An ‘ominous trend’ for Fox News’ ratings

In the first quarter of 2008, Fox News, after six years of cable-news ratings dominance, saw itself slip into second place behind CNN in the so-called “money demo” — viewers in their mid-20s through mid-50s, who advertisers care about most. The shift came thanks to a series of competitive primary nights and debates among Democratic candidates, after the Republican nomination had already been settled.

As it turns out, in the second quarter, as the Democratic race quieted down and the general election campaigning began, Fox News reclaimed the lead, but just barely. The NYT notes today that the “back-and-forth these last few months masks a more ominous trend for Fox News.”

The most dominant cable news channel for nearly a decade and a political force in its own right, Fox has seen its once formidable advantage over CNN erode in this presidential election year, as both CNN and MSNBC have added viewers at far more dramatic rates.

In the first five-and-a-half months of 2004, the last presidential election year, Fox’s prime-time audience among viewers aged 25 to 54 was more than double that of CNN’s — 530,000 to 248,000, according to estimates from Nielsen Media Research. This year, through mid-June, CNN erased the gap and drew nearly as many viewers in that demographic category as Fox — about 420,000 for CNN to 440,000 for Fox.

Meanwhile, CNN has added 170,000 viewers a night, on average, when compared with the last presidential year, while Fox has shed about 90,000, according to Nielsen. (MSNBC, which added 181,000 viewers in that audience, much of it courtesy of gains by “Countdown With Keith Olbermann,” still lagged in third place, with 303,000.)

Clearly, the Democratic race, and the fact that the Democratic candidates wouldn’t debate on Fox News, had something to do with the shift. But as the NYT noted, “[D]isproportionate interest in the Democratic campaign alone cannot explain the struggles of Fox relative to years past, and the gains of its competitors.”

“I don’t think it’s that Fox has slipped,” said Scott Reed, a Republican strategist who managed Bob Dole’s presidential campaign in 1996. “I just think MSNBC and CNN have risen to the occasion in a far more creative way, with better guests, cooler maps and more interactive shows.” […]

CNN and MSNBC have somehow managed to photocopy several pages from the playbook of Roger Ailes, the founder of Fox News and its chairman, whose emphasis on sharp opinions, glitzy graphics and big personalities has been taken to heart by competitors like CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Mr. Olbermann and his running mate on MSNBC, Chris Matthews.

Maybe. But I’d offer an alternative explanation: as the conservative movement falls apart, and the country is ready to move away from the Bush/Republican status quo, Fox News’ schtick has grown pretty tiresome. Time’s James Poniewozik argued recently that the network “has to figure out how not to seem like yesterday’s news.”

There’s something to be said for this. In Bush’s America, with Republicans in ascension, Fox News became the official network of the federal government. Officials were anxious to dish propaganda, and the network was anxious to help disseminate it. The audience for GOP talking points has, however, grown smaller as the party’s failures became more overwhelming. Given this, it’s no wonder CNN has practically caught up to FNC in the “money demo,” and MSNBC isn’t too far behind.

I’d add, though, that the nation’s good fortune may actually be Fox News’ life-preserver. If, come January, there’s a Democratic president and a Democratic Congress for the first time in 16 years, there are going to be plenty of suddenly-motivated conservatives looking for a news outlet to tell them how awful the governing party is. Fox News and its audience want someone to be mad at, and come 2009, they’ll probably have no shortage of options.

Rediculous. All three news networks are pretty empty of information. We need more cable outlets to offer Al Jazeera English or BBC World. Our people are ignorant. There’s nothing funny about that “Jay Walking” segment on the Tonight Show. It’s too true. Most people in this country know very little about anything.

  • Remember, FOXNEWS got its leg up with the Clinton impeachment meme, but as of now, that dog over at FOX just don’t hunt no more! -Kevo

  • I look forward, should Obama be elected, to seeing Fox News rediscover its love for the Constitution, its reverence for the separation of powers, its loathing of the Unitary Executive, and its fear of one-party government. Within two hours of Obama’s swearing in Fox will determine that we aren’t winning in Iraq, that Afghanistan is going in the wrong direction and that there are actually more terrorists in the world than ever before – and that it’s all his fault.

