Much more than film, TV shows have a wide, regular, and habitual viewership. |
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But even if not as many people could watch the games in person, the good news is that television viewership continued to grow. |
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Such invitationals will attract more viewership for sport by sparking interest among sports fans. |
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We are telecasting our religious programming purely as a service to our viewership. |
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He apparently values the viewership of 13-year-old boys who prefer to watch meritless, mindless cinema. |
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Dobbs' task will be to stem the viewership drain, and he says he harbors no illusions about the difficulty of the job at hand. |
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His speech held the audience in the palm of his hand, including the wider television viewership. |
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While certainly the cable channels boasted spikes in viewership, a swell of Web news users clicked offshore. |
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News channels get more viewership as people not watch them merely to catch headlines, but also because of their other non-fiction content. |
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A South African company will soon be engaged to monitor the channel's viewership. |
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There is little evidence to suggest increased television viewership is killing off reading. |
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Teng said she understood the media has to dramatize stories in order to increase viewership or sell papers. |
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The level of prime-time viewership now's probably as low as it's ever been in the history of television. |
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Interview those who own or manage the media and they will tell you that today it's the readership or viewership that calls the shots. |
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Indeed, can one imagine the reaction among the television viewership across Central America? |
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It didn't reach a U.S. viewership until the '90s, where it delighted insomniacs and stoners on late-night television. |
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So it seems there's room for improved viewership so long as boneheaded moves in the scheduling department can be avoided. |
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An increasing amount of telephone numbers are unlisted, and television viewership and Internet usage are at all-time highs. |
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Even among Fox's core audience of conservatives, CNN has an edge in total viewership. |
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Since its viewership has dwindled, ABC had to depend on something other than ABC to get the word out on its new shows. |
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In comparing media usage, online traffic growth coincided most closely with the rapid decline in television viewership. |
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Other deals are tied to the development of interactive television and ITV viewership measurement. |
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A lot of these problems would solve themselves if the public would vote with their viewership. |
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The race telecast also kept pace with 2005's average viewership with an audience of nearly a quarter-million people. |
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I would venture to say that television viewership would grow substantially. |
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The channel's viewership is ageing, and attempts to attract younger watchers have yet to bear fruit. |
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Seeing as Miami's viewership was worse than D.C.'s, its fate seems equally grim. |
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To be sure, even at their reduced rates of viewership, both men were leaders at their respective networks. |
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I think he triples or quadruples the viewership of all the other cable shows. |
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Now, if public support dwindles with viewership, PBS could slowly starve. |
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Ratings for talent competitions like idol, once viewership juggernauts, are plummeting. |
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As for O'Brien, finally in the job he had hungered after for a decade, his viewership was awful too, barely half the five million drawn by Leno. |
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We feel like we were putting out our strongest episodes by the end, but that doesn't really jibe with a rise in viewership. |
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If Blendle grows to overwhelm the publications' own subscription viewership, they may pull out. |
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The viewership stats suggest that, the occasional Ray Rice notwithstanding, the fans still buy it. |
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Football tournaments therefore provide guaranteed viewership for long periods. |
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If we look at your audience levels now, I think there is an overall job to increase the viewership and the environment for these feature films. |
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Sometimes the viewership out there puts more credence into what people write as opposed to what politicians say. |
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In fact, we believe that its current viewership can continue to grow exponentially in a global manner. |
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One of the reasons this is happening is that the CBC's viewership and the CBC television and the radio has fallen off and off and down. |
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I think their viewership is probably double or triple now that of the CBC news hour. |
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Even before you add in the Internet, the viewership of television is actually pretty remarkable. |
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Canadian viewership records were broken five times during the Olympic Winter Games. |
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Throughout all of this, television still has a fairly consistent viewership. |
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When you can actually have a half-hour program, airing of course the repeat, it gives a tremendous viewership here in the province. |
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It is influenced by commercial interests, competition for viewership and ideology. |
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In fact, viewership for locally conceived and produced shows is high, and loyal. |
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Left unmanaged, these advances could simply fortify and broaden viewership for the few dominant content providers already in existence. |
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Technological advances could simply fortify and broaden viewership for the few already dominant providers in existence. |
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Does the evidence bear out this idea that there's pretty good listenership or viewership at those times for kids' programs? |
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Episodic content is generally used to develop the broadcaster brand, ensure repeat viewership, and provide a consistent offering to advertisers. |
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I don't know if they have a great viewership of their own movies in that country. |
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Thus, this fragmentation of viewership results in a loss of advertising revenues. |
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Television and televangelism usually work through viewership. |
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If anything, it will push up piracy and television viewership. |
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I think Sportsnight and Studio 60 failed on network TV due to lack of viewership, something not necessarily as important in cable. |
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It too heralded great critical response but low audience viewership. |
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Prime time programmes in various channels are vying for viewership. |
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Despite high viewership, many viewers were disappointed with NBC's coverage. |
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When D movies have exclusive first windows during prime time on their local community channels, I predict a significant spike in local viewership. |
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Although the viewership figures were respectable, its slating in the press led US television networks to lose interest in broadcasting the film. |
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Through sponsorship of expert speakers on the show we gain excellent visibility while providing information to farm managers through this outstanding media that continues to increase in viewership. |
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I know that when we were in Vancouver just yesterday, we were asking about the kind of listenership or viewership they had, and they professed that they didn't know. |
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What's more, unless Mr Tiriac can win over the game's biggest names, he may quickly find his viewership dwindling. Players who have spoken out, like Mr Djokovic, complain the courts are far too slippery. |
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On many levels, and to a heteronormed viewership, Klapisch's film, and Xavier's travel diary, represent heady, heartening and wholly thrillsome escapes from conformity. |
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The early years of the 21st century have brought increased viewership and subsequent prosperity to the industry on the back of the economic revival. |
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