[opendtv] News: Broadcast Erosion: Many Culprits, Few Solutions
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2007 23:55:42 -0400
http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.san&s=59288&Nid=29733&p=428449
Broadcast Erosion: Many Culprits, Few Solutions
by Wayne Friedman, Wednesday, Apr 25, 2007 8:00 AM ET
THIS SEASON'S SURPRISING DIP IN broadcast ratings has many analysts
digging deeper into the reasons, exploring type of programming, DVR
usage, the Internet and even the usual suspect, cable TV.
Live-only broadcast ratings are down anywhere from 11% to 15%--a
steep fall off from the last three years, when broadcast viewership
has been basically flat versus the seasons before.
Just a handful of network prime-time shows have seen ratings
improvements over a year ago, such as "House" and "America's Funniest
Videos." But the list is long on the other side of the ledger. Shows
like "24," "Desperate Housewives,' "Lost," and "CSI" have taken
sizable dips.
Previously in the 1990s, broadcast viewership regularly dipped 3% to
5% per season--with cable networks getting the benefit. Some analysts
say the huge drop this year isn't all going to cable.
A big key in broadcast's drop could be DVR users, who now represent
14% of all U.S. TV households. Sources say that fully 40% of DVR
users time-shift. That in itself could result in a 5% drop or more,
according to one network executive. "That's huge," says one
executive. "Among DVR users, the highest-rated TV show in every half
hour in prime time is DVR playback. I'm shocked we are not down more."
As for Internet usage, networks said early on that online viewing
didn't affect regular viewership of certain shows--meaning consumers
weren't foregoing the traditional prime-time airing. However, if they
are watching "Desperate Housewives" on their computers in prime time,
"they are not watching something else on TV."
Still, programming on the networks' Internet sites has skyrocketed to
some 250 shows versus a year ago, when only a handful could be viewed
on computers.
Other executives complain about the high number of serial drama
programs, which frequently take long multi-week breaks between
original episodes. That makes viewers apathetic, pushing them to go
elsewhere.
But DVRs and the Internet may not be the only reasons. Jack
Wakshlag, chief research officer for Turner Broadcasting, says when
looking at live-plus seven days of DVR viewership, cable is up 3% in
ratings over a year ago. This compares to some lower broadcast
erosion than just live-only numbers--8% for the six networks, 5% for
the four networks.
If this season appears rougher for the broadcast networks, he says,
it's because it comes after an Olympic year, which typically
witnesses a big hit in ratings. Whatever the reasons, many media
executives are still worried--mostly because broadcast erosion got
such attention this year.
Former Carat USA research executive Rob Frydlewicz, who is president
of RAF, says: "With college TV ratings, engagement and commercial
ratings to consider, some of the day-to-day information is being
ignored. I think it has a lot of do with staffing at the agencies.
There is just a limited amount of work agencies can do."
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