Category: Television (Page 7 of 73)

2010 Super Bowl surpasses finale of “M*A*S*H”

Super Bowl XLIV between the Saints and Colts was watched by more than 106 million people, which surpassed the 1983 finale of “M*A*S*H” to become the most-watched program in U.S. television history.

From ESPN.com:

Nielsen estimated Monday that 106.5 million people watched Sunday’s Super Bowl. The “M*A*S*H” record was 105.97 million.

The “M*A*S*H” record has proven as durable and meaningful in television as Babe Ruth’s record of 714 home runs was in baseball until topped by Hank Aaron. Ultimately, it may be hard to tell which program was really watched by more people. There’s a margin for error in such numbers, and Nielsen’s Monday estimate was preliminary, and could change with a more thorough look at data due Tuesday.

“It’s significant for all of the members of the broadcasting community,” said Leslie Moonves, CBS Corp. CEO. “For anyone who wants to write that broadcasting is dead, 106 million people watched this program. You can’t find that anywhere else.”

And people wonder why companies spend so much on one 30 second commercial during the Super Bowl. It’s incredibly hard to get that many people to tune into your product or brand at one given time, so companies have no problem shelling out millions for ads on Super Bowl Sunday.


Photo from fOTOGLIF

Tebow’s Super Bowl ad hardly worth the stir

The most anticipated Super Bowl ad came and went on Sunday night without causing the stir many people thought it would. In fact, it’s safe to say that one could have seen it and still completely missed its message.

Leading up to the Super Bowl, the conservative group Focus on the Family put together a 30 second ad starring Tim Tebow and his mother, in which the former Heisman Trophy winner’s mom talks about how she nearly lost him during her pregnancy. The commercial sparked debate before it was even broadcast because of its expected anti-abortion overtones.

Here’s the ad:

When I first heard about the ad, I thought it was going to be an in-your-face message speaking out against abortion. Instead, the ad was light – almost hokey even, and I thought it did its best to steer away from controversy. It makes you wonder what all the fuss was about before it aired. (Although I get why some people didn’t want it to be shown when they first heard about it.)

On a related note, did anyone else feel as though the commercials for the Super Bowl this year were average at best? The laughs came and went for me after Betty White was trying to run a dig route over the middle of a tackle football game and got plastered. But even that one fizzled at the end.

I must admit the Doritos samurai guy was pretty funny too, although anyone that had a full laugh come out of their mouth during that Bud Light auto-tune commercial featuring T-Pain needs to be beaten with a sack of dirty underwear. The same goes for that beaver ad.

Suns hope to break TNT jinx

This is an amazing stat, courtesy of the Arizona Republic

The Suns have lost 17 consecutive games that have been broadcast by the network. The peculiar streak will continue or end today when they face the Grizzlies, who have won eight consecutive home games.

This streak is crazy, especially considering that the Suns have been pretty good for several years now. You’d think they would win at least 50% of TNT games, yet they’ve put together 17-straight losses. The Grizzlies are no pushovers either.

The game is at 5:30 ET, on…you guessed it…TNT.

Another big Saturday in sports

We’re in that sweet spot in the sports calendar when the NFL playoffs are going on and there are some good in-conference matchups in college hoops. Here’s a quick look at what’s on tap for Saturday. (All times Eastern.)

12 PM: #5 Syracuse @ #9 West Virginia (ESPN)
2 PM: #18 Georgia Tech @ #13 North Carolina (ESPN)
4:30 PM: Cardinals @ Saints (Fox)
8:15 PM: Ravens @ Colts (CBS)

That’s not a bad lineup at all.

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