
Nielsen says
U.S. TV viewers broke another record -- increasing their consumption last year.
The media research company said U.S. viewers watched 4 hours and 49 minutes of TV per day for the 2008-2009
season -- when looking at live viewing plus seven days of DVR playback.
That's up four minutes -- or 1.4% -- from the previous season. Nielsen says TV viewing is up 20% from a decade ago.
Why the rise? Nielsen says the gain came from more television sets in homes and more channels available for U.S. viewers. In addition, DVRs have increased the overall TV usage total: live and
playback.
It also appears that viewership improvements came in non-prime-time dayparts.
Prime-time viewership was the same -- at 1 hour and 12 minutes -- in the 2008-2009 season as it
was for the 2007-2008 season. Prime-time viewership has stayed relatively constant since 1991. Average duration back then was also 1 hour and 12 minutes.
Since 1991, prime-time viewing dipped
slowly to one hour and eight minutes between 1996 and 1999, then started to rise. During roughly the same time span, a similar trend occurred with overall day viewing.
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