Categories: OLD Media Moves

Why no one watches business TV anymore

Kevin Roose of New York Magazine writes Thursday about why viewership for business television networks is way down.

Roose writes, “Now Wall Street is boring. Sure, there is the occasional outrage, but most of the financial sector’s sharp edges have been sanded down, its eccentricities and peccadilloes ironed out by five years of regulation and magnifying-glass public scrutiny. Today, a day of financial news might include a scoop about Dodd-Frank implementation (zzz), an update on the race for the Federal Reserve chairmanship (zzzzzzz), or maybe a scaremongering segment about another housing bubble (zzzwake up, check Zillow, see that homes are still below 2006 prices, put head back on pillow — zzzzzzzzzz).

“As a result of the recovery and the relative dearth of juicy financial news out there, the entire business-news apparatus is falling apart. CNBC, the market leader in all things stock-y, has seen its ratings slide to the lowest level in two decades, according to the Post.

“It’s not just CNBC. Fox Business News, CNBC’s plucky upstart competitor, is also experiencing a viewership decline in most of its programming hours. And although ratings figures for Bloomberg TV aren’t readily available, it’s safe to say that the network’s “strategic repositioning” to focus on digital video means that not all is well in analog-land.

“By traditional metrics, ratings for business TV shouldn’t be dropping now. The stock market is booming, home values are up, and as ordinary Joes and Janes watch their 401(k)s grow and get interested in making investments again, shows like Mad Money — where Jim Cramer screams at viewers about which stocks to buy and which to sell — are well positioned to capture their interest. And yet, nobody is watching. That’s probably a good thing. Mom-and-pop investors really shouldn’t be buying stocks, and shows that encourage them to compete with information-advantaged professional investors are almost always inviting them to lose money.”

Read more here.

Chris Roush

Chris Roush was the dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He was previously Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Professor in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a former business journalist for Bloomberg News, Businessweek, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Tampa Tribune and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. He is the author of the leading business reporting textbook "Show me the Money: Writing Business and Economics Stories for Mass Communication" and "Thinking Things Over," a biography of former Wall Street Journal editor Vermont Royster.

View Comments

    Recent Posts

    Pitchbook seeks a senior editor for private equity coverage

    PitchBook's news team is looking for a senior editor for private equity who is deeply…

    15 hours ago

    Bloomberg senior editor Canivete moving to Dubai

    Bloomberg News senior editor Carla Canivete is leaving London to become Middle East economics and politics editor…

    15 hours ago

    Bloomberg Industry union gets new contract

    Bloomberg Industry Group and Bloomberg Correspondents union members have reached a new contract agreement with…

    16 hours ago

    Business Insider’s Russell to cover AI’s impact on professional services

    Business Insider senior tech reporter Melia Russell is moving to a new beat to cover how artificial…

    16 hours ago

    Why Yahoo decided to sell TechCrunch

    Connie Loizos, the editor in chief of TechCrunch, writes about why Yahoo sold the tech…

    19 hours ago

    Yahoo sells TechCrunch for undisclosed amount

     Yahoo sold the tech-news site TechCrunch to investment company Regent for an undisclosed amount, reports Todd…

    21 hours ago