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NEW YORK: The surest sign of how the coronavirus shutdown has devastated the television industry is the fourth-place finish of CBS in what was nominally the first week of a new fall season.
The network’s viewership was down a whopping 61% from the premiere week last year, the Nielsen company said.
CBS has essentially been America’s favorite television network for two decades. But that success was built primarily on its scripted dramas and comedies, particularly crime procedurals like NCIS. The shutdown in TV production because of the pandemic means CBS is struggling to cobble together a competitive schedule each week.
ABC, NBC and Fox were all down from last year, too. But between pro football and the return of some popular unscripted shows like The Masked Singer and Dancing With the Stars, they weren’t hurt as much as CBS. Fox’s animated series, including the ageless The Simpsons, are also back.
Overall television viewing was down 13% compared to the same week last year, with the decline more pronounced among younger viewers, Nielsen said.
Some scripted series have resumed production and are expected to gradually return to the air. CBS’ FBI will start fresh episodes on Oct. 6, for example, with NBC’s This is Us due back Oct. 27.
Technically, CBS was actually the fifth-place network last week, with Fox News Channel reaching more viewers in prime time. Fox News recorded an important milestone as the first cable network to beat all of the broadcast networks in viewership over a three-month period, Nielsen said. That’s testament to the popularity of Fox’s political programming and the summer cupboard being barren for the broadcasters.
NBC led the season-opening week, averaging 5.5 million viewers in prime time. Fox had 3.9 million, ABC had 3.8 million, CBS had 2.7 million, Univision had 1.14 million, Ion Television had 1.11 million, Telemundo had 1 million and the CW had 570,000.
Fox News Channel dominated the cable networks, averaging 3.73 million. ESPN had 2.91 million, MSNBC had 1.9 million, TNT had 1.82 million and CNN had 1.2 million.
Nielsen has also begun releasing a list of the top shows on streaming services, based on the total number of minutes watched, although the timing lags behind the TV ratings. For the last week of August, Nielsen said Netflix’s Lucifer was the most popular streamed show, with 2 million minutes watched, followed by Cobra Kai and reruns of The Office.
ABC’s World News Tonight won the evening news ratings race, averaging 8.4 million viewers for the week. NBC’s Nightly News had 7 million and the CBS Evening News had 5.1 million.
For the week of Sept. 21-27, the top 20 shows, their networks and viewership:
1. NFL Football: Green Bay at New Orleans, NBC, 17.8 million.
2. NFL Football: New Orleans at Las Vegas, ABC and ESPN, 15.96 million.
3. NFL Post-Game, Fox 14.44 million.
4. NFL Pre-Kick, NBC, 12.07 million.
5. 60 Minutes, CBS, 7.56 million.
6. Football Night in America, Part 3, NBC, 6.7 million.
7. America’s Got Talent (Wednesday, 9 p.m.), NBC, 6.57 million.
8. America’s Got Talent (Tuesday), NBC, 6.16 million.
9. Dancing With the Stars, ABC, 6.1 million.
10. The Masked Singer, Fox, 5.92 million.
11. Monday Night Kickoff, ABC, 5.62 million.
12. America’s Got Talent (Wednesday, 8 p.m.), NBC, 5.48 million.
13. NFL Football: Miami at Jacksonville, NFL Network, 5.43 million.
14. Celebrity Family Feud, ABC, 5.27 million.
15. NBA Playoffs: Denver vs. L.A. Lakers (Tuesday), TNT, 4.89 million.
16. Tucker Carlson Tonight (Wednesday), Fox News, 4.87 million.
17. NBA Playoffs: Denver vs. L.A. Lakers (Saturday), TNT, 4.79 million.
18. Tucker Carlson Tonight (Monday), Fox News, 4.76 million.
19. Tucker Carlson Tonight (Thursday), Fox News, 4.75 million.
20. Tucker Carlson Tonight (Tuesday), Fox News, 4.74 million.
Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor
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