The network TV audience for the final night of the Republican National Convention was the highest-rated of the week, but nonetheless failed to match the fourth and final night of the Democratic National Convention by 3.3%.
The four-night average audience for the RNC (19.4 million viewers) was 10.2% lower than …
Naturally, the COVID conventions were less "ready for prime time" than traditional conventions. But I can't help but wonder if the shortfall against 2016 is to some extent due to the extent to which people were tuning in via OTT and other streaming/digital sources that fall outside of the traditional linear TV ratings.
@Joshua Chasin: Makes sense. A number of peopel have implied that, including the President. Do you have any data to support that?
Not yet... but given that Republican viewers skew older and the Democratic viewers skew younger; and given that the cord cutters and cord-nevers skew younger... I don't think this is a point that helps the president.
What's lacking in these Nielsen tallys is the total audience or effective reach---viewed at least five or ten minutes---for each night's festivities on both sides. The average commercial minute ratings---or viewer estimates---are tiny compared to the total population, but the total reach figures might be more indicative as well as the relative amount of time sepnt tuned in---or "holding power"--- of these convention presentations. Even better would be an analysis of tune in variations---as well as tune-outs----for various segments of each show. For example, how did Trump fare while droning on for 65-70 minutes reading from his teleprompter? Did ratings peak, then fall off? Or, maybe, did they rise? If Nielsen is slow to provide such an analysis, perhaps ComScore could do it? Hint!