From the UK's observer..
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/aug/09/television-cnbc-viewing-figures
More US airtime for Amanda Dury then ??
Courting constant controversy for its evangelism of financial speculation, CNBC has never had so much attention. It devotes 16 hours of live coverage every day to the markets and has analysed every detail of the credit crunch. So why are its ratings slumping?
According to figures supplied to the Observer by Nielsen, the television tracking agency, the average number of Americans watching CNBC at any point on the 24-hour clock was 188,000 last month, a drop of 11% on last year. A more detailed breakdown leaked on the internet reveals a 28% plunge in CNBC viewers during the core business day, between 5am and 7pm.
Executives at the network say the numbers are a return to "normality" after a record spike at the height of last year's financial drama. Ratings in Europe and Asia are holding up more impressively, hits on the network's website are up 150% year-on-year and page views via mobile phones are rocketing.
But in the core US television sphere, a fall-back to 2007 levels means CNBC has kept none of the new fans who tuned in during the crunch. The channel is slinking back to a dark corner of the cable spectrum. Its smaller rivals, Bloomberg Television and Fox Business, have shown little sign of breaking into the mainstream, so the epochal stage of the crisis, which once seemed set to transform awareness of finance, is becoming a memory.
The drop in ratings is irresistible fodder for CNBC's critics. The channel is loathed by many on the left for its shouty style and unrestrained embrace of Ayn Rand-style capitalism. It apes the machismo of the trading floor and in gaps between genuinely informative reportage, its presenters jostle to out-opinion each other. Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Pew Research Centre's Project for Excellence in Journalism, says many of its shows are built around "punditry and personality" rather than any genuine attempt to report business news.
CNBC has had an accident-prone 2009. Top news executive Jonathan Wald and a popular anchorman, Dylan Ratigan, left after failing to agree new contracts. And a reporter, Rick Santelli, got carried away with an on-air rant in February, whipping traders around him into a frenzy at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange by blasting Barack Obama's economic stimulus package for subsidising "losers' mortgages". White House press secretary Robert Gibbs urged him to switch to decaffeinated coffee .....
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/aug/09/television-cnbc-viewing-figures
More US airtime for Amanda Dury then ??

