December was a robust month for TV usage. Five days recorded over 100 billion TV viewing minutes, including the second-highest daily total in 2023 occurring on December 31 (behind Super Bowl Sunday on February 12) with over 105 billion minutes. While all but the broadcast category showed monthly increases in usage, the "other* category" was the only to gain in share in December (+1.8 pts.), partly driven by increased video game console usage among younger demographics.
Following four consecutive months of growth (August through November), broadcast viewing decreased 4.3% from November, which brought the category to a 23.5% share of TV usage (-1.5 pts.). Decreased usage was led by viewers 25-34 who watched 13% less broadcast programming versus November. Sports remained the most-watched broadcast genre, accounting for 28.5% of broadcast viewing, with NFL games accounting for 12 of the top 13 broadcast telecasts during the month. ABC's New Year's Rockin' Eve took the 13th spot.
Cable viewing climbed another 1.3% this month, but due to the larger increase of overall TV usage, cable gave up 0.1 share point to finish at 28.2% of total TV usage. Cable sports viewing was up 8.4% versus November, led by both NCAA bowl games and NFL programming. The top telecast went to ESPN's NFL matchup between the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys on December 30, which totaled over 11 million viewers. Feature film viewing nearly tripled that of sports, however, accounting for 21.4% of cable usage compared with 8.1% for sports.
Streaming usage increased 1.2% in December, but like cable, it was not enough to maintain its share and the category fell to 35.9% of overall TV usage (-0.2 pt.). The streaming increase was led by 18-24 year-old viewers, whose usage was up 2.7%. Additional streaming platform and content highlights in December include:
- Netflix viewership climbed nearly 6% to account for 7.7% of TV usage (+0.3 pt.).
- Tubi exhibited a 6.6% bump in viewing to maintain 1.4% of TV usage.
- YouTube's share of TV fell to 8.5% (-0.4 pt.) following a 3.4% drop in usage, but it maintained the top spot among streaming platforms.
- Netflix's usage increase was partially driven by this month's top two streaming titles: Young Sheldon (also hosted on Max) was the #1 most-streamed title with 6.7 billion viewing minutes, and Leave the World Behind claimed #2 with 4.5 billion minutes.
Linear (live TV) streaming via MVPD (multichannel video programming distributors) and vMVPD (virtual multichannel video programming distributors) apps represented 6% of total television usage in December. Linear streaming is included in the appropriate broadcast or cable category, and is not included in the streaming category.
About The Gauge™
The Gauge™ is Nielsen's monthly snapshot of total broadcast, cable and streaming consumption that occurs through a television screen. Underpinned by Nielsen's National TV measurement and Streaming Platform Ratings services, in addition to complimentary insights from its Streaming Content Ratings service, The Gauge provides the industry with a holistic look at the various content audiences are watching. The latest edition of The Gauge is always available at nielsen.com/thegauge.
*The "other" category captures all other TV usage that does not fall into the broadcast, cable or streaming categories, and primarily includes tuning from unmeasured sources, unmeasured video on-demand, audio streaming, gaming, and other device usage (e.g. DVD playback). Also included is streaming content viewed through a cable set top box that is not identified as "original" within Nielsen's Streaming Content Ratings data.
About Nielsen
Nielsen shapes the world's media and content as a global leader in audience measurement, data and analytics. Through our understanding of people and their behaviors across all channels and platforms, we empower our clients with independent and actionable intelligence so they can connect and engage with their audiences—now and into the future. Nielsen operates around the world in more than 55 countries. Learn more at www.nielsen.com and connect with us on social media (Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram).
SOURCE Nielsen
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