The Academy Awards television audience plunged to 9.85 million viewers on ABC, less than half of the Oscarsā previous low and continuing a startling trend of viewer tune out for awards shows.
The Nielsen companyās preliminary estimate shows that the audience who watched āNomadlandā win best picture on Sunday was 58 percent below last yearās tally of 23.6 million, which had set the previous record for least-watched Oscars telecast. ABC owns broadcast rights for the Oscars until 2028.
Following a year where movie theaters were mostly closed due to COVID-19, people were unexcited about or unfamiliar with movies they primarily streamed at home. Producers tried to fight through pandemic fatigue with a hostless program and a small, socially-distanced audience that didnāt wear masks during the broadcast.
The event drew mixed reviews, and renewed questions about the types of movies the industry makes and wants to honor.
āIt was agonizing for me to get through the show last night. It was pure torture,ā said Marc Berman, a veteran television analyst who writes the āProgramming Insiderā newsletter, on Monday.
The Oscars do best in years when popular movies are up for awardsāthe telecast drew 55 million viewers when āTitanicā won best picture in 1998ābut no movie came close to that impact. As a result, viewers sat through ālong acceptance speeches from people you donāt know in movies you never heard of,ā Berman said.
All awards shows have been in a ratings free-fall. Both the Golden Globes (6.9 million viewers) and Grammy Awards (9.2 million) had record low audiences this year.
The normal glitz, glamour and excitement of these programs have been muted by the pandemic. Instead, producers have had to deal with live audiences either limited or non-existent, presented to an audience already sick of seeing people on Zoom.







