Milestone in US TV Ratings: Fox News #1 for 50 Quarters

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FNC Hits Ratings Mark With Megyn Kelly on the Rise, Benghazi Still a Hot Topic

10:26 AM PST 06/30/2014
by Michael O’Connell, The Hollywood Reporter
                
                                                Megyn Kelly and Bill Shine

The network’s executive vp programming Bill Shine speaks with THR about keeping ahead of the competition for so long, the first year of the revamped primetime lineup and why he stands by the editorial choice to keep covering the 2012 attack in Libya.

Perennial ratings victor Fox News Channel celebrates a new milestone this week: It just wrapped its 50th consecutive quarter (and 150th consecutive month) as the most watched cable news network in both total day and primetime. It’s a record only matched by ESPN, which has enjoyed a similar dominance in the sports category.
Though FNC, like all cable news networks, saw year-to-year losses in the second quarter, its average 1.6 million viewers and 267,000 adults 25-54 still gives it large margins of victory in primetime — where its biggest competition might be itself. In recent weeks, 9 p.m. anchor Megyn Kelly has out-rated her lead-in, reigning cable news champ Bill O’Reilly, on several occasions. That achievement did not escape the attention of FNC executive vp programming Bill Shine, who spoke with The Hollywood Reporter about the streak, the year of changes and some recent coverage choices.

“For us, that was a big change; we hardly make any adjustments to our primetime lineup,” Shine says of the decision to move Kelly from daytime to prime. “[She’s] much newsier. And I think we’re fortunate to have good timing.”
That timing includes Kelly’s arrival during the rocky launch of HealthCare.gov and the recent story of released P.O.W. Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl — which Kelly was one of the first to cover heavily. She’s also found herself at the center of the pop culture conversation, at least more so than her FNC colleagues, with interviews like June’s heated exchange with former Vice President (and Republican) Dick Cheney.
“I think it shows who Megyn is,” says Shine. “She’s a great broadcaster and she’s a great journalist. I think it also shows some of our competition and some of our skeptics what we do over here. I always say a lot of people who don’t like us don’t watch us.”

There are people watching, though. And while there have been big changes to primetime, Shine sees the network’s few changes to its talent roster as one thing that has kept viewers tuning in. “I think we’ve had a lot consistency. You look at people like Bill and Sean [Hannity], they’ve both been here since day one. Shep Smith and Neil Cavuto have both been here since day one.”

Some critics have pointed to that consistency as one reason why FNC’s average viewer is now over 65 years old, but Shine says an increased median age is something affecting all networks.

“It’s happening to most everyone in television, and in terms of the economics of it, we don’t buy and sell on that data,” Shine tells THR. “We buy and sell on the demo, and we’re still clearly winning the demo race among our competitors — combined in some cases. Is it something we keep our eye on? Absolutely. But it’s not something I currently go home and lose sleep over.”
Shine also says his eye is on the competition. He’s not ignoring CNN’s decision to ditch live news coverage for documentary news at cable news’ traditional flagship hour of 9 p.m. — “They’ve decided to go in another direction, and I think you’ve got to give them some time to see if it works.” — though he is committed to live programming and now considers their primetime block as beginning at 5 p.m. with The Five. That show now goes back and forth with Kelly’s between the No. 2 or No. 3 telecasts on cable news.

READ MORE AT THE FOLLOWING LINK:

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/fox-news-exec-talks-50-715660#sthash.3il9MfeX.dpuf

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