Fox, experienced increased traffic during the past
year - more than a 30 percent increase on average. However, the Web
sites of local commercial television and radio stations, while also
making some gains, grew at a slower pace than the brand name media
sites.
The research found that while the Web sites of nationally known
newspapers like the "New York Times," "Washington Post" and "USA
Today" experienced 10 percent gains, most newspaper Web outlets lost
audience share.
The largest gains in audience, however, occurred among nontraditional
news providers. The sites of search engines, service providers,
aggregators and bloggers grew faster on average than the sites of
traditional news providers, whether print, broadcast, or cable.
The report said the sites of Google, Yahoo, AOL and MSN, along with
newsvine.com, topix.net, digg.com and reddit.com, saw large increases
in traffic during the past year.
In giving a historical perspective to the current audience shift, the
study noted that in 1963, when the television networks significantly
expanded their nightly newscasts and reporting resources, it resulted
in the eventual death of most of the nation's 1400 afternoon
newspapers. At peak, 80 percent of dinner-hour viewers watched TV
news.
Network news, however, began losing that massive audience with the
rise of cable in the 1980s. Now, the report said, cable is losing its
news audience. In 2006, cable's daytime ratings dropped by 11 percent
while its prime-time news audience fell by 12 percent.
"The process that the economist Joseph Schumpeter labeled 'creative
destruction' is once again reshaping the news system," the report
said. "This time, the technological disruption is Internet- based
news. As online use has increased, the audiences of older media have
declined. In the past year alone, newspaper circulation has fallen by
three percent, broadcast news has lost a million viewers, and local
TV news ratings have dropped by more than five percent."
To download the full report, visit www.shorensteincenter.org.
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