OK, I’m confused up near the start of the article you have the rather startling (to me) stat
" the proportion of people who tune in each week was down from 83% in 2021 to 79% in 2022."
Then further down you have
“Ten years ago, the average evening audience sitting down to watch the evening schedule at around 9pm was around 20 to 24 million people. These days, on a summer Saturday, the number is getting close to half of that.”
12million is what, 20% of the UK population ?
On the first stat I find that extremely implausible, literally the only person I know who regularly watches live TV is my elderly neighbour (70 pushing 80), fair enough habits of a lifetime and all that. But none of the adults I know watch live TV except for “events” like the FA cup that aren’t on a streaming option. Literally none. How can 79% of the population be watching live tv and I know 1 out of what, 50 odd people do in my social circle ?
The 20% figure is far more reconcilable - I’m sure there’s a decent slice of people still watching East Enders and Love Island, but 79% is just gobsmacking
Mex@feddit.uk 1 year ago
Is anyone suprised by this?
thehatfox@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Well it’s always useful to back our assumptions with actual numbers.
If these trends continue it’s going to increase pressure on the BBCs licensing model I would guess.
NuPNuA@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Given that the lisence covers iPlayer and their podcast output as well it seems like they’re already adapting.