Over the last decade, we have seen an explosion of new original TV content. One of the biggest categories is awards shows.
While these are once-a-year efforts, they still offer big overall
advertising revenue gains -- and plenty of extra off-air marketing opportunities that ongoing unscripted, scripted entertainment and sports TV programming don’t have.
Advertisers have come
running. Even in recent years, the Academy Awards, Emmys, Grammys and Golden Globes events provided brand-safe, highly viewable consumer engagement.
In 2020, total Oscar ad revenue, per
Kantar, was $150 million for one three-hour event in late February. That's before the pandemic upended the entertainment business.
Until recently, most of the shows have been top
individual TV programs each year. But now, not so much.
But, as we have seen in recent years -- and especially with the pandemic -- there has been a sharp decline in interest. In part, all this
collided with a glut of premium entertainment.
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The recent Oscar broadcast took a massive hit, down 60% to 9.8 million viewers from 23.6 million in 2020. This 20 million plus viewer level had
been relatively constant over the last few years.
Again, the pandemic contributed to changing circumstances. Many events -- with virtual or with limited live audiences -- revealed a lower level
of excitement.
Still, in part, advertisers continue to hang around. The Oscars got
an estimated $2.1 million for a 30-second commercial this year, according to Kantar -- a trend that has steadily risen over the past years. ABC regular sells out its Oscar advertising
inventory.
Some would say the Oscar decline comes from not highlighting big box office movies, but the reality that many niche, independent, lower-box office movies take home trophies. That
might draw a smaller viewership.
There is also an issue of viewer fatigue.
Now, diversity issues keep plaguing some shows, though the Oscars curtailed some criticism by honoring more
women/minorities with awards/nominations.
That was less so for the Golden Globes -- at least for
its internal operations. It had one of the fastest-growing awards shows. Still, among its 87 voting members, not one is black. And there hasn’t been one since 1987!
All that put the kibosh
on the show recently. NBCUniversal won't air the Globes in 2022. It has a contract to run the event through 2026.
What does this mean for other awards shows? Now, they too have to contend with
content popularity, potential diversity (in front and behind the camera) and creative show issues.
And less we forget, these shows also have to navigate a growing streaming/on-demand world --
one with less live, linear TV content, which has helped sustain its ongoing financial health.
Solving these issues will take some effort. Maybe they deserve an award for it.