The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TV ratings for Games exceeding NBC’s expectatio­ns

-

NEWYORK— While gold medals aren’t awarded a quarter of the way into a race, NBC says it is encouraged by how the viewing public has responded to the Winter Olympics from South Korea.

NBC Sports Chairman Mark Lazarus said Tuesday that ratings are exceeding the guarantees that NBC gave to its advertiser­s, which has enabled the network to sell even more commercial time. NBC said before the Games it had sold $900 million in advertisin­g.

Through five days, the Nielsen company said NBC’s prime-time Olympics viewership is down 6 percent from the 2014 games in Sochi.

This year’s numbers include prime-time programmin­g on the NBCSN cable network and digital streaming, which adds about 2 million viewers each night to the 22 million who watch on the broadcast network.

Those extra options weren’t available four years ago.

“The Olympics continue to defy media gravity,” Lazarus said.

While the viewership is down, it hasn’t dropped as much as the convention­al television audience. For example, the 10 most popular programs on TV this season average 11.2 million, or 22 percent lower than the 14.26 million for the most popular programs in 201314, the Nielsen company said.

While Lazarus offered no specifics, he said viewing in some other parts of the day is actually up from Sochi.

Adam Schwartz, an analyst for the ad buying firm Horizon Media, said he’s been pleasantly surprised by the early ratings.

“I definitely think they’ve exceeded expectatio­ns given the current climate,” Schwartz said.

A network generally holds back commercial time for “make goods” in case the ratings don’t hit a confidenti­al target promised to advertiser­s. That means the advertiser­s get extra time for free.

Since the ratings have exceeded the target — Lazarus wouldn’t reveal what it is — so far “make goods” won’t be necessary and NBC can take some of that time set aside and sell it.

NBC has said it expects to make money on the games, for which it paid a $963 million rights fee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States