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Friday, August 12, 2016

NBC Still Selling Rio Olympics

NBC Sports Group chairman Mark Lazarus announced during a news conference Thursday stated, "This will be our most economically successful Games in history."

According to philly.com, he announced that NBC had sold $30 million of additional advertising since the Olympics began - on top of the already record-breaking $1.2 billion total before the flame was lit in Rio de Janeiro.

NBC is televising and streaming more Olympics coverage than ever. Every event is streamed live online, and TV coverage is spread across 10 channels - eight in English and two in Spanish - from morning until midnight. There are live prime-time broadcasts on channels outside the main NBC network for the first time ever.

Mark Lazarus
But the bell cow remains the prime-time showcase broadcasts on NBC's over-the-air network.

Nielsen reported that NBC's rating for this year's opening ceremony was down 35 percent from the 2012 edition, and Deadline.com reported that through the opening weekend, the NBC network prime-time ratings were below four previous Summer Olympics.

That matters to advertisers, who want their products front and center on the prime-time broadcasts.

Still, every night of Olympics coverage has been the most-watched TV show in prime time by some distance. And viewership surged this week as American swimmers won a slew of gold medals in races that aired live in prime time.

Lazarus was peppered with questions about whether NBC will have to offer make-goods as a result of the aforementioned ratings decline. He insisted that won't happen, because advertisers understand NBC is selling more than just the prime-time network broadcast.

"Overall, our ratings consumption is meeting our expectations - the mix is just a little different," Lazarus said. "Our advertisers are happy."

Because there's so much online streaming concurrent with TV coverage, NBC has made a point of trying to find the best ways to measure viewership. These Olympics have solidified the use of "average minute audience" - literally tracking the average number of online viewers of an event in a given minute. That's the same methodology Nielsen uses in its TV ratings.

NBC has thus published "total audience delivery" statistics that aggregate viewership across its TV channels and digital platforms. As one example, Tuesday's prime-time total was 36.1 million viewers, of which 33.4 million watched NBC's over-the-air broadcast.

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