Friday, February 10, 2012

News Sites Surged On Obama's Big Day

January 27, 2009

The top three cable television news Web sites -- MSNBC.com, CNN.com, and FoxNews.com -- attracted a disproportionate increase in the number of Inauguration Day viewers compared to the Internet at large, Web analytics firm comScore reported Tuesday. The 4.1 million viewers who watched video on those sites during the 12-1 p.m. EST hour as President Barack Obama was sworn in one week ago represented a fourteen-fold increase from the previous Tuesday.

"Online video coverage of President Obama's inauguration appears to represent a significant incremental audience to TV, since it presumably includes many people at work who did not have access to a TV," comScore's Tania Yuki said in a press release. "As such, the 13 million online viewers during this time period likely represent a 32 percent addition to the reported 40 million people who viewed the inauguration on TV. And, that so much of this online audience flocked to the Web sites of the major cable TV news outlets reflects a direct channel shift from TV to the Internet."

Although countless video sites carried live inauguration streams, 30 percent of those who watched online gravitated toward cable TV news sites, Yuki said. Much like TV, people have a tendency to tune into specific channels when they consume certain content. Unlike TV, online video offers greater flexibility in how, where and when it can provide these experiences. CNN's Inauguration Day partnership with Facebook is one such example. The cable channel created a special version of its CNN.com Live video player that let users comment via their Facebook "status" on what was happening in real time.

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Juliana Gruenwald has been covering tech and telecom issues for more than a decade for National Journal, Interactive Week, BNA and Congressional Quarterly. This is her second stint with National Journal. She was recruited by NJ in 1998 to help launch its first tech policy publication, Technology Daily. She left in 2000 to cover international tech and telecom issues for Ziff Davis Media's Interactive Week magazine. She started her career at United Press International as the wire service's first Helen Thomas Intern. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Minnesota. A Minneapolis native, she misses the lakes but not the cold.


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Josh Smith covers technology policy as a staff reporter for National Journal. He previously interned at National Journal Daily, a Senate press office, and the Deseret News in Salt Lake City where he covered the state legislature, courts, and crime. In 2009 he graduated with honors from Southern Utah University after managing an award-winning student newspaper as editor-in-chief. Josh has received state, regional and national awards for his political and policy reporting, including first place in CapitolBeat’s 2009 Best of Statehouse Reporting college competition. A native of drop-dead-gorgeous Utah, Josh lives in Virginia with his wife, Amber.