Tv, 2012 Olympics | featured news

Comcast 3Q profit, sales top Street on upbeat subs

Cable giant Comcast Corp., the nation's largest provider of TV and high-speed Internet services, more than doubled its net income in the third quarter, helped by fewer cancelations of video service than expected and by breaking even on the expensive-to-produce London Olympics.

 

Parents are foreclosing on their house.. Made $2.3 million last year in endorsements.. Scumbag Ryan Lochte

Olympics swimmer Ryan Lochte, who won five medals at this year's Olympic Games in London, is considering several offers to star in reality TV shows. "I cannot tell you the exact shows, but two different reality show concepts have been offered and one additional is being discussed," said his agent.

 

NBC's London Olympics ratings defy expectations

NBC Olympics Ratings

NBC's coverage of the London Olympics has blown away the most optimistic projections for audience performance in an increasingly fractured media landscape.

 

Premiere of NBC comedy ‘Go On’ gets a post-Olympics win

Matthew Perry in "Go On"

More than 16 million of the 30 million-ish people who were still watching NBC’s London Olympics about 11 p.m. Wednesday stuck around to see the ad-free unveiling of the network’s new Matthew Perry comedy, “Go On.”

 

London Olympics huge boost to NBC's 'Today' show

NBC's hopes that the London Olympics would boost the struggling "Today" show have been rewarded and then some. The once-dominant morning news show beat ABC's "Good Morning America" by an average of 1.6 million viewers each day last week, the Nielsen ratings company said Monday. That's the most dominant week for "Today" since the Vancouver Olympics in 2010.

 

RATINGS RAT RACE: London Olympics Day 9 Down From Last Sunday, ‘Big Brother’ Up, ‘Secret Millionaire’ & ‘Extreme Makeover: Weigh

Usain Bolt ran his second fastest time ever and set an Olympic record in the 100-meter dash in Sunday’s XXX Summer Games (10.5/27). In fast nationals, last night’s 8 – 11 PM broadcast was down 9% from last Sunday but up 14% from the same second Sunday at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

 

CEO says NBC set to 'break even' on Olympics

2012 Olympics

NBC is set to "break even" on its Olympics coverage, rather than lose money as previously expected, the head of NBCUniversal said Wednesday. The company had expected at one point to take a $200 million loss on the London Olympics. NBC paid $1.2 billion for the rights to show the games on TV and online in the U.S. It has said that it sold more than $1 billion in ads, breaking the record of $850 million set during the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

 

Twitter suspends reporter's account

Olympics Reporter Suspected from Twitter

Twitter has suspended the account of a Los Angeles-based reporter for a British newspaper who included the email address of the NBC Olympics president and asked his followers to write him to complain about the network's coverage....

 

NBC racking up record number of viewers for Olympics coverage

The Nielsen company said 36 million people watched Sunday night's coverage, the biggest audience for the second night of a non-U.S. summer Olympics competition since TV began covering them in 1960. Counting the opening ceremonies on Friday, an average of 35.8 million people have tuned in for the three nights, well above the 30.6 million who watched the first three nights in Beijing in 2008 and considerably more than the 24 million who saw the first three nights of the Athens games of 2004.

 

Overnight ratings up for first night

Ryan Loche

Preliminary estimates show that Saturday night's NBC telecast scored the highest ratings for the first evening of an Olympics competition outside of the United States. The Nielsen company said Sunday that its measurement of the nation's largest cities showed ratings for the Olympics telecast were up 8 percent over opening night in Beijing four years ago. A fuller measurement of viewership is expected later on Sunday.

 

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