| Despite
Solid Show, Viewers Stayed Away From Grammy Awards
Feb
14, 2005 17:06 Eastern Time
By
DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer
NEW
YORK (AP) _ From J.Lo to James Brown, Usher to
U2, the Grammys had it all this year _ except a lot of interested
viewers.
An estimated
18.8 million people watched Ray Charles' swan song clean
up with eight awards Sunday night, a startling 28 percent
drop from the 2004 Grammys. After two years on an upswing,
Grammy ratings sunk to their lowest level since 1995, according
to Nielsen Media Research.
It may
be an ominous sign for the granddaddy of awards shows, the
Academy Awards, Feb. 27 on ABC.
People
at CBS and elsewhere in the industry were somewhat perplexed
by the numbers on Monday, given that the show was jam-packed
with performances and star power.
``This
was the show to beat in terms of how it was produced,''
said Shari Anne Brill, a television analyst for Carat USA.
``It was just great. It wasn't about someone handing out
awards. It was about performances. Viewers who didn't tune
in missed a treat.''
The
Grammys, which has a long history of being derided as the
Grannies within the music industry, even drew an endorsement
from one of pop's potentates. ``I think this is the best
Grammys we've ever seen,'' U2 lead singer Bono said as the
group accepted an award toward the show's end.
It was
a continuation of a recent Grammy trend of minimizing awards
presentations and maximizing live performances.
While
there were misfires _ the cacophonous opening number where
several acts briefly played different songs all at once
_ there were plenty of thrills. Alicia Keys' smoldering
``If I Ain't Got You,'' Kanye West's resurrection, the duet
between Usher and Brown and songs by Green Day and U2 all
come to mind.
CBS
spokesman Chris Ender noted last year's show benefited from
Janet Jackson's Super Bowl fallout. Controversy sells.
Brill
agreed: ``Don't you think if Michael Jackson did a duet
with someone with his trial going on, more viewers would
have come?''
ABC
is also much more competitive. The hit show ``Desperate
Housewives'' had more viewers than the Grammys in the same
time slot on Sunday, Nielsen said. But there was little
evidence that many people switched over to the Grammys when
``Desperate Housewives'' was done.
Charles'
big win could have been a hindrance, too. While a music
legend, his best work may have been a mystery to many young
viewers. Since he died last June, viewers were denied heartwarming
scenes of him basking in the glory.
It continues
a trend of less-than-stellar U.S. ratings for awards shows.
The
Emmys last fall had its smallest audience ever. The Golden
Globes last month had its fewest viewers since returning
to broadcast television in 1996, down a whopping 10 million
people from 2004. The 12.9 million people who watched the
American Music Awards in November was a distant echo of
the 48 million who tuned in two decades ago.
``I'm
wondering if there are so many awards shows that they have
lost some of their specialness,'' Brill said.
AP-CS-02-14-05
1706EST
|