San Diego Union-Tribune

Ratings plummet for Golden Globe Awards

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The pandemic-era Golden Globe Awards sunk to 6.9 million viewers, down a whopping 64 percent from 2020 and only barely beating the year when a writer’s strike forced NBC to show a news conference announcing the winners.

Last year’s show, in the pre-lockdown era, reached 18.4 million viewers, the Nielsen company said.

Big winners in Sunday’s ceremony were the films “Nomadland” and “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” and the television programs “The Crown” and “The Queen’s Gambit.”

The writer’s strike curtailed the Globes in 2008 and only 6 million people watched the news conference.

Otherwise, this year’s show had by far the smallest audience since NBC began telecastin­g the awards in 1996.

NBC anticipate­d a ratings bloodbath, the only question was how much. Tina Fey and Amy Poehler co-hosted, but on separate coasts: Poehler in the show’s traditiona­l home of the Beverly Hilton and Fey in New York’s Rainbow Room.

For a country sick of Zoom meetings, most of the nominees appeared remotely and there was no red carpet. Some stars dressed for the occasion, others didn’t bother. “Ted Lasso” star Jason Sudeikis wore a sweatshirt for his acceptance speech.

The Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n, which runs the Golden Globes, was reeling from an investigat­ion by the Los Angeles Times that revealed ethical lapses and the news that the organizati­on had no Black members who voted on winners.

Nominated films also suffered from a lack of buzz, in large part because theaters were largely closed. Since film buffs had to navigate streaming services to keep up with what was going on, there was no runaway success to entice viewers.

The shuddering sound you hear at the ratings news is coming from ABC and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which puts on the Oscars. The Academy Awards in 2020 reached a record-low 23.6 million viewers, and that was also pre-lockdown.

The Oscars will be held on April 25, giving organizers hope that with more people vaccinated against COVID-19, it might have more in-person elements.

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