Business Standard

COVID-19 IMPACT: TV NEWS VIEWERSHIP GROWS 298%

37 per cent jump in weekly viewing minutes; Ramayana top-rated weekend show

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Viewers in India spent more time in front of their television sets during the first full week of the lockdown between March 20 and 27, data from the Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC), released on Thursday shows, pointing to the seminal trend of the idiot box being a key source of entertainm­ent and news to many in the country.

This comes despite time spent on smartphone­s growing 12 per cent in the week under review versus the period prior to the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) outbreak. Smartphone users spent almost 3.8 hours daily on their devices during the lockdown, but this number pales in comparison to television viewership.

Almost 622 million viewers watched TV daily for four hours and 39 minutes, a jump of 23 per cent over the weeks prior to the Covid-19 outbreak, with weekly viewing minutes touching 1.2 trillion, a jump of 37 per cent over the previous period.

“This is the highest in terms of TV viewing for any period, with average daily viewers growing by 62 million,” Sunil Lulla, chief executive officer, BARC India, said.

News viewership was the biggest gainer during the first full week of lockdown, growing 298 per cent versus the pre-covid period between January 11 and 31.

Ramayana, whose rerun has begun on Doordarsha­n, was the top-rated show on Saturday and Sunday, pushing Hindi general entertainm­ent channel (GEC) viewership by 3 per cent, BARC data shows.

Movies grew by 56 per cent, viewership of kids' entertainm­ent increased 39 per cent, infotainme­nt grew by 63 per cent, youth and lifestyle entertainm­ent grew by 30 per cent and 20 per cent each, data from the body shows.

Interestin­gly, Lulla said non-prime time viewership was growing during the lockdown, with a surge of 71 per cent seen in the period under review at an all-India level, while Hindi-speaking markets saw a bigger peak, growing 83 per cent at the same time.

GEC viewership in non-prime time, for instance, grew 32 per cent, while news viewership in non-prime time grew 200 per cent and kids' entertainm­ent grew 58 per cent, BARC data shows.

Total TV consumptio­n in Hindispeak­ing markets grew 41 per cent, with male viewership growing 41 per cent and female viewership growing 34 per cent,

data from the body shows.

Lulla said share of news in total TV viewership touched 21 per cent during the lockdown period versus 7 per cent in the weeks prior to the outbreak. Share of movies to total viewership touched 26 per cent versus 23 per cent earlier.

Advertisin­g has also surged on television, since more people are spending time on the medium. Overall advertisin­g volume on TV grew 15 per cent in the period under review, with commercial time growing 24 per cent, 16 per cent, and 13 per cent on news, movies, and general entertainm­ent, respective­ly.

Categories that advertised the most included food and beverages, services, and banking and financial sectors.

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