ACMs play to a loyal country audience to shore up ratings
NASHVILLE, TENN. » As the television industry deals with overall declines in total viewership, organizers behind the Academy of Country Music Awards are focused on keeping the core country music audience coming back each year to watch the genre’s biggest stars party in Las Vegas.
The ACM Awards, airing live Sunday on CBS (8 p.m. Eastern), are relying on two likable co-hosts, tried and true stars of the format, cross-genre collaborations, a party vibe and new music to keep fans tuned in.
“The audience that CBS draws to it on a weekly basis is right dead smack in the wheel of country music,” said Jack Sussman, the network’s executive vice president of special, music and live events. “Our audience is that audience and our job is to grow that above and beyond the core whenever we can.”
After decades of hosting the show in Los Angeles, the ACM Awards moved to Las Vegas in 2003 and several days of concerts, pool parties and songwriter showcases lead up to the televised show, which gives it a loose, fun atmosphere that artists enjoy, said R.A. Clark, an executive producer at dick clark productions. “We are the away game,” he said. “It feels more like a party than an awards show.”
The awards show has had positive ratings swings in recent years. In 2013, the show was watched by 15.5 million people, according to the Nielsen company, outdrawing the rival Country Music Association Awards show held the previous November for the first time. During a special 50th anniversary show in 2015 held at a football stadium in Arlington, Texas, just under 16 million people tuned in and gave the show its best viewership in 17 years.