Awards Shows Falter as Sports Strengthen Their Grip on Ratings
The Tonys’ slippage continued a tough year for the latest round of awards shows.
The Oscars, the biggest entertainment show on television, may have been hurt by a slate of nominees lacking major box-office appeal: Best Picture went to Bird Man, which took home just $37 million at U.S. theaters in 2014. The 87th Academy Awards, hosted by Neil Patrick Harris, who stripped to his skivvies at one point, garnered 36.6 million watchers for ABC on Feb. 22, down 16% from 43.7 million in 2014, the franchise’s biggest audience in a decade. Among Madison Avenue’s preferred 18-49 demo, the rating declined 18%, to a 10.8 rating from 13.1 for the 2014 show, hosted by Ellen DeGeneres.
The 57th-annual Grammys on CBS on Feb. 8 averaged 25.3 million viewers, off 11% from 28.4 million for the 2014 show; among adults 18-49, the rating was down 14%, to 8.5. Hosted by LL Cool J, the performance-driven show aired on delay in the Pacific time zone. The numbers also were hurt by AMC’s midseason return of The Walking Dead’s fifth campaign and the debut of Breaking Bad spinoff Better Call Saul, which averaged 15.6 million and 6.9 million viewers, respectively.
The Golden Globes’ third and final pairing of the co-hosting team of Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, attracted an audience of 19.3 million for NBC on Jan. 11, down 7% from 20.9 million in 2014. Among adults 18-49, the 72nd version of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s party and statuefest declined 11% to a 5.8 rating.
The 66th Annual Primetime Emmys, hosted by Seth Meyers, averaged 15.6 million viewers for NBC on Aug. 25, 2014. That was the franchise’s second-best delivery in eight years, even though the show aired on a Monday in late August. However, it was off 12% from the 17.8 million watchers on CBS in 2013, when the 65th edition ran in its traditional September slot and benefited from an NFL lead-in, though squared off against TV’s biggest primetime show, NBC’s Sunday Night Football.
The 2014 Video Music Awards averaged 8.3 million viewers on Aug. 24, 2014, for MTV, down 18% from 10.1 million in 2013, when Miley Cyrus and Robin Thicke played provocateur. The 2014 edition, which featured plenty of twerking of its own from Nicki Minaj, tallied 10.3 million viewers when simulcasts on MTV2, VH1, and Logo were also tabulated. All told, the Moonman show amassed an audience of 13.7 million over the course of the night.
Next up: the ESPYs, which last summer bucked the downward trend. The July 16, 2014, edition, hosted by Drake, was simulcast on ESPN and ESPN2 and saw a 13% rise in viewership, to 2.55 million, and a 31% jump among males 18-34, to 2.1. Presumably, the move to broadcast sibling ABC on July 15 at 8 p.m. ET from the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles will kick the 23rd edition of the sports-award show up a few Nielsen notches. The show will be hosted by Joel McHale and will likely benefit from Caitlyn (nee Bruce) Jenner’s being honored with the Arthur Ashe Courage Award.