Commentary

Woo-hoo! Maddow's Up In The Ratings, And Trump's To Blame

Here’s a story that suddenly came out of left field: MSNBC and CNN both beat Fox News Channel in the ratings last week. Is this another case of Trump disrupting TV yet again?

Specifically, for the five-day week of May 15-19, MSNBC’s prime-time shows drew an average audience in the news demo (both men and women 25-54) of 611,000, CNN averaged 589,000 viewers, and Fox News had 497,000 viewers in the age group.

In the total-viewer averages, MSNBC was first with 2.44 million, Fox News was second with 2.41 million, and CNN had 1.65 million. These figures were reported here in The Hollywood Reporter.  

The story went on to pay particular attention to “The Rachel Maddow Show” on MSNBC at 9 p.m. and “Anderson Cooper 360” on CNN at 8. The Maddow show appears to be skyrocketing. It averaged 760,000 viewers in the demo in the 9-10 p.m. slot. The story said Cooper “placed No. 1 for the hour Monday through Friday.”

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Last week was one of those very fertile weeks for news about the Trump administration. But that can be said about almost every week since Trump announced in June 2015 that he would run for president.

Perhaps now, though, the Disruptor-In-Chief and the tumult surrounding his administration have settled in to such a degree that viewers in search of news and commentary about the Trump White House are now flocking to MSNBC and CNN instead of Fox News Channel.

Why not Fox News? Because for the growing multitudes for whom hating Trump has become a religion, the personalities on Fox News come across as Trump apologists who are increasingly out of step with what is now the anti-Trump mainstream.

For many consumers of political talk and conversation on the news channels, MSNBC and CNN are giving them their world in the way they see it. While Fox News Channel has always offered an alternative point of view, lately that view can seem less like a reasonable alternative than a depiction of a straight-up bizarro world where up is down.

Maybe it's a bellwether for the country in general. Trump is having the effect of turning off so many people that the old Fox News Channel model isn’t working anymore. If so, that doesn't bode well for the Republican majorities in the House and Senate in the midterm 2018 elections either, as many commentators have been predicting (and many have been hoping for too).

But I'm just a TV columnist. More interesting to me is how Trump has upended some segments of the TV business whose pecking order we long took for granted -- from late-night to the news channels.

MSNBC beating Fox News Channel? Talk about a bizarro world: I never would have predicted that would ever happen.

In late-night TV, Stephen Colbert overtook Jimmy Fallon and “The Tonight Show.” The conventional wisdom is that Colbert and his team have been more savvy in their treatment of Trump and his White House than the Fallon people.

Except for two relatively brief periods -- at the start of the Jay Leno-David Letterman competition in 1993 and the brief reign of Conan O’Brien -- “The Tonight Show” had been TV’s top-rated late-night show for eons. Now it’s not, and you have to wonder: Will Fallon lose his job because of Trump?

And another question: What will be the next segment of TV that will be turned upside down because of Trump?

3 comments about "Woo-hoo! Maddow's Up In The Ratings, And Trump's To Blame ".
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  1. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, May 23, 2017 at 12:55 p.m.

    I think it's more a case of Fox making some very dumb primetime programming moves in replacing O'Reilly and Kelly, Adam. You can't put a guy like Carlson---an obvious right wing fanatic---- at 8PM and follow with a daytime type gabfest at 9PM?

  2. Tim Brooks from consultant, May 23, 2017 at 4:56 p.m.

    Good analysis, Adam. It's always a problem when you lose your anchor show in an evening. However in this case they replaced O'Reilly with a show with a very different tone, almost cartoonish in its confrontations with guests. For all the shade thrown at him by liberals, O'Reilly had a carefully constructed and often insightful show (for those willing to listen). I suspect the problem is more the format than it is Carlson. 

  3. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, May 23, 2017 at 6:58 p.m.

    Tim, I tend to think that Tucker Carlson may have been OK at 7PM as most Fox viewers recognize that this is not the evening's main event. But at 8PM they are expecting---perhaps craving----something more substantial than what Tucker can give them. I've watched Fox quite a bit---though in recent years I soured on the whole network and greatly reduced my exposure. Nevertheless, I make it a point to sample new shows like Tucker's or, Megan Kelly's debut at 9PM, before him. And I must say that Tucker is a nervous nellie at 8PM--- about to pounce on his guests, while seemingly biting his lips and twitching with impatience, when they say something he disagrees with. Just my opinion, but it makes a reasonably objective viewer---even a die hard conservative, I would think----rather uncomfortable. While good old Bill mostly seemed unflappable and in control----sort of like John Wayne---even though he often duked it out with his guests, one does not get the same feeling with Tucker. He fidgets and purses his lips, smiles then winces as if in pain---it's not a reassuring experience to watch this for a whole hour----in my humble opinion.

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