Average American watches over 34 hours of Television a week - Canadian TV, Computing and Home Theatre Forums
 

Go Back   Canadian TV, Computing and Home Theatre Forums > Canadian Digital Industry Forums > Television Industry / Channels and Providers

Digital Home Helpful Information

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes

Old 2011-04-26, 10:09 AM   #1
hugh
Member #1
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Toronto
Posts: 47,492
Default Average American watches over 34 hours of Television a week

The average American watched 34 hours and 39 minutes of television per week during the final three months of 2010 according to a recent State of the Media report by the Nielsen company.

The ratings giant said that American Seniors (Adults 65+) watched the most television heaviest, a whopping 47 hours and 33 minutes per week, followed by adults 50-64 who watched 43 hours per week.

Teenagers who are often accused of watching too much television watched an average of 23 hours and 41 minutes per week.
__________________
As of January 2012, I am no longer the owner of the Digital Home website. If you have questions about the operation of the site, please contact VSAdmin. For personal inquiries contact me at the Hugh Thompson website.
hugh is offline  
Sponsored Links
Advertisement
 
Old 2011-04-26, 10:16 AM   #2
james99
Moderator
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Burlington
Posts: 24,791
Default

Not surprised about the numbers between the age groups. People get less active as they get older and being retired gives one more time to watch tele.

Kids are consumed by new technology.
james99 is offline  
Old 2011-04-26, 10:42 AM   #3
57
Moderator
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Toronto, Rogers, 8300HD, eHDD, Panasonic TCP65S1, Denon AVR4310Ci; 8300HD, eHDD & Sony KDL40W3000
Posts: 50,301
Default

Quote:
Adults 35-49 now timeshift just over 3 hours of television a week.
I always find it fascinating that people have the tools to timeshift, but only do it about 20% of the time (less than 10% of viewing time ratioed for the 40% of Americans with PVRs). This number has been the same (about 20%) since the advent of the VCR. People could either save themselves about 30-50% of the time they spend in front of the TV, or they could watch 50-100% more, better, programming if they took active part in their TV viewing with their PVRs, but I guess (most) people prefer to "veg".

http://www.digitalhome.ca/2011/04/on...es-owns-a-pvr/ PVR ownership.


Regarding kids using TVs less, that may be true, but they are often simply in front of a different screen - computer, tablet, cell, etc.
__________________
57's Home Theatre (Latest equipment & photos)

57's Optimization Services (Home Theatre Optimization)
57 is offline  
Old 2011-04-26, 11:42 AM   #4
Fonceur
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: DDO, Videotron, Cisco 8642HD
Posts: 299
Default

Then again, I PVR everything, but tend to watch most shows live. I just use those commercial breaks to read emails/forums or grab a drink/snack...
Fonceur is offline  
Old 2011-04-26, 12:25 PM   #5
hugh
Member #1
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Toronto
Posts: 47,492
Default

100% of our Family viewing is using the PVR.

We don't watch that much tv though. Most nights I don't watch anything.
__________________
As of January 2012, I am no longer the owner of the Digital Home website. If you have questions about the operation of the site, please contact VSAdmin. For personal inquiries contact me at the Hugh Thompson website.
hugh is offline  
Old 2011-04-26, 08:55 PM   #6
rpr
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Brampton, ON
Posts: 484
Default

Sheesh. I'm watching more than 34 hours a week of just hockey right now, who has time for TV?
rpr is offline  
Old 2011-04-30, 11:13 AM   #7
Kartan
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 75
Default

If you read "Reality is Broken" by Jane McGonigal, she points out that those who play video games watch drastically less TV than anyone else. Ofcourse this is because they are in fact gaming. I'm one of those gamers, but I do normally have the TV on in the room when I'm on the computer, guess I just like having white noise. It's very rare that I'll sit down for the sole purpose of watching TV...and if I do, I probably have my iPod touch or Nintendo DS close by. On average, I'd bet that I only watch 10 hours a week at home or less
Kartan is offline  
Old 2011-05-04, 07:49 AM   #8
Francois Caron
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 1,368
Default

Like most young people today, I don't follow schedules, I follow links. I don't even have cable. And the thing I've noticed since I got rid of Bell ExpressVu many years ago is that I'm much more picky over what I watch. As a result, my television viewing hours have dropped from some 35 hours per week to less than 20 hours per week, or 10 hours during reruns.

