
Nielsen says linear TV usage fell below a 50% share for the
first time in July, while streaming usage continued its growth -- rising to an all-time leading share of 38.7%.
Broadcast at a 20% share and cable at 29.6% sank to new lows, and their combined
results yielded a 49.6% share for linear TV, according to The Gauge Nielsen metric, which measures total day viewing for persons two years of age and older.
Cable slipped under a 30% share for
the first time. A year ago, cable commanded a 34.4% share.
Linear TV had a combined 51.4% total share in June 2023 compared to 57.5% in June 2022 and 63.6% in June 2021.
Streaming
usage rose 10% versus the previous month (June 2023) and was 23% higher vs. a year ago. Nielsen says streaming benefited from new acquired programming during the period, including Netflix's
“Suits” and Disney's "Bluey".
Streaming, combined with the "Other" category, means non-linear TV usage now tops 50%. Nielsen's “Other” category of non-linear TV or
streaming use -- which includes unmeasured video-on-demand (VOD), streaming via a cable set-top box, audio streaming, gaming or DVD playback use -- registered an 11.4% share compared to a 10.9 share
in June.
In July, three streaming services registered their highest usage: YouTube at 9.2%, Netflix with 8.5%, and Amazon Prime Video at 3.4%.
Fox Corp's Tubi TV was the leading FAST
service (Free Advertising Supported Television) -- rising 12.1% to a 1.4% share, Nielsen says. It is now tied with Warner Bros. Discovery's Max.
Tubi also has a higher share than
NBCUniversal's Peacock (1.2%) and Paramount Global's Paramount+ (1.0%).
The “Other Streaming” category -- which includes smaller individual streaming platforms (not virtual
pay TV providers) -- was at 5.1%, unchanged from June 2023.
This story has been updated.
