Nothing beats football.
That’s not an opinion. That’s a fact. When it comes to TV, football remains king.
Check out these numbers. Sunday’s 1 p.m. Eastern game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Cincinnati Bengals averaged 17.38 million viewers. That many haven’t watched CBS’s early-window Week 1 game since the NFL returned to the network in 1998.
Over on Fox, an average of 18.54 million viewers watched the Green Bay Packer and Minnesota Vikings in the late afternoon slot. That’s a 12% increase over a year ago.
NBC’s “Sunday Night Football” is routinely the most watched program on TV every year. On Sunday, the Tom Brady-led Tampa Bay Bucs took on America’s team, the Dallas Cowboys, and even though the game was a dog (the Bucs won 19-3), it averaged 25.1 million viewers. That’s the best opening week for “SNF” since 2015.
But here’s the real nitty gritty: Of the top 10 most-watched shows over the past week, nine were either NFL games or NFL pregame or postgame shows, according to Nielsen. The only non-NFL show was at No. 8 — “60 Minutes,” which, by the way, had the NFL as a lead-in.
The Athletic’s Bill Shea wrote, “What does it all mean? The NFL numbers continue to be incredible in light of the continued roiled state of the TV industry, which is dealing with overall viewership declines as tens of millions of U.S. homes drop cable in favor of streaming or even nothing at all. The pandemic accelerated some of the industry trends, yet the NFL remains one of the lesser-affected TV properties.”
The numbers above are straight over-the-air broadcast numbers. Viewership and interest in the NFL are much, much higher when you factor in the NFL’s “Red Zone” channel — which, for seven hours, constantly shifts from one game to another and isn’t measured by Nielsen.
Shea wrote, “… the NFL’s stranglehold on American TV is astounding.”
Meanwhile, ESPN finally started getting a return on its huge investment for “Monday Night Football.” Joe Buck and Troy Aikman, who were lured away from Fox Sports for a combined $165 million over the next five years, called their first regular season game for ESPN on Monday night. It turned out to be a decent game with a weird finish as the Seattle Seahawks beat the Denver Broncos and former Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson.
Did it feel like a big game with two of the best announcers in the business? Actually, yeah it did.
The Athletic’s Richard Deitsch agreed, writing, “Did it feel bigger? I think it did, but much of that was my own anticipation of Buck and Aikman moving to ESPN.”
The ratings for the game were huge. ESPN reported that 19.85 million tuned in to the main broadcast, making it the most-watched “Monday Night Football” game since 2009 and the third-most watched in the ESPN era, which goes back to 2006 and spans more than 270 games.
In addition, the ManningCast on ESPN2 featuring former QB brothers Peyton and Eli Manning also had a solid number of 1.5 million viewers.
As the year goes along, it will be interesting to see if the Buck-Aikman booth will take viewers away from the Mannings. My theory is that if your favorite team is playing on “Monday Night Football,” you might be more inclined to watch the main broadcast. But if your team is not in the game, you might be more willing to switch over to the Mannings.
To be clear, the main broadcast has far superior TV numbers. Last year’s ManningCast drew an average of 1.58 million viewers per game. The main “MNF” broadcast averaged 14.18 million viewers over 19 regular-season games.
Sports Illustrated’s Jimmy Traina had a nice get, talking to Buck for a Q&A after Monday’s broadcast. Buck told Traina, “It wasn’t like any other broadcast and it wasn’t like any other night. I was really excited at my ripe young age of 53, but I felt in some ways like I was 24 or 25 doing Buccaneers and Bears on opening day in 1994. There’s that newness. It’s like starting a new school. But on the other hand, I never felt nervous.”
Blogging but make it 2022
For this item, I turn it over to my Poynter colleague, Annie Aguiar.
The 2000s called, and it has some ideas on how to organize a news website.
That’s not an insult to tech news outlet The Verge’s redesign, unveiled Tuesday: The new version is a return to blogging, in addition to its eye-catching visuals and new logo.
The change sees the Vox Media-owned outlet making a bid to build out its own website as its main platform for sharing the news, an audience strategy in stark contrast to many outlets’ reliance on social media to get their stories out and about.
“I think that the core realization for us is that our competition is not Wired, our competition is Twitter … and other aggregators of audience,” editor-in-chief Nilay Patel told Axios.
Patel’s introductory post for the redesign pointed to the website’s last incarnation, designed six years ago, as built to travel as articles were packaged across search and other platforms. “But publishing across other people’s platforms can only take you so far,” Patel writes. “And the more we lived with that decision, the more we felt strongly that our own platform should be an antidote to algorithmic news feeds, an editorial product made by actual people with intent and expertise.”
The new homepage’s feed is called the Storystream news feed, curated by editors and senior reporters with stories, blog posts, links to other outlets and highlights of archival features and investigations from The Verge relevant to the news of the day. Comment sections will also be a big part of the new audience approach, with Q&As and other experiments to come.
While the redesign certainly pops, it raised accessibility concerns for some reviewers who pointed to the color choices, flashing images and new logo as issues.
Wemple weighs in
Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple wrote about the Las Vegas reporter who was murdered in “The horror of Jeff German’s killing.”
German, a reporter for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, was found dead from stab wounds outside his home less than two weeks ago. A county official whom German has written about for mismanagement has been arrested in German’s murder.
Wemple’s piece gets into the details of what German has written, what he was continuing to investigate and the reaction to those stories from Robert Telles, the Clark County public administrator who has been arrested. Many who worked with German and were close to him said, despite Telles’ online complaints about the reporter’s work, he did not feel threatened.
Wemple wrote, “News of his slaying stunned his colleagues and unnerved journalists across the country — not only because of the brutal circumstances but also because of the broader conundrum at the heart of the case: How can reporters possibly know whom to fear?”
Wemple quotes Glenn Cook, the executive editor of the Review-Journal, who said, “It’s terrifying for the staff to understand that this is possible, and it is alarming to journalists everywhere that the person that you would least expect to be capable of something like this actually might be. … We’re not covering an extremist organization; we’re not covering a rally that’s inciting violence; we’re covering a duly elected official.”
A significant profile