The Star Malaysia

Youtube hits a viewing high for Tokyo Olympics

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LOS ANGELES: You’ve probably heard that the Tokyo Olympics were a ratings flop for NBC. But by all measures, it was the moststream­ed Olympics ever.

NBC’S traditiona­l prime time TV ratings for the coronaviru­s-delayed Tokyo Summer Olympics were the lowest in the broadcaste­r’s history – the worst since it first started airing the games in 1988. The viewership drops led NBC to negotiate make-goods with advertiser­s for failing to deliver promised audiences.

Overall, NBC’S Tokyo Olympics primetime coverage averaged 15.6 million viewers per evening, a 42% decline from Rio.

Among digital audiences, though, the Olympics were more popular than ever.

During the Tokyo Games, which ran July 23-Aug 8, Youtube viewers watched more than 200 million hours of Olympics-related content (including historical footage of past Olympic Games). According to the video platform, that’s seven times the amount of hours of Olympic Games content Youtube visitors watched during Rio 2016.

In addition, Youtube said, Olympics content was viewed more than 190 million times per day during Tokyo, five times more than the average daily views during Rio five years ago. Some 5,000 hours of Olympics content were uploaded to Youtube from broadcaste­rs around the world, including livestream­s of opening and closing ceremonies, clips of memorable moments and highlights across the 33 Olympic sports.

Meanwhile, NBC Sports touted more than 4.4 billion minutes (73.3 million hours) of Tokyo Olympics content streamed across Nbcolympic­s.com, the NBC Sports app and Peacock – up 25% from 2016 Rio and up 101% versus the 2018 Pyeong Chang Winter Games. And it said the average minute audience of 477,000 viewers in primetime was the best ever for an Olympics.

Nbcunivers­al had been banking on the Olympics to goose usage of Peacock. And, according to the company Peacock registered its highest two weeks of usage during the Summer Games. The Tokyo Olympics helped downloads of the Peacock app to nearly double in July over the month prior, per analytics firm Apptopia.

Amid all the hand-wringing over the drop in TV viewership, NBCU CEO Jeff Shell insisted on Comcast’s earnings call last month that the company would turn a profit on the Tokyo Olympics. NBCU has said it expects Tokyo to top the Us$1.2bil (Rm5.08bil) in ad revenue it pulled in for the Rio Games.

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