Technology Boosts Cable Viewerhip

  • by September 20, 2000
By Anya Khait

Ad-supported cable appears to be flourishing in the face of emerging new TV delivery technologies, according to a Cabletelevision Advertising Bureau analysis of the Nielsen Media Research Collaborative Digital Distribution Analysis of June 2000.

CAB reports primetime viewing to ad-supported cable has accelerated in digital-wired, direct broadcast satellite and alternative delivery system (ADS) households compared to all of the nation's TV homes. Ad-supported cable's average primetime 24 rating/44 share in total U.S. households climbed to a 27 rating/48 share in ADS homes, 29 rating/51 share in DBS homes and 32 rating/50 share in digital-wired cable homes. CAB reports that the opposite is true for primetime viewing to broadcast network affiliates, independents and PBS. Versus an average total U.S. primetime 34 rating/61 share, viewing to broadcast TV slipped to a 21 rating/38 share in DBS households, 24 rating/42 share in ADS households and 29 rating/47 share in digital-wired cable homes. The CAB also reports that the just completed 1999/2000 TV season was a year of continued overall viewership growth for ad-supported cable TV. According to CAB analysis of Nielsen data for the 52-week period from 9/20/99-9/17/00, ad-supported cable's average primetime U.S. household delivery climbed by more than 1.1 million homes (+4.9%) versus the same period a year ago, and rating and share each rose by almost a point (+3% and +2% respectively). On a total day basis for the full season, CAB reports that ad-supported cable gained almost one million households (+7.9%), approximately one rating point (6.4%) and almost two share points (+4.7%). Ad-supported cable's primetime and total day viewership levels are new highs for the medium for a full season. In contrast, according to the CAB, share of viewing to ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX declined in both primetime (-0.8%) and total day (-3.1%) compared to the previous full season. Individually, only ABC posted audience increases for the total 52 weeks, with CBS, NBC and FOX recording losses in delivery, rating and share.

advertisement

advertisement

- MediaPost Staff Reporter Anya Khait may be reached at anya@mediapost.com

Next story loading loading..