Recent McCain articles
“Hockey moms” — famously invoked by Gov. Sarah Palin in her V.P. campaign speeches — may also have a passion for politics.
According to a Nielsen analysis released Tuesday, “hockey moms” — defined as women ages 25 to 54 who live in homes with children and who watched at least six minutes of the most recent Stanley Cup Finals on NBC – were more likely than average moms to watch the first two debates of the 2008 election.
Last Thursday, Sen. Joe Biden and Gov. Sarah Palin’s V.P. debate drew 23.8% of all mothers (ages …
With the U.S. financial crisis hanging in the balance, the first debate between Barack Obama and John McCain – originally scheduled for Friday — has taken on unusual importance. But, how will this first presidential duel of the 2008 election compare with the most-watched debates of the last half-century?
Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan’s October 28, 1980 debate claimed the largest television audience — 80.6 million viewers — since 1976, the first year that Nielsen collected TV viewership data for presidential debates.
George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Ross Perot’s October 15, 1992 debate (69.9 …
ABC’s post-debate analysis of Barack Obama and John McCain’s first presidential debate was the top-ranked primetime telecast on broadcast TV for Friday, September 26, 2008. The show drew an average of almost 8.3 million viewers.
CBS’s “The Mentalist” claimed second place, with almost 7.9 million average viewers, while NBC’s post-debate coverage rounded out the top three, with just over 7.1 million average viewers.
Post-debate analysis on CBS (6.1 million average viewers) and FOX News (3.9 million average viewers) also made the top ten.
RANK
NAME
NETWORK
VIEWERS (P2+)
1
VOTE2008: ANALYSIS-FRI(S)-09/26/2008
ABC
8,272,000
2
MENTALIST, THE-FRIDAY SP(S)-09/26/2008
CBS
7,896,000
3
DECISION ‘08:PRES ANALSYS(S)-09/26/2008
NBC
7,124,000
4
20/20 SP EDITION-9/26(S)-09/26/2008
ABC
6,891,000
5
CAMPAIGN ‘08-DEBATE …
52.7 million viewers tuned in for President Bush’s speech on the U.S. economic crisis, which aired live Wednesday night from approximately 9:00pm to 9:15pm EST on ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, Telemundo, Univision, CNBC, CNN, FOX News Channel, and MSNBC.
Rating
Average Audience
Number
All Households
33.2
38,031,000
Persons 2+
18.2
52,653,000
Source: The Nielsen Company (September 24, 2008)
Note: Sum of audience estimates for ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, Telemundo, Univision, CNBC, CNN, FOX News Channel, and MSNBC.
[read more]It’s one of the few points not up for debate this election season: TV coverage of the typically uneventful U.S. political conventions drew record-breaking audiences.
Nearly two-thirds of all U.S. households (64.5%) — 120.1 million people age two or older — watched at least one of the 2008 political conventions, according to a new analysis released Thursday by Nielsen.
Viewership levels for the Democratic and Republican conventions were essentially even, with about half of all U.S. households watching each. Overall, 15% of all homes tuned in to the Republican National Convention only, while 15.7% …
YEAR
NETWORKS
TOTAL RATING
TOTAL HOMES
2004
Total- ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC, FOXNC
15.3*
16,809,000*
2000
Total- ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC, FOXNC
13.9**
14,042,000**
1996
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, PBS
16.5***
15,756,000***
1992
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, PBS
20.5
20,000,000
1988
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
18.3
16,200,000
1984
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
19.2
16,200,000
1980
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
21.6
16,500,000
1976
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
31.5
21,900,000
1972
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
23.4
14,400,000
1968
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
26.4
15,000,000
1964
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
21.8
11,130,000
1960
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
28
12,596,000
Source: The Nielsen Company (1960 – 2004)
Presidential nominating conventions are held in July and August with the party holding the Presidency scheduling its convention last. Changes in the parties’ primary system have impacted the conventions in recent campaigns.
*2004 data based on the …
[read more]YEAR
NETWORKS
TOTAL RATING
TOTAL HOMES
2004
Total- ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC, FOXNC
14.3*
15,537,000*
2000
Total- ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC, FOXNC
15.3**
15,380,000**
1996
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, PBS
17.2
16,418,000
1992
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, PBS
22
20,500,000
1988
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
19.8
17,400,000
1984
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
23.4
19,500,000
1980
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
27
20,700,000
1976
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
25.2
17,400,000
1972
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
18.3
11,400,000
1968
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
28.5
16,200,000
1964
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
28.8
14,695,000
1960
Total– ABC, CBS, NBC
29.2
13,216,000
Source: The Nielsen Company (1960 – 2004)
Presidential nominating conventions are held in July and August with the party holding the Presidency scheduling its convention last. Changes in the parties’ primary system have impacted the conventions in recent campaigns.
*2004 data based on the …
[read more]Senators McCain and Obama are each spending sizable sums of money on TV advertising during the Olympics. But when it comes to placing display advertising online, both candidates have relatively unimpressive records, Mediaweek Senior Editor Mike Shields noted Monday in a column.
“The 2008 race has been lametastic when it comes to online advertising,” Shields wrote, adding: “McCain’s been nearly invisible when it comes to display advertising.”
Senator McCain placed 16 million online display ad impressions in June, while Sen. Obama ran 80 million impressions, Shields noted, citing Nielsen Online data.
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