Millions Of TV Viewers Go Dark, Few Complain

Suppose someone pulled the plug and a couple of million people didn't care. That may be what the TV industry is discovering nearly a week after the U.S. broadcast industry converted from analog to digital broadcasting. Days after their analog TV signals went dark, 2.2% of U.S. households still haven't bothered to hook up to digital reception, according to estimates released Wednesday by Nielsen Co.

Even more troubling, the estimates are based on households in Nielsen's national and local TV ratings panels, which means that more than 2% of Nielsen's panel is reporting zero TV usage in the days following the conversion.

The broadcast industry had expected that the vast majority of analog hold-outs would scramble to convert to digital at the 11th hour, or after their TV sets went dark, but that does not appear to be the case, as a survey of the nation's TV stations by the National Association of Broadcasters reports only "moderate" call volume from viewers to local stations seeking help of information about receiving their digital broadcast signals.

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"The call volume is considerably low given that the transition impacts an estimated 14 million over-the-air households in markets with at least one station going all-digital," the NAB said in late Friday, the day analog broadcast signals ceased to transmit.

Moreover, most of the calls received by local broadcasters were among those that had already prepared for the digital transition, but simply needed assistance in scanning digital channels with their new equipment.

"A relatively small percentage of viewers so far have needed assistance given the large number of broadcast-only households affected during the today's transition," noted Jonathan Collegio, vice president for digital television at NAB. "Importantly, much of the assistance sought by viewers has been on the relatively minor issue of scanning and re-scanning converter boxes and digital TV sets."

The NAB has not released new data on the number of households that have gone dark, but the new Nielsen data suggests millions of TV viewers either don't care, or are still perplexed about how to hook up to digital broadcast despite billions of dollars invested by the broadcast TV industry and the U.S. government to help educate them.

3 comments about "Millions Of TV Viewers Go Dark, Few Complain".
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  1. Virginia Suhr from Greenstone/Fontana, June 18, 2009 at 9 a.m.

    In this economy, there are many people who cannot afford cable television or other ways to get the digital signals.

  2. William Hughes from Arnold Aerospace, June 18, 2009 at 9:04 a.m.

    Perhaps these people have done what I've done, and now get their News and Information via the very medium I'm posting this on (The Internet for those of you in Rio Linda!), and their Entertainment from other sources, such as DVDs.

  3. Gary Belis from TVB, June 18, 2009 at 11:26 a.m.

    Joe, this report represents data gathered from June 8 - June 14, meaning five of seven days were BEFORE the turnoff. The next set of Nielsen numbers will be all-post-June 12, and will be the one to watch.

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