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    Home » Nielsen, Amazon Prime spar over football viewers; ratings week in review

    Nielsen, Amazon Prime spar over football viewers; ratings week in review

    By SHOOTWednesday, October 26, 2022Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1047 Views
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    Arizona Cardinals cornerback Marco Wilson (20) intercepts a pass intended for New Orleans Saints wide receiver Marquez Callaway, facing camera, which he returned for a touchdown, during the first half of an NFL football game, Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Matt York)

    By David Bauder, Media Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    By the Nielsen company's count, 7.8 million people watched Amazon Prime's coverage of last Thursday's NFL game between New Orleans and Arizona. But Amazon says no, there were actually 8.9 million people watching.
    So which is it?

    You'll have to judge for yourself. After each of its Thursday night games this season, Amazon has publicly contradicted Nielsen in this manner, one of the boldest challenges ever to a company that for generations has monopolized the count of people watching programs on television.

    Neither company is saying the other is wrong, but neither is backing down, either. The result is confusion, most notably for advertisers.

    Nielsen, as it has for years, follows the viewing habits in a panel of homes across the country and, from that limited sample, derives an estimate of how many people watch a particular program. That number is currency in the media industry, meaning it is used to determine advertising rates.

    Amazon, in the first year of an 11-year contract to stream Thursday night games, says it has an actual count of every one of its subscribers who streams it — not an estimate. The games are also televised in the local markets of the participating teams, about 9% of its total viewership each week, and Amazon uses Nielsen's estimate for that portion of the total.

    "We wouldn't put out our number if we weren't comfortable that it was accurate," said Jay Marine, vice president of Amazon Prime Video and head of its sports department.

    Through six weeks, Nielsen says the Thursday night games have averaged 10.3 million viewers. Amazon says the average is 12.1 million. Amazon's estimate has been bigger than Nielsen's each week.

    "I don't at all believe that Amazon's numbers are not right," said Connie Kim, Nielsen spokeswoman. "And I don't believe that our numbers are not right."

    Since different methodologies are being used, it's no surprise that there are differences in the estimate, she said.

    "It's going to take a little time," Kim said. "As it evolves it should be one number. But we're not quite there yet."

    For now, ad prices for the Thursday games are set using Nielsen's numbers. But Amazon clearly has an incentive to let clients know that it believes more people are actually watching.

    "You have to remember that this is new — new for Nielsen and it's the first time there's been actual data for an event like this," Marine said.

    The dispute has clear implications for the future. Streamers haven't had much incentive for measurements of daily viewing to be publicized, in part because people don't watch their shows the same way as broadcast television, and they haven't needed numbers verified from a third-party source for advertisers.

    But with Netflix about to introduce advertising, that can all change very rapidly. And if other companies develop technology that can measure viewing more precisely, the precedent has now been set for publicly disputing Nielsen's numbers.

    In primetime last week, NBC was the top-rated network, averaging 5.1 million viewers. CBS had 4.7 million, Fox had 4 million, ABC had 3 million, Univision had 1.4 million, Ion Television had 950,000 and Telemundo had 880,000.

    TBS was the most-watched cable network, averaging 2.85 million viewers in primetime. ESPN had 2.68 million, Fox News Channel had 2.26 million, MSNBC had 1.09 million and TNT had 1.05 million.

    ABC's "World News Tonight" won the evening news ratings race, averaging 7.7 million viewers, NBC's "Nightly News" had 6.5 million and the "CBS Evening News" had 4.7 million.

    Here are the 20 most popular shows on primetime television for the week of Oct. 17-23, their networks and viewerships:

    1. NFL Football: Pittsburgh and Miami, NBC, 15.53 million.
    2. "NFL Pregame" (Sunday), NBC, 13.09 million.
    3. NFL Football: Seattle at L.A. Chargers, Fox, 12.81 million.
    4. "The OT," Fox, 9.88 milllion.
    5. "Football Night in America," NBC, 9.53 million.
    6. "60 Minutes," CBS, 7.97 million.
    7. "FBI," CBS, 7.11 million.
    8. "Chicago Fire," NBC, 7.05 million.
    9. "NCIS," CBS, 6.91 million.
    10. "The Equalizer," CBS, 6.9 million.
    11. "Chicago Med," NBC, 6.88 million.
    12. "Young Sheldon," CBS, 6.8 million.
    13. "The Voice" (Monday), NBC, 6.23 million.
    14. "The Voice" (Tuesday), NBC, 6.13 million.
    15. "FBI: International," CBS, 6.09 million.
    16. "Ghosts," CBS, 6.08 million.
    17. "Blue Bloods," CBS, 5.91 million.
    18. Baseball: NLCS, San Diego at Philadelphia, Fox, 5.74 million.
    19. "Chicago PD," NBC, 5.58 million.
    20. "The Neighborhood," CBS, 5.51 million.

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    Tags:Amazon PrimeNFLNielsenThursday Night Football



    Elon Musk’s X platform investigated in France for alleged data tampering and fraud

    Friday, July 11, 2025
    An "X" sign rests atop the company headquarters, formerly known as Twitter, in downtown San Francisco, on Friday, July 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)

    French prosecutors have launched a police investigation into alleged data tampering and fraud involving X, Elon Musk's social media platform.

    The Paris prosecutor's office, in a statement Friday, announced the opening of the investigation, and said that a branch of the French gendarmerie is conducting the inquiry.

    The investigation is looking into two alleged offenses "in particular" — organized tampering with the functioning of an automated data processing system, and organized fraudulent extraction of data from an automated data processing system, the statement said.

    It didn't give details of the alleged wrongdoing. It said that the investigation is targeting both the platform and people, without naming them or saying what role they might have within X.

    The prosecutor's office said that it was acting on information that two people provided in January to its cybercrimes unit. One of them is a member of parliament, and the other is a senior official in a French government institution. It didn't identify them or the institution.

    It said the two people alleged the suspected use of X's algorithm for the "purposes of foreign interference." It didn't detail the alleged interference or how the algorithm was allegedly used.

    The prosecutor's office said that it decided this week to open the police investigation, after conducting its own "verifications" and having received additional information from French researchers and "various public institutions."

    The Associated Press has emailed X's press office, seeking comment.

    Kelvin Chan contributed to this report from London.

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