  • Dennis: I doubt that Monopolistic & Corporate $$interests will disappear because Obama is president. But I think that the make up of our legislature will change along with the presidency. There will be fewer corporate owned politicians and the rape of our nation and earth might just be slowed or reversed. I dare to hope.

  • Comparing Fox, CNN and NBC is like trying to grade 2 D-minuses and an F on the curve. Any comparison belies the real quality of effort or lack thereof.

  • You’re correct, Evergreen. I’m just betting that the same things that were the subject of endless fawning approbation from Fox when Bush did them will be the subject of endless opprobrium when a Democrat is president. This will put fresh wind into the Fox sails. I also expect a lot of flak from the left when Obama and a Democratic Congress fail to put right in ninety days all of the things that Bush and his pack of Vandals have spent years screwing up.

  • In reference to the rise of Fox with the Clinton impeachment story, I’d like to think the country has MoveOnned since then, but CNN, particularly Wolf Blitzer and the vomitous regulars of Headline News, have been moving steadily right in the last few months. Even Olbermann, with his defense of Obama’s dismal FISA performance, isn’t what he used to be. The pattern seems to be, move left to capture homeless viewers, then move right to consolidate the middle. Where truth and honesty ends up is a question. I’d like to hope the internet doesn’t go like this, but, as more money shifts there, we’ll see an increased reliance on “marketing strategies.” I’m practicing my smoke signals.

  • Given that (1) FOX’s target audience is dying off by the bushel-basket-full, and that (2) Republicans are getting beat up just as badly in the Neocon Rape/Pillage/Burn Profit-Fest, and that (3) Obama has formally founded the Republicans Anonymous Twelve Step Program Wing of the Democratic Party, I’m thinking it’ll be an odds-on favorite at the cable-news track that FOX experiences a POX of its own brewing by this time next year.

  • What miserable choices…but if you gotta watch something to find out about stuff…Fox is last. Still…having no choice and making do is not the same as wanting to watch.

  • You have to look outside the United States if you want uncensored, unfiltered news. Why is it that you never hear constructive criticism of Israel from any news outlet inside the United States of America?

  • I just see this as another case of media love of a horse race. CNN’s been trying with all its might to become just another Faux clone. What’s to choose: Faux One or Faux Two? Neither one’s worth squat if you want some serious news.

  • I don’t watch FOX much, but why is it that the lighting always gives their anchors a trademark purplish pallor? I’ve noticed this for years now. The other strange trait of FOX productions (and this goes for their sports productions as well) is the excess of irritating and noisy graphics, what’s up with that anyway?

    Moochy (no. 11), I agree. The strange part is that one needn’t resort to anti-Semitic knuckle-draggers to find this criticism, there are fairly mainstream media outlets and political parties in Israel which do this 24/7. All we have to do is have every forth interview with Bibi replaced with someone from Ha’aretz, Meretz or Peace Now.

  • #11 & #13: I’ll third that. It was a revelation to me years ago when I was able to watch BBC World News for the first time. American news doesn’t cover most of that news at all, and coverage of Israel/Palestine had a shockingly different perspective.

  • I only watch the TV “news” when I am a guest at someone else’s house. Yesterady that meant listening to O’reilly.

    I was struck by how polite and almost apologetic he was. He introduced every question with “I don’t want to be mean here” or” I don’t want to put you on the spot..” The questions, which were framed according to laughably stereotypical rightwing frmaes, were asked in a calm polite tone. And he listened to the answers! No interrupting!

    So…is he on medication thises days? Has Faux decided to tone it down? or was it a fluke?

    Not being a regular viewer, I don’t know. His behavior was strikingly different from the last time a years or so ago when I was subjected to his show.

  • He’s been taking Loofanozaprin for a while now as well as Benicemyratingsarecrapagain which could counteract the side effects of Obnoxicontin that he’s been on for many years.Mr. Limbaugh is now taking Mydicksadrippin and Mycocksafloppin with untold results.

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