Ad that's without the endless, asinine commercials.
Francois Caron is online now  
Old 2011-05-04, 09:40 AM   #9
ScaryBob
Veteran
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: The Dandelion City
Posts: 7,133
Talking What TV?

There were many years that I or my family never owned a TV. For the years when I did, often only one or two channels were available (BBC or CBC.) Even cable TV, for the year or two we had it, only had 11 and later about 20 channels. But unlike today, there was no internet either. There weren't even PCs, cellphones or game machines. It was boring but not he end of the world. I would go to the library to read books, build projects, explore the city or participate in activities with friends. I would say that my TV viewing has only briefly ever been as high as 34 hr/wk. That was due to unusual circumstances. So kids, have sympathy for us "older folks" who were deprived when we were young.
__________________
At 20 I had a good mind. At 40 I had money. At 60 I've lost my mind and my money. Oh, to be 20 again. --Scary
ScaryBob is offline  
Old 2011-05-06, 12:16 PM   #10
SamtheMan
Rookie
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Toronto
Posts: 7
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Kartan View Post
If you read "Reality is Broken" by Jane McGonigal, she points out that those who play video games watch drastically less TV than anyone else. Ofcourse this is because they are in fact gaming. I'm one of those gamers, but I do normally have the TV on in the room when I'm on the computer, guess I just like having white noise. It's very rare that I'll sit down for the sole purpose of watching TV...and if I do, I probably have my iPod touch or Nintendo DS close by. On average, I'd bet that I only watch 10 hours a week at home or less
Increasingly Kartan your behaviour I think is more typical of most folks. The problem is that the guys that measure media behaviour are only measuring whether the TV is on not what else you might be doing. They use the gross measure of the TV being "on" to justify why broadcast TV remains the most important medium to advertisers. Kinda a "not".
SamtheMan is offline  
Old 2011-05-06, 12:20 PM   #11
hugh
Member #1
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Toronto
Posts: 47,492
Default

In the old days of diaries, people used to write down shows they "normally" watched even if they did not. People used to have the tv while doing housework or other things, not just playing video games.

My point is that ratings have been juiced since television began so I'm not sure anything has changed.
__________________
As of January 2012, I am no longer the owner of the Digital Home website. If you have questions about the operation of the site, please contact VSAdmin. For personal inquiries contact me at the Hugh Thompson website.
hugh is offline  
Old 2011-05-07, 03:11 PM   #12
SamtheMan
Rookie
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Toronto
Posts: 7
Default

Totally agree Hugh. They used to joke about the active Nielsen boxes that in the States that people would put on PBS and then leave the house to go bowling. A lot of money rides on some pretty questionable measures.
SamtheMan is offline  
Old 2011-05-11, 08:28 AM   #13
MCIBUS
Veteran
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 2,093
Question

34 hours per week!! Hell I watch that much in almost 4 days little alone in 7 days.
MCIBUS is online now  
Old 2011-05-14, 03:39 PM   #14
nauru
Rookie
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 6
Default

I wonder how they measure this stuff. I mean, what about people who just always have the TV on, but aren't in the room, or are in and out of the room and not really watching, etc. How are these people counted? Because I think there are a lot of people like this.
nauru is offline  
Old 2011-05-15, 04:43 PM   #15
SamtheMan
Rookie
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Toronto
Posts: 7
Default

They do it a bunch of different ways. The "old school" ways are those of the BBM which requires the keeping of a written diary and the other one was to have a box, like a digital set-top box, that actually records what you're watching and for how long. You can imagine the problems with these methods. Nowadays they'll do other kinds of interviews and surveys that ask more detailed questions about what you are doing at the same time as the TV was on.

You can imagine too that it gets hairier as they try and distinguish between other TV-like watching. Streaming through computer, video games, mobile video streams, DVD versus broadcast TV, PVRs, etc. The short answer is, they make it up - it is based upon surveys and assumptions however. Some are better than others, there's no objective standard. It's more what advertisers agree to believe.
SamtheMan is offline  
Reply

Tags
nielsen, ratings, research, television viewing

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:59 PM.

Search Digital Home

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.