Average Age of Viewers Hits 50 as More Turn To Web
by Ravi Somaiya
The
Guardian
Given a diet
of US imports such as Gossip
Girl, Friends,
and Lost
you'd be forgiven for thinking that most American television viewers
were about 20. But figures this week have revealed that the average
age of those watching TV in the US has tipped 50 for the first time.
A study of
the big five broadcast networks from research firm Magna Global
shows that the average viewer no longer falls within the coveted
1849 demographic so sought after by advertisers. The median
age of the population in the US is 38. For the 2007/08 seasons CBS
attracted an average age of 54, ABC pulled in the 50-year-olds,
NBC managed 49, Fox's viewers were a younger-still 44 and The CW
(which airs Gossip Girl and Smallville) comes out at 34. If you
factor in viewings on DVRs, the average age drops by a year in most
cases, though that is still higher than it's ever been.
The youngest
show on CBS was Big Brother (45) while the oldest was news
and investigations flagship 60 Minutes (60). ABC varied from
UK import Supernanny
(41), to police drama Women's
Murder Club (57); Fox swung from Family
Guy and American
Dad (29) to legal drama Canterbury's
Law; and The CW from teen drama One Tree Hill (26)
to family drama Life Is Wild (45). NBC's youngest-viewing
show was Scrubs
(34) and its oldest was the detective show Monk
(58).
It doesn't
take a detective to deduce that older viewers like crime dramas
which goes some way to explain the success of Monk,
an obsessive-compulsive sleuth in San Francisco. The show has consistently
pulled in high viewing figures both on ABC where it originated
and now on cable network USA without either being a huge
critical success or generating much buzz. That its average viewer
is 58, making it the oldest-skewing non-news show out there, may
go some way towards explaining the success of a show that got almost
no press and never set internet chatrooms ablaze.
The cable networks
vary more widely. Ultra-conservative Fox News maintains a median
age of 65 across prime-time and daytime programming. The Golf Channel,
other news networks and TV-movie showcase the Hallmark Channel are
also greyer than average, while the kids' network Nickelodeon unsurprisingly
mostly attracts 10-year-olds.
So where have
the young people, except those kids watching SpongeBob
Squarepants, gone? That the average viewing age drops when
DVR figures are taken into account gives some indication that they
are embracing new technology and setting their own schedules. Many
also take advantage of streaming repeats online. The
Hills, MTV's flagship reality show, got an average of 3.7
million viewers for new episodes but factor in DVR figures,
and you add another million. In addition, episodes and clips have
been streamed 32m times online. In fact The CW stopped offering
an online repeat for Gossip Girl in order to try to boost
viewing figures. The network still, however, offers episodes for
sale on iTunes, where the latest is regularly number one
perhaps because 12- to 17-year-olds are twice as likely to use Apple's
media-buying hub as any other age group.
Read
the rest of the article
August
17, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 The Guardian
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