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Thread started 11/10/10 6:10pm

Identity

The Myth About TV Ratings

November 2010

Nielsen, the primary source for audience measurement within the television industry, only tracks the viewership of 25,000 pre-selected households compared to the estimated 116 million total U.S. households with televisions. Nielsen uses the sample to represent the viewing habits of everyone in the country.

Nielsen ratings most-often used do not take into account viewing on Digital Video Recorders (DVRs), online streaming platforms like Hulu.com, paid downloads from the iTunes or Amazon stores and illegal streams or downloads.

In short, the measurement of television consumption considered the most important by the networks, the ad industry and viewers includes only a small fraction of the overall audience.

source: tvsurveillance.com

[Edited 11/12/10 9:43am]

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Reply #1 posted 11/10/10 6:38pm

KatSkrizzle

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Same goes with radio, print, and internet. Everything is scaled to the actual size compared to the sample. Arbitron is used for radio. The same thing. The people that ACTUALLY fill out the diaries is weighed against the percentage of the population.

Statistics. It is also very easy to make the numbers favor one or the other. Like in politics, for example.

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Reply #2 posted 11/10/10 6:38pm

whistle

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who watches telly when there's so much internet porn about?...

everyone's a fruit & nut case
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Reply #3 posted 11/10/10 6:42pm

Efan

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Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account, I believe. Not sure about Hulu and other platforms, but I think they are starting to do that as well. If not, I think they will adjust to accomodate it.

As for the 25,000...why wouldn't that be enough?

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Reply #4 posted 11/10/10 6:45pm

KatSkrizzle

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Efan said:

Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account, I believe. Not sure about Hulu and other platforms, but I think they are starting to do that as well. If not, I think they will adjust to accomodate it.

As for the 25,000...why wouldn't that be enough?

Everyone is NOT got oing to fill their diaries or allow a Nielsen person to install a ratings meter in their house. There is no possible way for EVEYRONE to be measured. Which is why it is all measured to scale.

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Reply #5 posted 11/10/10 6:46pm

Efan

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KatSkrizzle said:

Efan said:

Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account, I believe. Not sure about Hulu and other platforms, but I think they are starting to do that as well. If not, I think they will adjust to accomodate it.

As for the 25,000...why wouldn't that be enough?

Everyone is NOT got oing to fill their diaries or allow a Nielsen person to install a ratings meter in their house. There is no possible way for EVEYRONE to be measured. Which is why it is all measured to scale.

Exactly. (Although I don't think people need to fill in diaries anymore; I think it's electronic.)

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Reply #6 posted 11/10/10 6:55pm

Identity

Efan said:

Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account

Nielsen only reports who watched a show on DVR 7 days after the initial airing.

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Reply #7 posted 11/10/10 6:57pm

Identity

Efan said:

KatSkrizzle said:

Everyone is NOT got oing to fill their diaries or allow a Nielsen person to install a ratings meter in their house. There is no possible way for EVEYRONE to be measured. Which is why it is all measured to scale.

Exactly. (Although I don't think people need to fill in diaries anymore; I think it's electronic.)

Nielsen uses set meters and (yikes!) diaries.

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Reply #8 posted 11/10/10 6:57pm

OnlyNDaUsa

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Identity said:

Efan said:

Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account

Nielsen only reports who watched a show on DVR 7 days after the initial airing.

is that why some shows make you wait 8 days to watch them on the internet?

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #9 posted 11/10/10 6:58pm

OnlyNDaUsa

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whistle said:

who watches telly when there's so much internet porn about?...

what do you mean? internet porn?

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #10 posted 11/10/10 6:59pm

Identity

OnlyNDaUsa said:

Identity said:

Nielsen only reports who watched a show on DVR 7 days after the initial airing.

is that why some shows make you wait 8 days to watch them on the internet?

I meant to type "within 7 days". My bad.

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Reply #11 posted 11/10/10 7:08pm

Efan

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Identity said:

Efan said:

Neilsen ratings do take DVR usage into account

Nielsen only reports who watched a show on DVR 7 days after the initial airing.

But wouldn't that be a better measure of how "hot" a show is? If you record it but don't watch it for a long period of time, you're probably not too interested in it. Also, the ads on that show (which you're probably going to fast-forward through anyway) would likely be out of date after a week.

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Reply #12 posted 11/10/10 7:11pm

OnlyNDaUsa

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Identity said:

OnlyNDaUsa said:

is that why some shows make you wait 8 days to watch them on the internet?

I meant to type "within 7 days". My bad.

no i understand. but the other night HOUSE did not record so I went on line and it said I had to wait 8 days to watch it online.

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #13 posted 11/10/10 7:12pm

KatSkrizzle

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Efan said:

KatSkrizzle said:

Everyone is NOT got oing to fill their diaries or allow a Nielsen person to install a ratings meter in their house. There is no possible way for EVEYRONE to be measured. Which is why it is all measured to scale.

Exactly. (Although I don't think people need to fill in diaries anymore; I think it's electronic.)

Wow, what a difference 3 years makes! They were still doing actual diaries "back in the olden days of 2007". smile

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Reply #14 posted 11/10/10 7:14pm

OnlyNDaUsa

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KatSkrizzle said:

Efan said:

Exactly. (Although I don't think people need to fill in diaries anymore; I think it's electronic.)

Wow, what a difference 3 years makes! They were still doing actual diaries "back in the olden days of 2007". smile

i did them for sweeps week in 2007 too i think.

"Keep on shilling for Big Pharm!"
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Reply #15 posted 11/10/10 7:19pm

Identity

This flawed system explains how a totally lame show like Two & A Half Men can still be on the air, and supposedly garnering 19M viewers.

[Edited 11/10/10 19:23pm]

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Reply #16 posted 11/10/10 7:19pm

Efan

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KatSkrizzle said:

Efan said:

Exactly. (Although I don't think people need to fill in diaries anymore; I think it's electronic.)

Wow, what a difference 3 years makes! They were still doing actual diaries "back in the olden days of 2007". smile

Really? I just thought they were done by boxes that connected to the TV or the cable box. My bad. Weird that they still rely on diaries.

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Reply #17 posted 11/10/10 7:21pm

KatSkrizzle

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Efan said:

KatSkrizzle said:

Wow, what a difference 3 years makes! They were still doing actual diaries "back in the olden days of 2007". smile

Really? I just thought they were done by boxes that connected to the TV or the cable box. My bad. Weird that they still rely on diaries.

Arbitron is used for radio stations. I don't know TV, but I worked in radio for 8 years. I had a friend that worked for Nielsen, and she installed the meters. Now Nielsen does do theirs electronically. I think we misunderstood each other. wink

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Reply #18 posted 11/10/10 8:12pm

purplemookiebu
t

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my dad used to date a woman who was in this selected group. she had a special remote for the tv that tracked wut she and her kids watched...

yoda i don't wear a cross?!!? i wear a prince symbol prince guitar wacky nutty I When Prince's cum dries, diamonds are formed. lol eek drooling no one tops prince in concert!
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Reply #19 posted 11/11/10 7:09am

Identity

Nielsen ratings should be ignored. The set meter doesn't even take into account that people in the same house may be watching different shows on different televisions at the same time.

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