
While broadcast viewing got its usual boost in January
from heavy NFL sports viewing, on a year-over-year basis it was down 6% from January 2022, according to Nielsen’s Gauge, which measures total day viewing by persons two years of age and
up.
Broadcast content rose 2.1% in January from December, which gave it a 24.9% share.
Streaming maintained its industry-leading dominant 38.1% share -- up 1.2% from December. A
year ago, in January 2022, streaming had a 28.9% share. That means year-over-year, time spent watching streaming content grew 31.8%.
YouTube maintained its leading position as the top
individual streaming platform with a 8.6% share, followed by Netflix with 7.5%; Hulu, 3.5%; Amazon Prime Video, 2.9%; Disney+ 1.7%; Peacock, 1.0% and Pluto TV with 0.8%.
Disney+ dropped nearly
10% in viewing as a result of comparisons to December, when it benefited from holiday-film consumer viewing.
Nielsen says virtual pay TV provider YouTube TV now makes up nearly 15% of total
YouTube viewing, while Hulu Live, another virtual pay TV provider, was 9% of total Hulu’s share.
Cable TV stayed in second place to streaming with a 30.4% share -- virtually flat with
December viewing.
Cable TV news, which continues to be the most watched of all content on cable platforms, slipped 4% month to month.
Nielsen says the biggest factor for cable was
lower viewing of feature films -- down nearly 20%, on cable channels in January in comparison to the high holiday viewing of films in November and December.