All-Star game wins yet loses, setting record low

Clayton Kershaw wears a white and gold Dodgers jersey at the All-Star game.

The Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw at July 19’s All-Star recreation, which averaged 7.507 million viewers, a report low.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Instances)

Fox’s protection of Main League Baseball’s All-Star recreation at Dodger Stadium July 19 averaged 7.507 million viewers, probably the most amongst prime-time non-news broadcast and cable applications airing between July 18 and Sunday, in response to live-plus-same-day figures launched by Nielsen on Tuesday.

But scores for the American League’s 3-2 victory over the Nationwide League set a report low. The earlier low was 8.162 million for the 2019 recreation. The 2021 recreation averaged 8.316 million viewers.

The viewers for the sport was the most important for any prime-time, non-news program since ABC’s protection of the concluding recreation of the NBA finals on June 16 averaged 13.993 million viewers. It was the most important viewers for a Fox program since Jan. 30, when its protection of the NFC championship recreation averaged 50.225 million.

ESPN’s protection of the Residence Run Derby, additionally from Dodger Stadium, averaged 6.02 million viewers, ending in second place on cable and fourth total, behind the All-Star recreation, NBC’s “America’s Received Expertise,” which averaged 6.153 million, and an version of CBS’ “60 Minutes,” with three beforehand broadcast segments that had been up to date for Sunday’s broadcast, which averaged 6.13 million viewers.

The highest rated present for the week was Thursday’s prime-time listening to of the Home choose committee on the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, averaging 17.667 million viewers throughout 10 networks. The committee’s earlier prime-time listening to, June 9, averaged 20.043 million throughout 11 networks. MSNBC drew the most important viewers for Thursday’s hearings, averaging 4.832 million viewers, fifth among the many week’s prime-time applications.

Within the community race ABC edged CBS, 2.75 million to 2.7 million, to win the community race for the fifth time within the eight full weeks of tv’s summer season season.

ABC’s top-rated present was “Celeb Household Feud,” seventh for the week, averaging 4.214 million for an episode that includes the casts from Disney+’s “Excessive Faculty Musical: The Musical: The Sequence” and the Netflix comedy “By no means Have I Ever” and the households of Ron Funches and Meagan Good.

Fox completed third, averaging 2.58 million viewers. NBC was fourth, averaging 2.56 million viewers.

The CW averaged 370,000 viewers.

The week’s prime 20 consisted of Fox’s protection of Main League Baseball’s All-Star recreation; the Residence Run Derby and its 23-minute “prelude” on ESPN; the CBS information journal “60 Minutes”; NBC’s “America’s Received Expertise”; two recreation reveals and a rerun of “America’s Funniest Residence Movies” on ABC; segments of protection of the Jan. 6 committee listening to on MSNBC; listening to protection on ABC and CNN; reruns of three CBS scripted sequence; the Wednesday and Sunday editions of the CBS different sequence “Large Brother”; and three editions of the Fox Information Channel political speak present “Tucker Carlson Tonight.”

Fox Information Channel received the cable community race in prime time for the seventh consecutive week, averaging 2.185 million viewers. MSNBC was second, averaging 1.624 million and ESPN third, averaging 1.19 million. Hallmark Channel was the one different cable community to common greater than 1 million viewers in prime time, averaging 1.029 million.

Cable’s prime 20 consisted of 14 Fox Information Channel weeknight political speak reveals — 5 broadcasts every of “Tucker Carlson Tonight” and “Hannity” and 4 of “The Ingraham Angle”; the Residence Run Derby and its 23-minute “prelude” on ESPN; protection of the Jan. 6 committee listening to on MSNBC and CNN; and the July 18 version of the MSNBC information and opinion program “The Rachel Maddow Present.”

On Netflix, the fourth season of “Virgin River” was probably the most streamed program, with viewers spending 105.44 million hours watching the season’s 12 episodes of the romantic drama of their first 5 days of launch, in response to figures launched by the streaming service Tuesday.

The nine-episode fourth season of “Stranger Issues” was second with 74.99 million hours watched after ending first for 3 consecutive weeks — and first for seven of the 9 weeks that the season had been out there.

“The Grey Man” was Netflix’s greatest performing film, with viewers spending 88.55 million hours streaming the motion thriller in its first three days of launch. “The Sea Beast” was second with 34.14 million hours watched after ending first the earlier two weeks.

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