Los Angeles Times

ABC wears news ratings crown

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio @latimes.com

ABC and NBC claimed ratings crowns for their news programs in the 2016-17 TV season that ended last week, but their kingdom of viewers is still getting smaller.

The average number of viewers watching network evening newscasts each night during the 2016-17 season was 23.1 million, down 4% from the 2015-16 season. In the morning, the three networks’ total was 12.2 million viewers, a decline of 5% from the previous year.

The drop in the overall number of viewers shows how broadcast news is facing the same disruption that has occurred in the rest of the TV business. More choices for viewers means less time with the traditiona­l programs that have been cornerston­es of network TV.

“I don’t think there is any media genre on the planet that is immune to the way technologi­cal change has shifted people’s consumptio­n habits,” said NBC News President Noah Oppenheim.

Still, the networks touted their wins for bragging rights for their morning and evening programs. Nielsen data showed “ABC World News Tonight With David Muir” was the mostwatche­d evening news program with 8.3 million viewers, even with its audience in the 2015-16 season. It breaks a 21-year streak of seasonal wins for “NBC Nightly News,” which had 8.2 million viewers, down 6%.

ABC’s “Good Morning America” finished first among the morning shows for the fifth straight season with 4.4 million viewers, a decline of 7%.

“ABC World News” was down 6% in the 25- to 54year-old demographi­c, while “Good Morning America” lost nearly 12% of that audience.

NBC’s morning program “Today” and “NBC Nightly News” topped ABC’s programs in the 25- to 54-yearold group that advertiser­s seek. But “Today” was down 10% in the demographi­c while “Nightly News” was off 7%.

CBS’ programs finished third both in overall viewers and in the 25- to 54-year-old demographi­c. “CBS This Morning” held up better than its two competitor­s with 3.56 million viewers but declined 11% in the category.

“We’re maintainin­g the highest level that CBS has seen in the morning in 30 years,” said Ryan Kadro, executive producer of “CBS This Morning, which had seen annual audience growth in the previous four TV seasons.

“CBS Evening News,” which is fronted by interim anchor Anthony Mason, finished the season with 6.6 million viewers, a 6% decline. It was off 11% in the 25- to 54year-old demographi­c.

Network broadcast news has also faced an unexpected challenge as cable news ratings surge over their record levels in 2016 during the presidenti­al race.

The expectatio­n was that the ratings for CNN, MSNBC and Fox News would decline in 2017 without the boost of the campaign. But the abundance of news out of the Trump White House has created an ongoing saga that has lifted the ratings and likely pulled viewers away from the broadcast networks.

In 2017, Fox News is up 46% from 6 to 9 a.m., when it airs President Trump’s favorite morning show “Fox & Friends.” CNN’s “New Day” is up 31% while MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” has gained 46% over last season. In the 6 to 7 p.m. hour, the cable news audience has increased by 16%.

NBC News is a beneficiar­y of those cable news gains as it operates MSNBC. Rivals have said the left-leaning politics of the cable channel’s prime-time hosts have turned off conservati­ve viewers from its broadcast programs.

But Oppenheim disagrees. “I’m proud of our associatio­n with MSNBC and viewers are sophistica­ted enough to make a distinctio­n between the news that our correspond­ents are reporting throughout the day and the more analytical programmin­g that appears in prime time,” he said.

Oppenheim also disputes the notion that the evening news broadcast cannot drive the country’s conversati­on about politics as effectivel­y as cable news.

He cited “Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt’s interview in which President Trump said he fired FBI Director James B. Comey because of the bureau’s inquiry into his election campaign’s alleged collusion with the Russian government.

“I still think broadcast news is in a pretty healthy place and is still a relevant part of the conversati­on,” he said.

ABC News President James Goldston noted that “ABC World News Tonight” had as many viewers in the 2016-17 season as it did 10 years ago, despite the increased competitio­n and audience fragmentat­ion.

“It’s an extremely effective aggregator of what’s happened in the world during the day,” Goldston said. “It’s a straight down-the-line broadcast.”

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