Linear TV skews older as streaming audiences stay 20 years younger
The median age of linear television viewers has risen to over 64 years, with news programs skewing the oldest (67-71 years) and primetime shows ranging from 58-73 years. In contrast, streaming platforms attract audiences that are frequently 20-25 years younger than their linear counterparts, even for the same programs, with specific examples provided for both linear primetime series and cable news networks.
Key Takeaways
- Linear TV’s median viewer age is now over 64 years old.
- News programs skew oldest, at roughly 67 to 71 years old.
- Primetime broadcast series span a wide age range, from Bob’s Burgers at 49.5 years to Blue Bloods at 73.0 years.
- Abbott Elementary averages about 61 years on broadcast and 36 years on streaming.
- CNN’s total-day audience is 67.0 to 68.0 years old, Fox News is 68.0 to 69.0, and MSNBC is 71.0.
Why It Matters
The immediate signal is that broadcast and cable continue to age, while streaming reaches materially younger viewers for the same titles. That gap is visible across Fox, CBS, ABC, Hulu, Peacock, Paramount+, CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC in the figures cited here. For the streaming ecosystem, the issue is not just reach but audience mix: the same program can look very different depending on where it is watched. The next data point to watch is whether future Nielsen program-by-program splits keep showing a 20-25 year age gap between broadcast and streaming audiences.
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