View New Posts
  1. #1

    Default Super Bowl most watched TV show ever

    Keith Groller February 9, 2010



    The NF L capped its best season ever in terms of popularity with record viewership on Sunday, drawing an average of 106.5 million viewers and beating the M*A*S*H series finale in 1983 as the most-watched program in television history.

    A weekend in which a good portion of the country was digging out from a major snowstorm, along with the lure of several compelling story lines and (supposed) explosive offenses, all factored into blockbuster numbers and capped another year that cemented pro football as our nation's most popular sport.

    As for the broadcast itself, CBS was unspectacular, but solid.

    They don't overdo the facial shots the way Fox, in particular, does, and limited the suite shots of the Mannings. May have seen a little more of Sean Payton than I'd have liked, but his decision to begin the second half with an onside kick will be hailed as one of the great coaching moves in Super Bowl history.

    By the way, has the scrum for the ball ended yet?

    Jim Nantz and Phil Simms are not as good as Al Michaels and Cris Collinsworth and probably don't agitate as much as Joe Buck and Troy Aikman.

    Their best trait is they stick to the action and don't over-dramatize any particular play or series.

    Nantz, prepping well, noted that this was the 13th straight year the NFC team won the coin toss and added that there are ''8,100-to-1 odds'' against it happening.

    When Pierre Garcon dropped a potential big-gainer over the middle with the Colts up 10-3 in the second quarter, Nantz came up prescient by calling it a possible ''momentum-changer.''

    It was the last pass Peyton Manning would throw for more than a hour in actual time.

    The game had a weird flow for the casual, non-rooting viewer. The Colts get out to 10-0 lead and you're thinking it's over and then you especially think it's over after the Colts make the goal-line stand just before halftime.

    Then you think ''Oh, how nice'' it is that the Saints fight back and make a game of it, but ultimately, you figure Manning and the Colts will find a way in the end.

    You're still thinking that way until the Tracy Porter interception and return.

    Even after that, you think maybe Manning can pull off a miracle.

    But then suddenly, the game ends and the New Orleans Saints, incredibly, are Super Bowl champs.

    Some other quick observations:

    Tom Fallon of local ESPN radio e-mailed to say he thought it was too much for CBS analysts to be wearing Mardi Gras beads immediately after the game. ''They can say 'good for them and the city' over and over in the postgame show Â… but actually wearing party beads crossed a line.''

    But all of the announcers seemed overly thrilled the Saints won with Chris Berman, Steve Young and Tom Jackson gushing on ESPN. Haven't detected this kind of one-sided sentiment since the Pats beat the Rams in 2002 and everyone thought it was so appropriate that a team wearing red, white and blue and called Patriots would win the first Super Bowl after the 9/11 tragedy.

    Great shot of Drew Brees, his eyes misting, holding his young son Baylen in the postgame celebration. Baylen was wearing headphones to minimize crowd noise.

    Queen Latifah and Carrie Underwood were more in tune before the game than The Who was at halftime, although that stage was amazing. CBS didn't mind the song selections either since they are the themes to a couple of their biggest drama hits.

    The NFL Network's marathon pregame show was without Warren Sapp, who was arrested after an alleged incident of domestic violence, but there was more than enough -- too much, really -- analysis, including a discussion about the demeanor of Manning's face as he entered the stadium.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/20/2005


  2. #2

    Default

    175 pts

    3-QUESTION
    SBR TRIVIA WINNER 05/24/2012


  3. #3

    Default

    I bet the snow snowstorm in South had something to do with higher numbers as people were stuck home.

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/20/2005


  4. #4

    Default

    I thought it was one of the better that i have seen. I have seen every super bowl.

  5. #5

    Default

    2 of the better QBs in the league. I think most wanted more of a shoot out, but I was happy w/ the gm
    175 pts

    3-QUESTION
    SBR TRIVIA WINNER 05/24/2012


  6. #6

    Default

    Most viewed game is the World Cup final. More than 2 billion fans watch it on TV.

