October 26, 2009, 1:42 pm

New York Times Media Decode

CNN Drops to Last Place Among Cable News Networks
By Bill Carter

CNN, which invented the cable news network more than two decades ago, will
hit a new competitive low with its prime-time programs in October, finishing
fourth - and last - among the cable news networks with the audience that all
the networks rely on for their advertising.

The official monthly numbers will be finalized at 4 p.m. Monday and will
include results from Friday. CNN executives conceded that will not change
the competitive standing for the month. CNN will still be last in prime
time.

That means CNN's programs were behind not only Fox News and MSNBC, but even
its own sister network HLN (formerly Headline News.) Three of its four shows
between 7 and 11 p.m. finished fourth and last among the cable news
networks. That was the first time CNN had finished that poorly with its
prime-time shows.

The results demonstrate once more the apparent preference of viewers for
opinion-oriented shows from the news networks in prime time.

CNN has steered opinion hosts like Nancy Grace to HLN, while maintaining
more news-oriented shows on CNN itself. When news events are not being
intensely followed, CNN executives acknowledge, viewers seem to be looking
for partisan views more than objective coverage.

Individually, the CNN shows were beaten resoundingly by all the Fox News
programs, but also lost to all of the MSNBC programs, including a repeat of
Keith Olbermann's 8 p.m. edition of "Countdown," which beat the 10 p.m. hour
of CNN's signature prime-time program, "Anderson Cooper 360."
Again that was a first.

Mr. Cooper had 211,000 viewers to 223,000 for Mr. Olbermann's repeat. That
meant Mr. Cooper finished fourth and last in the 10 p.m. hour because,
besides being well behind the leader, Greta Van Susteren, who had 538,000
viewers, he was also beaten by a repeat of Nancy Grace's 8 p.m. show on HLN,
which averaged 222,000.

For the month, CNN averaged 202,000 viewers between the ages of 25 and 54 -
the group that television news organizations use as their basis of success
because of their advertising sales. That was far behind the dominant leader,
Fox News, which averaged 689,000. But it also trailed MSNBC, which had
250,000 viewers in that group and HLN, which had 221,000.

The only CNN show from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. that did not finish last was Larry
King, which was third, ahead of the new Joy Behar show on HLN. But Sean
Hannity's show on Fox News had a huge lead with 659,000 viewers in that age
group. Second was Rachel Maddow on MSNBC with 242,000.
Mr. King averaged 224,000 and Ms. Behar 181,000.

At 7 p.m. CNN's host, Lou Dobbs was fourth, barely beaten by Jane Velez
Mitchell on HLN, 166,000 to 162,000. The big winner was Shepard Smith on Fox
with 465,000 viewers. Second was Chris Matthews and "Hardball" on MSNBC,
with 179,000 viewers.
Keith Bedford for The New York Times HLN's Nancy Grace

CNN's performance was worst in the 8 p.m. hour. Bill O'Reilly on Fox News
continued his long dominance with the biggest numbers of any host, 881,000
viewers. Mr. Olbermann, with his first-run program, was second with 295,000.
Close behind was the first edition of Ms. Grace's show with 269,000.
Campbell Brown on CNN trailed with only 162,000.

CNN executives emphasized that the network continues to draw more viewers
than all its competitors except Fox News when all hours of the day are
counted.

CNN released a statement Monday saying, "CNN's ratings are always going to
be more dependent on the news environment, much more so than opinion-based
programming especially in prime time."


Regards,

KGB

-----
Kevin G. Barkes
Email: [email protected]
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