Despite overtime finish,
NFL Super Bowl draws lower TV ratings
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[February 07, 2017]
By Tim Baysinger
(Reuters) - Fox
Television's broadcast of Super Bowl LI on Sunday night
drew 111.3 million viewers, according to Nielsen data
released by the network on Monday, the smallest audience
for the National Football League's title game in four
years.
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The contest included a thrilling finish, with the New England
Patriots staging a comeback to defeat the Atlanta Falcons in the
National Football league's first-ever Super Bowl overtime. The
Patriots returned from a 25-point deficit and quarterback Tom
Brady, 39, won his record fifth championship.
The Falcons were in control for much of the game, with a 28-3
lead midway through the third quarter. Viewership surged as the
Patriots' pushed the game into overtime, peaking at 117.7
million from 10 p.m. to 10:15 p.m ET.
Without the Patriots' rally, ratings would've been even worse
for Fox, which still posted the least-viewed Super Bowl since
2013, when 108.7 million watched the Baltimore Ravens defeat the
San Francisco 49ers.
Lady Gaga's halftime show drew 117.5 million viewers.
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Last year's Super Bowl drew a 111.9 million viewers to CBS
Corp's <CBS.N> CBS, while the Patriots' previous title game
appearance in 2015 helped Comcast Corp's <CMCSA.O> NBC
television draw 114.4 million viewers, the most-watched TV
broadcast in U.S. history.
Despite the lower viewership, the brief overtime, in which the
Patriots scored a touchdown in their first possession, allowed
Fox to add four more commercials. It is not clear how many more
ad dollars Fox was able to get; the network was charging $5
million for 30-seconds of airtime during the game. Fox brought
in an estimated $509.6 million in ad revenue for the broadcast,
according to research firm iSpot.TV.
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Advertising took up 23 percent of the broadcast, with 51 minutes and
30 seconds of commercials. That made it the second-most ad-cluttered
Super Bowl game, according to ad-tracking firm Kantar Media.
The four-year viewership low comes on the heels of a disappointing
NFL season that saw ratings decline 9 percent and another 6 percent
through the playoffs leading up to the Super Bowl. The NFL's four
U.S. TV partners, Fox, NBC, CBS and Walt Disney Co's ESPN, are
collectively paying $5.4 billion per year under their current media
rights contracts.
Much of the ratings decline during the season was blamed on the
contentious U.S. presidential election drawing interest away, as
well as the lackluster quality of play early in the season. Prior to
the Nov. 8 election, ratings were down 12 percent, but were only off
by 5 percent after, according to analysis by MoffettNathanson.
(Reporting by Tim Baysinger; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Alan
Crosby)
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