
Coronavirus issues could mean a 60% increase in the amount of
video content watched in U.S. homes, according to Nielsen.
In other parts of the world, one impact of the coronavirus is rising TV usage: In South Korea, TV usage was up 17% in the last week in
February from the second week of that month -- 1.2 million viewers.
In Italy, there was a 6.5% increase in TV viewing and almost 12% more in the Lombardy region of the country during the last
week of February, according to Auditel, the Italian Joint Industry Committee.
Nielsen notes media consumption in the U.S. is already at historical highs, with U.S. consumers 18+ already
spending 3 hours/58 minutes using a smartphone, 3 hours/27 minutes watching liveTV, and 1 hour/41 minutes listening to radio.
They spend 52 minutes using a tablet; 38 minutes were using an
internet-content device; 32 minutes using internet on a computer; 29 minutes watching time-shifted TV; 13 minutes on a gaming console; and 4 minutes with a DVD/Blu-Ray player.
By way of
comparison to other major disruptive events, TV usage climbed 56% in Houston when Hurricane Harvey hit in August 2017.
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