Nielsen: People Getting TV In New Ways

Three-quarters of the estimated 5 million homes that don't get TV signals over the airways or through cable, satellite or telecommunications companies have televisions anyway, according to the media research firm. Many of these homes are satisfied to use their TVs for games or get programming through DVDs or services like Netflix or Apple TV.

NEW YORK (AP) — The number of U.S. homes that don’t get traditional television service continues to increase, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have TVs.

The Nielsen company said in a report issued on Tuesday that three-quarters of the estimated 5 million homes that don’t get TV signals over the airways or through cable, satellite or telecommunications companies have televisions anyway.

Many of these homes are satisfied to use their TVs for games or get programming through DVDs or services like Netflix or Apple TV, said Dounia Turrill, senior vice president for client insights at Nielsen.

The company’s report shows how the nature of TV service is slowly changing. Before the percentage started declining about three years ago, more than 99 percent of TV homes received the traditional TV signals. Now that has dipped just below 96 percent.

Part of the decline is also economic – service deemed expendable by people struggling to make ends meet, Nielsen said.

Because of the changes, Nielsen is considering redefining what it considers a television household to include people who get service through Netflix or similar services instead of the traditional TV signals, Turrill said.

BRAND CONNECTIONS

During the first three months of 2012, the average consumer spent about 2 percent less time watching traditional TV than the previous year, Nielsen said. They more than made up for that by spending more time watching material recorded on DVRs or on the Internet through TVs, computers and mobile devices.

The typical consumer spends 14 minutes a day using gaming consoles, although it’s more for owners of Wii, XBox and PlayStation 3, Nielsen said. Many of these devices are also popular sites for accessing video, Turrill said.

“The gaming devices are becoming entertainment hubs,” she said.

People over age 65 spend nearly 48 hours, on average, watching television each week, Nielsen said. At the other end of the spectrum are teenagers aged 12 to 17, who spend an average of 22 minutes per week watching TV.

Blacks spend an average of 210 hours per month watching TV, more than whites (nearly 153 hours), Latinos (131 hours) and Asians (100 hours), Nielsen said.


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Pierre Jaspar says:

September 12, 2012 at 9:55 am

It’s cheaper and more reliable than ATSC tuning, to use the internet or Apple TV and Roku. Granted the quality lacks a bit, but for free you gotta give up something. Netflix and Amazon, or Hulu for less than 10 bucks a month… allot cheaper than cable, WITHOUT ALL OF THE INFOMERCIALS. I can go to Justin TV to watch all cable nets, with exception on HLN, foreign Newscast on CBC or Sky, etc. With USTVNow, I can watch the main networks, minus the “dot 2” channels for free (all from Harrisburg/York/State College/Clearfield). Bottom line- there’s more offered, it’s more customized to me, cheaper and more reliable. I can see why this trend is picking up steam. For my free TV, minus internet fee, I’m giving up a touch, but it’s definitely worth it.