http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-ratings6-
2008nov06,0,5478822.story

>From the Los Angeles Times

Election night draws record viewership
Led by ABC, the networks and cable channels were watched by 71 
million.

By Matea Gold

November 6, 2008

Reporting from New York — President-elect Barack Obama's historic win 
Tuesday night captured the attention of a record 71 million television 
viewers, a fitting conclusion to a presidential campaign that saw 
interest in political news reach new heights.

Nearly a quarter of all television viewers in the United States 
watched the results come in between 5 and 8 p.m. PST on 14 networks, 
outstripping the 61.6 million people who tuned into the 2000 election 
returns, according to Nielsen Media Research.

The winning network in prime time was ABC, whose anchor trio of 
Charles Gibson, Diane Sawyer and George Stephanopoulos drew an average 
of 13.13 million viewers, the most of any broadcast or cable channel.

It marked the first time since 1996 that ABC has gotten the largest 
audience on a presidential election night and came as Gibson was 
locked in a tight battle with NBC's Brian Williams to be the top-rated 
evening news anchor.

ABC News President David Westin credited the network's win to its 
determination to "make it about the story, not about us."

On a night when the networks loaded up on flashy features like 
holograms and virtual graphics, he noted that ABC "used technology in 
the service of substance, not for its own sake, which helped."

It remains to be seen whether ABC's victory will pay dividends for 
"World News," its flagship evening broadcast. This season, the 
newscast has averaged 7.95 million viewers, down 2% from last season, 
while "NBC Nightly News" is up slightly with an average of 8.06 
million. "CBS Evening News" trails with 6.04 million viewers.

"It helps any network to have a lot of people see their anchor in this 
setting, and you would think it would help in the long run, but I 
don't think we'll see an immediate effect," said Westin, adding that 
he views election coverage primarily as a public service.

Aside from ABC's win, Tuesday's television ratings underscored the 
growing strength of the cable news networks, which have seen their 
audiences surge during the 2008 campaign.

During prime time, CNN -- which showcased some of the most advanced 
technology of the night -- drew the second-largest audience, with 12.3 
million viewers. That was 98% more than tuned in to CNN's 2004 
election coverage and the biggest viewership in the network's 28-year 
history. 

Between 5 and 9:30 p.m., which included Sen. John McCain's concession 
speech and Obama's victory address, CNN was the most-watched network 
overall, drawing 13.3 million viewers.

In prime time, the cable channel beat NBC, which took third place with 
12.02 million viewers, down 18% from four years ago. Fox News followed 
with 9.04 million viewers, up 12%. 

Despite the positive buzz CBS anchor Katie Couric attracted this fall 
for her political interviews, her election-night special lagged behind 
the competitors, pulling in just 7.83 million viewers, a decline of 
14% from four years ago.

MSNBC followed with 5.89 million viewers but enjoyed the biggest gains 
of any network -- a spike of 108% over 2004. The Fox broadcast network 
placed last with 5.14 million viewers.

Gold is a Times staff writer.

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