(Headline USA) Television ratings for the Oscars rebounded somewhat from last year’s record low, but the leftist-tainted, woke-filled event clearly doesn’t have the appeal to viewers that it once had.
Sunday’s ceremony reached an estimated 15.36 million viewers, according to preliminary Nielsen company numbers released on Monday by ABC. A more detailed estimate is expected Tuesday, with elements like out-of-home viewing added.
“CODA” won best picture in Sunday’s ceremony, but all of the winners and losers were overshadowed by best actor winner Will Smith storming the stage to slap comic Chris Rock because of a joke Rock made about Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.
Held in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2021 ceremony had reached a startlingly low 9.85 million viewers. That led to several changes in the Oscars going into this year, including the addition of hosts and awarding eight categories ahead of the broadcast and editing them into the live show.
The changes, though, did little to address the reason many viewers have tuned out the Oscars, that being Hollywood’s inherent leftist disdain for mainstream attitudes and beliefs.
For proof, look no further than the woke trio that hosted this year’s event and the outright distortions they peddled, under the guise of an alleged joke, about Florida‘s popular Parental Rights in Education bill.
This year’s viewership of 15 million is still below the 23.6 million people who watched the Oscars in 2020. Until last year, that was the smallest-ever audience for an Oscars ceremony.
Nielsen did not immediately have more specific viewership numbers for Sunday’s show, but the research company Samba TV said its own study did not indicate that the Smith-Rock incident had a significant affect on the audience size as the ceremony happened.
Viewership for live television events, with the notable exception of NFL football games, has been declining for several years with the advent of streaming and cord-cutting. Some Hollywood observers believe that the relatively niche appeal of many films honored by the Oscars has also limited the audience.
Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press