TV Ratings Hit Rock Bottom While Great Shows Flourish In Cable Uplands

Part of: Cathode Ray Fray

The numbers are in… and they aren't looking so hot for the broadcast networks.

While it is of course the summer, and most people of non-geekish and non-orkish ancestry are more busy with beaches and suntan lotion than the faint blue glow of the Idiot Box, it is nonetheless significant that the four broadcast networks – ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox – posted the lowest combined weekly audience (20.8 million viewers) in recorded history. The previous low had been set in July of 2005.

Is it a sign that a New Age of on demand digital content is here to stay? Are the MySpace hordes too busy on their BlackBerrys and two-way pagers, hitting up daddies skiing in Gstaad via web 2.0 online collaborative interface? Or maybe the eco-revolution, spearheaded by Al Gore (with help from Manbearpig), has inspired a new generation of kids to embrace and save our environment, brandishing copies of An Inconvenient Truth and The Dharma Bums, recycled pages fluttering on the new and exuberant open mists?

Maybe a little bit. More than likely, however, it's because there are more television choices than ever, and the summer is proving to be an increasingly fertile time for basic and paid cable stations to steer eyes toward genuinely high quality offerings.

pivenFor those who can afford it, HBO continues to outpace, dwarf, and overshadow broadcast television with nearly every original program it puts to air. Entourage is the current bell of the ball, a can't miss Sunday night pleasure that crowns an HBO-only night in my household. Season Three may have lost a touch of the edge of the early episodes, but Jeremy Piven as super agent Ari Gold is reason enough to tune in, and Kevin Dillon as Johnny Drama could read a phone book (longingly, yearningly for a part in some A List project) and still entertain. "One Day in the Valley," which self-consciously parodies Almost Famous, is the quintessential teenage fantasy: becoming the biggest movie star on the planet, hooking up your boys with a Maserati, and shot-gunning some brews.

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Article Author: Eric Berlin

Eric Berlin is the publisher of Online Media Cultist. He's also prone to referring to himself in the third person in author bios in an attempt to make it look like someone Less Important wrote it for him.
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  • 1 - empath

    Jul 12, 2006 at 1:12 pm

    Good point! In the summer cable just destroys the networks completely.

    I just wanted to add two summer shows that you left out: The Closer(TNT), and Blade(Spike). The Closer is a very good cop show vehicle for the very talented Kyra Sedgewick. The first season with its "Prime Suspect" style office tension was probably a bit stronger, but Deputy Chief Brenda Johnson is one of my favorite TV cops in years. Blade has been surprisingly (at least to me) strong in the first couple of episodes. It may not have Wesley Snipes, or the audio/visual punch of the movies, but the plots and writing are more interesting by far, and this could turn into one of the best vampire geekfests on TV since Buffy.

  • 2 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 12, 2006 at 1:23 pm

    Thanks empath! I must admit certain cable nets get my attention more than others -- there are just so many now to choose from. I have been hearing good things about The Closer and have the first season somewhere in the depths of my Netflix list. The Blade film did not interest me at all, I'm afraid. Could the television version have made the same dramatic leap that Buffy the Vampire Slayer did?

  • 3 - Craig Lyndall

    Jul 12, 2006 at 3:04 pm

    Summer TV is good so far. I agree on Entourage, and Tourgasm. One TV show you missed is The 4400 on USA. That is by far my favorite show of the summer with new episodes.

  • 4 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 12, 2006 at 3:07 pm

    Yeah, I just never caught on with that show. It had a creepy religious overtone to it for some reason, which I'm sure I'm completely wrong about.

    I fell off the USA bandwagon a while back when The Dead Zone seemed to tire and wear itself out after a really spectacular couple of seasons.

  • 5 - empath

    Jul 12, 2006 at 4:18 pm

    Eric, I have the same problem with certain cable nets catching more of my attention than others. When a friend of mine recommended Blade to me it actually took me a while just to figure out where Spike was in my cable lineup. TNT is kinda off my beaten path as well, but after FX started making such good tv with the Sheild, I guess it proved that even these smaller, more esoteric cable nets can compete in terms of quality. All the better for viewers.

  • 6 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 12, 2006 at 4:55 pm

    Empath, I couldn't agree more. More competition is always better. Think about top-rated shows from the '80s and how they would fare today. The big nets are slow to move and react and that's part of the reason why they're slowly losing market share. That said, they still do have the ability to produce smart, well produced programs (Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip looks like a can't miss, but we'll see) but the ability of cable to take risks, be agile, have less restrictions on content, etc. will mean that broadcast networks must work harder and harder to stay relevant.

  • 7 - Mat Brewster

    Jul 12, 2006 at 5:52 pm

    Eric, your enthusiasm in you TV writing has turned me from a TV hater to having tons of TV seasons on my blockbuster queue.

    I'd curse your name, but darnit if you aren't right most of the time.

  • 8 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 12, 2006 at 5:59 pm

    Thanks man, and you have my sincere condolences.

    (I loaded up my Netflix queue with two or three dozen series just last week).

  • 9 - Ala

    Jul 13, 2006 at 12:37 am

    good taste man. always sunny, rescue me, the daily show, the colbert report, and (to a much lesser degree) tourgasm are all shows i enjoy.

  • 10 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 13, 2006 at 1:49 am

    Thanks Ala!

  • 11 - Chris Evans

    Jul 13, 2006 at 6:53 am

    Don't forget about Monk and Psych! The latter of which had higher ratings than The Closer which makes it the 2nd highest rated series on cable.

  • 12 - Craig Lyndall

    Jul 13, 2006 at 8:07 am

    You know what? I thougt Psych looked good. I checked out the first episode. I like the premise, but I can't be on board, I don't think. The jokiness and campiness are just a little too much. I wouldn't want it to be as overly serious as "Numbers" but I think Psych (at least the pilot) is kind of hacky.

  • 13 - Chris Evans

    Jul 13, 2006 at 1:04 pm

    Ack--I mean highest rated series on cable--not 2nd.

  • 14 - Ty

    Jul 13, 2006 at 6:04 pm

    Battlestar Galactica is one the best shows on TV, but is always ignored. I've heard people say it is better than 24, but suffers from being labelled a "sci-fi" show, aired on the sci-fi network, and that it airs on Friday nights (When they have new episodes).

    Please don't hate on BSG just because you are closed minded about good TV.

  • 15 - Eric Berlin

    Jul 13, 2006 at 6:05 pm

    Who hated on BSG, Ty? I haven't had time to check it out, but based upon its legion of fans I think you can easily group it with the new wave of quality cable television shows.

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