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When Did TV Watching Peak? (theatlantic.com)

An anonymous reader writes: With Netflix and Amazon Prime, Facebook Video and YouTube, it's tempting to imagine that the tech industry destroyed TV. The world is more than 25 years into the web era, after all, more than half of American households have had home Internet for 15 years, and the current smartphone paradigm began more than a decade ago. But no. Americans still watch an absolutely astounding amount of traditional television.

In fact, television viewing didn't peak until 2009-2010, when the average American household watched 8 hours and 55 minutes of TV per day. And the '00s saw the greatest growth in TV viewing time of any decade since Nielsen began keeping track in 1949-1950: Americans watched 1 hour and 23 minutes more television at the end of the decade than at the beginning. Run the numbers and you'll find that 32 percent of the increase in viewing time from the birth of television to its peak occurred in the first years of the 21st century.

Over the last 8 years, all the new, non-TV things -- Facebook, phones, YouTube, Netflix -- have only cut about an hour per day from the dizzying amount of TV that the average household watches. Americans are still watching more than 7 hours and 50 minutes per household per day.

6 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Actively watching or passive background by Alascom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "...watching more than 7 hours and 50 minutes per household per day"

    I suspect people aren't "watching" as much as just leaving a TV playing in the background. To Nielsen, they would appear as the same thing.

  2. Re:And we all wonder how Trump got elected. by jonsmirl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are people really watching 8hrs a day or is the TV simply on? We leave ours on all of the time when not at home because the dogs like hearing the voices and they don't misbehave.

  3. Found the real cause of obesity: by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Americans are still watching more than 7 hours and 50 minutes per household per day.

    FFS I didn't even watch that much the last time I was unemployed. People need to cut the other cord: the power cord to the TV, and GO OUTSIDE.

  4. TV is complete shit by pablo_max · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Now.. I am not saying that all programing is shit, but the mode of consumption is total shit.
    The amount of advert you watch for a 30 min program is nuts.
    The UK is shockingly bad about this. I would say you get about 17 min of actual program per 30 min, the rest is loud and obnoxious adverts.
    Why would anyone actually pay money to suffer that crap?
    Not to mention that the monthly fees for TV in the US is stupidly high. When I was last living there, we paid 120 per month for TV plus internet. We ended up dropping TV but still needed to pay 70 per month for internet.
    Nice that they are now allowed to kill your netflix speed even though you give those asshats almost 1k a year.

    Of my friends, I know only a couple with TV and that is because they are diehard soccer fans.

  5. Netflix & Amazon are TV by Luthair · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Netflix & Amazon are TV, they're just a different delivery mechanism. We didn't talk about cable destroying TV as it became more popular than antennas.

    Youtube & Facebook are different IMO as they serve an entirely different kind of content.

  6. Re:And we all wonder how Trump got elected. by apoc.famine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On their website, Nielson says:

    Chosen at random through proven methodology, Nielsen’s U.S. TV families represent a cross-section of representative homes throughout the country.

    That's a lie.

    Nielson only selects people who watch enough TV to survey. We don't really watch TV, and Nielson sent me their diary for a week and told me if I filled it out they'd let me do a month's worth and pay me a pittance.I figured I would to see what happened. What happened was that they sent me a response saying in effect that I did not meet their criteria to be a "Nielson Household". Why? We didn't watch enough TV. Too much Netflix and YouTube, and not enough cable.

    So while I can believe that Nielson has an understanding of what people are watching on TV, it's complete bullshit to call this number the average that Americans watch per day. It's the average of users who Nielson thinks watch enough TV that they want to survey. Nothing more, nothing less.

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