HDTV drives increase in sports viewers

Dec 12, 2008 8:34 AM

    
Nielsen says the most popular form of HDTV programming in the United States is sports.

Nielsen says the most popular form of HDTV programming in the United States is sports.

In the years when the benefits of HDTV were being sold to the public, one of the chief beneficiaries was to be sports. The promoters argued that watching sports programming in HD would be one of the new medium’s driving forces.

Apparently, they were right. Last week, Nielsen released a new study calling 2008 a banner year in sports media. Among the highlights were the Olympics, the most-watched global event in history; the most-watched Super Bowl; and the most-watched cable broadcast of all time — the Cowboys-Eagles “Monday Night Football” game, with 18.6 million viewers.

The year scored other most-watched highlights, including baseball on cable (Red Sox-Rays in ALCS Game 7) and the most-watched cable golf program (Tiger Woods vs. Rocco Mediate at the U.S. Open playoff).

Nielsen said that at least 22 percent of U.S. households now get HDTV — up from 10 percent in September 2007 — and its ratings for TV sports are 20 percent higher than in the United States overall. The most popular form of HDTV programming is sports commentary, the rating service found.

Nielsen, which has been analyzing TV viewing since the 1950s, said U.S. TV usage is at an all-time high. The average American watches about 142 TV hours a month — compared to about 27 hours online — with 31 percent of in-home Internet use taking place while the viewer is also watching television.

Each screen feeds the other: ESPN.com users spend 27 percent more time watching ESPN on television than those who only absorb ESPN via TV, Nielsen found.

Sports leagues and news channels produce vast amounts of data, news and highlights that can fill multiple media outlets. The online platform is particularly important in empowering and engaging the sports fan. Nielsen said more than 75 million people visited sports Web sites in October alone.

Mobile use is also changing sports coverage. According to Nielsen Mobile, 10.6 million U.S. mobile subscribers accessed sports content over mobile phones in August 2008. ESPN’s site alone was accessed by 6.3 million subscribers. ESPN is also the second most-watched mobile video channel among subscriber-viewers, second only to NBC.

Nielsen Mobile estimates that in the second quarter of 2008 more than 400,000 Verizon and AT&T subscribers received ESPN alerts over text message and 200,000 received MLB alerts as fans tried to stay tuned to their favorite teams — both real and fantasy.




Want to use this article?
Click here for options!
Get Copyright Clearance

Share this article

blog comments powered by Disqus

 

Current Issue

Online captioning compliance

May 2012

The FCC has issued captioning requirements for all online video. Learn how to meet the requirements of the new rules and how to automate the technical process.

Read More articles...

Related Newsletter

Transition to Digital
Provides readers with weekly timely updates on FCC actions, industry news, and station build-out schedules.

Related Posts


Confused about the terminology in an article? Find definitions of common terms and abbreviations in Broadcast Engineering's Glossary.

 


Video Compression, Editing and Displays

Video Compression, Editing and Displays

Video compression, editing and displays is an in-depth tutorial on MPEG compression technology, editing MPEG content and evaluating color video monitors written by long-time video expert, trainer and writer Steve Mullen, Ph. D.

File Based Technology and Workflow

File Based Technology and Workflow

File-based technologies have replaced video tape methods for a majority of production and broadcast operations. The worlds of AV and IT are coalescing to create new methods and workflows for media

Sound Off Podcasts

 

Broadcast Engineering Digital Reference Guide

Browse Back Issues

Back to Top