  7. #7

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pavyracer View Post
    Most viewed game is the World Cup final. More than 2 billion fans watch it on TV.
    Ummm I doubt it. First of all the superbowl stat is how many tvs were turned on.

    2nd, if 2 bill is a accurate number, the only way to get that number would be tv ratings stats. With 6.8 bill people in the world....and if they are saying 2 bill tvs are on that game...And I'm sure over 80% of those tvs have more then 1 viewer, do the math

    iPad
    WINNER
    SBR Store 06/10/2011


  8. #8

    Default

    I find it hard to believe that nearly 1/3 of the people on the entire planet watched a world cup final match.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Iwinyourmoney View Post
    Ummm I doubt it. First of all the superbowl stat is how many tvs were turned on.

    2nd, if 2 bill is a accurate number, the only way to get that number would be tv ratings stats. With 6.8 bill people in the world....and if they are saying 2 bill tvs are on that game...And I'm sure over 80% of those tvs have more then 1 viewer, do the math
    http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/fifa...6e_tv_2658.pdf

    All the games had a cumulative viewership of 26.29 billion viewers during the Word Cup of 2006. It has increased 76% since 2002 and 148% since 1998. This year in 2010 expect another 75% increase.

  10. #10

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by pavyracer View Post
    http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/fifa...6e_tv_2658.pdf

    All the games had a cumulative viewership of 26.29 billion viewers during the Word Cup of 2006. It has increased 76% since 2002 and 148% since 1998. This year in 2010 expect another 75% increase.
    all these stats are for the whole world cup, not 1 match

    iPad
    WINNER
    SBR Store 06/10/2011


  11. #11

    Default

    Good detective work IWIN, you caught Paver!!!

    SBR Founder Join Date: 7/20/2005


  12. #12

    Default

    "The 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany had a total cumulative television audience of 26.29 billion (24.2 billion in-home and 2.1 billion out-of-home viewers). This is on a par with the 1998 event, which like 2006 was also staged in Europe, but a little below the 26.4 billion in-home viewers noted for the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea and Japan. Unsurprisingly, the most-watched match was the final Italy - France with a global cumulative audience of 715.1 million viewers."

    http://www.webcitation.org/5lWlE0Yc4

  13. #13

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Iwinyourmoney View Post
    all these stats are for the whole world cup, not 1 match
    Did the whole NFL season had 26.29 billion viewers? and World cup is only 3 weeks not 5 months.

  14. #14

  15. #15

    Default

    Ok...we are talking bout 1 game, don't get all fukin defensive. Let ur cok get hard yes soccer wins overall. U said 3 bill watched the final. That was the debate

    iPad
    WINNER
    SBR Store 06/10/2011


  16. #16

    Default

    And to what JK quoted:
    cumulative viewers means estimated audience, NOT tvs on the channel like the superbowl. Basically soccer stat is estimating how many people avg per tv, where as the superbowl stat is just tvs on that channel

    iPad
    WINNER
    SBR Store 06/10/2011


  17. #17

    Default

    Well the title of this thread is deceptive. My point is the Superbowl is not the most watched event. 100 million is only a fraction of the 750 million who watched the WC final.

  18. #18

    Default

    Pavy the stats can't be compared. Soccer stat is an estimate how many people watched, football is how many tvs were on the game. I would guess if the stats uses the same type of stat, they would be very close

    iPad
    WINNER
    SBR Store 06/10/2011


  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Iwinyourmoney View Post
    Pavy the stats can't be compared. Soccer stat is an estimate how many people watched, football is how many tvs were on the game. I would guess if the stats uses the same type of stat, they would be very close
    Let me tell you what happened to my house. We have 4 TV's. At some point all 4 TV's where on during the Superbowl. Only 2 people in the house watched the game. So what you are saying is our house had more TV's on than people watching the game. That means less people watch the Superbowl than the number of TV's.

Top