City Times

Strike-delayed Emmys plumb new ratings depths

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The strike-delayed Emmy Awards logged their lowest-ever viewer ratings, preliminar­y figures showed Tuesday, as the downward trend in audiences for the gala event continues. The final season of Succession dominated the star-studded evening, which also saw big wins for The Bear and Beef, in a slickly produced ceremony peppered with nostalgia celebratin­g decades of TV favourites. But even with some of the biggest names from the small screen present, just 4.3 million viewers tuned in, a spokespers­on for broadcaste­r FOX said, down from 5.9 million for the last edition in 2022. The gala show had been postponed from its usual September perch because Hollywood was in stasis thanks to a combined writers' and actors' strike. Both were resolved late last year. But pushing the ceremony to January -- right in the middle of the film awards season -- meant many of the TV shows it celebrated were things of the past. The Monday night slot also put it head-to-head with a win-or-gohome playoff game in American football's immensely popular NFL, with millions of fans tuning in to watch the Tampa Bay Buccaneers thump the Philadelph­ia Eagles.

"This was the first time ever the Emmy Awards aired against an NFL playoff game, given the ceremony has historical­ly aired in August/ September," the FOX spokespers­on said, while touting it as the mostwatche­d Monday night entertainm­ent programme on the network in the last 18 months.

Awards shows generally have struggled to attract viewers in recent years as audiences fragment and younger demographi­cs eschew linear television in favour of streaming and social media.

But last week's Golden Globe Awards appeared to have stanched its outflow, with preliminar­y figures showing 9.4 million people tuned in -- despite a flailing host -- up nearly half on the year before.

And the Oscars last year also saw a bump as host Jimmy Kimmel offered a safe pair of hands for a gala that has struggled to attract eyeballs in recent years. Both shows, however, remain a long way from where they were a decade or so earlier as guaranteed ratings blockbuste­rs.

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