The Future Of Television. Dissected Daily.
Just How Much Did Election Coverage Dominate TV Viewership?
Inscape’s ranking of the most-watched programs for Nov. 4-10 is overwhelmingly news-focused, with a bit of sports — and Yellowstone — thrown in.
TV Program Ranking: Olympics Dominates Watch-Time
Coverage of the 2024 Paris games captured a 12.47% viewership share across July 22-28, per Inscape.
RNC Coverage, Open Championship Lead TV Watch-Time
Across various networks, coverage of the RNC captured a combined viewership share of 2.96%, per Inscape.
TV By the Numbers: CFP National Championship, NFL’s Wild Card Weekend
A look at the most-watched programming for January 8-14, with insights from Inscape.
CNN To Launch On Max, Syndication Market In Flux
Why CNN Max is not going to cannibalize CNN OG (but which one will be the alpha) and why old players are getting out and new players are getting in to the daytime syndication game.
4 Months. 4 Indictments. How Much Do Cable News Viewers Still Care?
So far, arraignment days have seen more cable news tune-in than indictment days, per Inscape.
Week In Review: Licht Is Nicht, Amazon May Be Launching An Ad-Supported Tier
Why getting rid of Chris Licht doesn’t really solve any of CNN’s meta issues and why Google and Meta should be very afraid of an ad-supported Amazon Prime.
Disruption Is A Bitch, WBD Stops The Bleeding But WTF CNN?
Streaming brings changes to the television industry that no amount of protesting can remedy, WBD gets streaming into the black but CNN remains a problem.
Fox News, CNN And The Future Of Cable News, Netflix’s Password Sharing Crackdown Dilemma
The future of cable news is streaming. We examine what that might look like, while offering Netflix some tips on handling their upcoming password sharing crackdown.
Nielsen Gets Bought, CNN+ Launches, But Only On Amazon and Apple
How the sale of Nielsen will affect the TV measurement industry and what to make of CNN+’s future prospects.
As Big Names Exit, Cable News Operations Grapple With Streaming Future
The Big Three cable news networks have all seen big names depart in the past two weeks, part of a crucial period of realignment as they prepare to transition to their streaming future. And the questions are just as plentiful for local broadcast news organizations too.