Ratings fall as more Australians switch off TV talking heads

Australian Breakfast TV Mongrels Are The Scum Of The Earth So Keep Tuning Out Australia
Breakfast television and evening current affair programs are losing viewers, with claims about ‘digital migration’ as a cause not stacking up.
RATINGS SLUMP
Breakfast Television
Breakfast TV ratings on Australia’s leading networks are plummeting in 2022.
Both Seven’s Sunrise and Nine’s Today, long considered ‘the jewels’ in the respective networks’ crowns, have shed up to 35 per cent of their audience over the course of a decade, according to reports.

Political Talkshows
According to reports, the ABC is in ‘panic mode’ after Q+A hit a new low in the TV ratings last week.
The ‘prestigious’ current affairs talk show, hosted by Stan Grant, scored a “pitiful” audience recently of just 165,000 viewers in the five major cities.

Now, nobody could care less about the one-sided dribble.
Earlier this year, we also saw the same thing with night time TV’s ‘The Project’.
The Channel 10 current affairs program, hosted on Sunday by Hamish Macdonald, Lisa Wilkinson and Tommy Little, scored a dismal 185,000 in the 6.30pm time slot in the five-city metro market in March.

THE ILLUSION OF DOMINANCE
All of these networks claim ‘migration to digital platforms’ is to blame for the declining free-to-air numbers, and while the broadcasting landscape has changed, here are the facts.
If people want to watch it, they will.
This is why non-political or news related content, such as building and cooking shows, are still massive revenue-generators for the companies. Advertisers still pay big $ for television slots.
Seven’s coverage of the nail-biting AFL elimination between Richmond and the Brisbane Lions at the Gabba scored an impressive 786,000 metro viewers.
Yes, I can watch the footy on my phone, but do I want that for the best viewing experience?
The same goes for all media.
People actually move to larger screens to get the best a program has offer, join in with families, etc.
Provide something that is perceived as good on TV, and people will tune in — on TV.
This old excuse of ‘migration’ to digital platforms is all a deflective shield.
The migration numbers don’t translate to interaction or revenue for online platforms, either.
Where are these people?
View counts, given they are multi-million dollar empires, just don’t make sense:

When you focus in on the news element, people are increasingly becoming not interesting.
That’s the reality of things.
But here’s the catch.
News services will continue to spend billions of dollars every year to ensure they remain on every TV screen as an illusionary tactic to show they are still the ‘top dogs’, the big deal in town.
Even if they lose this money each year.
Nine is part-owned by Goldman Sachs, for example.
There is an endless check book available to keep the illusion going.
Small political podcasts on YouTube get more numbers than Q&A or The Project can pull.
TV talking heads have become screens echoing to nobody.
Yet, they will never give in. To do so would mean they have truly lost their power; the mystique that keeps people captivated. They can’t have that, even if people aren’t watching the news pieces.
Because even those that aren’t watching still see the news on TV in a food court, in a shop window, etc.
It still presents itself as a distant omnipresent force, maintaining the false reality we live in.
If that was to disappear, the house of cards would have a hard time not collapsing.
Thus, the mass machine conglomerate will continue to present the illusion of dominance.
For as long as it takes.
Finally, some good news!