On Sep 28, 2016, at 10:35 PM, Manfredi, Albert E <albert.e.manfredi@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Craig wrote:
If you go back to the post you linked to above, it talks about the
same "qualified" studies you tried to use earlier in this thread.
That post did discuss a study about DVR usage for time shifting,
which tells us that when you add DVR time shifting of live linear
content to live viewing, about 80% of all TV viewing originates
with the live linear networks delivered by MVPD services.
So, the Business Insider article is here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/how-much-tv-do-americans-watch-2016-6
and it references the Nielsen report I show above.
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/next-tv/28-tv-viewing-done-streaming/142380
U
28% of TV Viewing Done Via Streaming
Jul 08 2015
Streaming is becoming a very big deal. According to a new study, 28% of all
TV viewing is now done via digital streaming.
Research company GfK MRI says that accessing subscription or free online
platforms using a personal computer or mobile device accounts for 16% of time
spent with TV content. Streaming via a connected TV set accounts for another
9% and using other devices, including game consoles, covers around 3%.
The study found that 41% of TV viewers are what GfK MRI calls "Digital
Enthusiasts" who have a traditional pay-TV subscription plus three streaming
TV services.
The study is part of GfK MRI's "The Future of TV" series, which found the
viewers still like old-fashioned TV viewing. The most popular way to watch TV
remains live when first broadcast, and watching live accounts for 39% of time
spent with TV content.