"Oscars Ratings Drop 10 Percent From 2005"
http://apnews.myway.com//article/20060306/D8G663F80.html
And now the question: Why is this even news anymore? Thanks to a poster who shall remain nameless, we know ratings for the Winter Olympics were down (even if we didn't really care to know). Ratings have also been in significant flux for the MLB playoffs/World Series, The NBA playoffs & Finals, Monday Night Football, The Emmys, Grammys, so on and so forth.
(We can always count on Mike Tirico asking David Stern about this come Finals time...I don't remember an ABC telecast of the Finals where it wasn't asked.)
Of course the media buyers live and die by this information, but should ratings of these big events really be all that newsworthy anymore? Easily more choices, not only from television, but from other media forms as well. I can even imagine the Super Bowl losing a touch of its dominance with new cable efforts at counterprogramming.
Should we really be surprised that these events aren't the mega-draws they once were? It just seems like the bigger hoopla that's made about ratings is what causes the networks to implement more gimmicks and flash in hopes of bringing the scores up, often with little success or viewers wondering what they just saw. Thoughts?<P ID="signature">______________
Let us live so that 100 years from now, someone may be proud of us.</P>
http://apnews.myway.com//article/20060306/D8G663F80.html
And now the question: Why is this even news anymore? Thanks to a poster who shall remain nameless, we know ratings for the Winter Olympics were down (even if we didn't really care to know). Ratings have also been in significant flux for the MLB playoffs/World Series, The NBA playoffs & Finals, Monday Night Football, The Emmys, Grammys, so on and so forth.
(We can always count on Mike Tirico asking David Stern about this come Finals time...I don't remember an ABC telecast of the Finals where it wasn't asked.)
Of course the media buyers live and die by this information, but should ratings of these big events really be all that newsworthy anymore? Easily more choices, not only from television, but from other media forms as well. I can even imagine the Super Bowl losing a touch of its dominance with new cable efforts at counterprogramming.
Should we really be surprised that these events aren't the mega-draws they once were? It just seems like the bigger hoopla that's made about ratings is what causes the networks to implement more gimmicks and flash in hopes of bringing the scores up, often with little success or viewers wondering what they just saw. Thoughts?<P ID="signature">______________
Let us live so that 100 years from now, someone may be proud of us.</P>