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深夜脱口秀面临挑战,吉米·基梅尔节目被停播
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吉米·基梅尔的深夜节目被ABC无限期停播,这反映了当前深夜电视节目的脆弱处境。该节目因主持人关于政治人物的评论引发了联邦通信委员会(FCC)和部分ABC附属电视台的强烈不满。与此同时,深夜电视节目正面临观众流失、广告收入下降以及来自政界日益增长的压力。随着观众转向流媒体和社交媒体,传统电视收视率下滑,广告商支出减少,这使得电视网络在维持节目运营和应对各方诉求之间面临艰难的权衡。

🎙️ **深夜电视的脆弱性凸显**:吉米·基梅尔的节目被停播,标志着深夜电视领域正经历一段艰难时期。主持人因政治评论引发争议,导致节目被广播公司暂停,这表明了节目内容与政治环境之间的敏感关系,以及节目制作方在平衡创意表达与外部压力方面所面临的挑战。

📉 **收视率与广告收入双重下滑**:深夜脱口秀正面临观众流失和广告收入下降的双重打击。随着观众越来越倾向于流媒体和社交媒体,传统电视收视率不断攀升的难度加大,广告商的支出也随之减少,迫使电视网络重新评估这些节目的经济可行性。

⚖️ **多方压力下的艰难抉择**:电视网络在观众、广告商、地方电视台以及政府监管部门之间扮演着复杂的协调者角色。尤其是在政治环境日益紧张的背景下,FCC的监管和地方电视台的立场对节目能否继续播出产生直接影响,使得网络在维护节目内容和避免政治风险之间举步维艰。

🌐 **文化影响力与社交媒体的演变**:尽管收视数字可能不复往日辉煌,但深夜脱口秀在文化上仍具有一定影响力,并且其节目片段常在社交媒体上病毒式传播,为网络吸引新观众和推广其数字服务提供了途径。然而,这种影响力是否足以抵消日益增长的风险,仍是未知数。

Jimmy Kimmel's show was suspended on Wednesday.

The lights are dimming on late-night TV, and Jimmy Kimmel's suspension by ABC is the latest reminder of a fading era.

Once the crown jewel of network television, the format faces pressure on multiple fronts. Hosts have become the target of Trump and his allies, who don't find their satirical jokes funny and want them off the air. At the same time, late-night shows are grappling with declining ratings and ad revenue as audiences shift away from linear TV viewing to streaming and social media.

On Wednesday, Disney's ABC said it had pulled "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" off the air indefinitely. The suspension came following comments Kimmel made on Monday's show about Charlie Kirk's assassination and President Donald Trump's reaction to his death.

The mocking monologue drew a backlash from the Federal Communications Commission and partner companies that own ABC affiliate stations. Brendan Carr, Trump's appointee as chair of the FCC, condemned Kimmel's comments as "the sickest conduct possible" and warned that ABC's affiliate licenses could come under review. Nexstar and Sinclair said they would yank the show from the ABC affiliate stations they own. These stations carry ABC programming under contract — and pay ABC lucrative fees — but aren't owned by the network itself.

Kimmel's suspension marks the latest flash point for network television's after-dark lineup. In July, CBS said "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" would be canceled after next year, a decision it said was financial. Multiple outlets, including The Wall Street Journal, reported the show was losing about $40 million a year.

"That leaves Jimmy and Seth, two total losers, on Fake News NBC," Trump wrote on Truth Social late Wednesday, referring to NBC late-night show hosts Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers, in a post cheering Kimmel's suspension. "Their ratings are also horrible. Do it NBC!"

Network executives must make complex calculations regarding late-night programming in order to serve several constituents at once: audiences, advertisers, local station groups, and the government.

"It's a really difficult position to be in," said Jason Damata, CEO of Fabric Media, a marketing and communications consultancy. "It's easy for people to go, 'Disney is bending to the will,' but it's operating in a really complex business environment."

Going forward, the big question for media conglomerates like Disney and NBCUniversal — which own properties ranging from streaming services to theme parks — is whether keeping late-night shows around is worth the heat.

Late-night numbers are looking sleepy

At their peak, shows like "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson," which came off-air in the 1990s, and "The Late Show with David Letterman," which aired its final episode in 2015, could pull in audiences of more than 10 million viewers. In the second quarter of this year, Colbert averaged around 2.42 million viewers and Kimmel 1.77 million, according to Nielsen.

Johnny Carson, seen here interviewing actor Robin Williams, led late-night TV at its peak.

As audiences have decreased across late-night, so have the ad dollars.

Advertiser spending on late-night shows on linear broadcasts across ABC, CBS, and NBC dropped to $221 million in 2024, down from $439 million in 2018, according to Guideline, an analytics firm that aggregates data from the world's largest media-buying agencies.

Madison and Wall media analyst Brian Wieser estimates that news and current affairs programming, which includes late-night, represents a "low double-digit share of ad revenue" for the industry, somewhere in the mid-single digit billions of dollars. The situation could soon get worse as the US government plans to step up its enforcement of pharmaceutical ads on TV, a key constituent for TV news advertising.

"Having a highly paid star with falling ratings and a questionable ad appeal is never a good mix," said Ian Whittaker, an independent media analyst.

Despite the dwindling numbers, late-night shows like Kimmel's maintained cultural appeal and still served as branding vehicles for networks and advertisers alike. Kimmel, a four-time host of the Oscars, which air on ABC, is also a key figure for Disney beyond his eponymous talk show.

According to the TV measurement firm iSpot, "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" delivered ads for more than 200 brands, generating ABC just under $70 million in revenue year-to-date. Top-spenders on the show included major brands such as Allstate, McDonald's, and Starbucks. ABC also used 12% of its Kimmel ad inventory to advertise its other shows, per iSpot.

While late-night shows might not lead the network ratings, clips of snarky monologues and comedy sketches often go viral across social media, marketing that the networks hope will entice people to sign up for their digital subscription services.

The heavy hand of politics

When weighing the pros and cons of late-night in 2025, politics has clearly been the major shift in the calculation.

Unlike cable TV or streaming, broadcast channels are subject to FCC regulation. That's particularly relevant in an era of media consolidation, since the FCC needs to sign off on deals involving broadcast stations.

Brendan Carr, a senior Republican Commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission, has been tapped to lead the FCC in a second Trump term.

Nexstar, the owner of ABC affiliate stations, certainly wants to avoid being in the government's crosshairs. It's seeking FCC approval for a $6.2 billion deal to acquire Tegna, a combination that would make Nexstar the biggest local TV station owner in the US.

And what Nexstar says matters to ABC.

"The station groups have consolidated enough to have a real voice," Damata said.

The political environment leaves late-night and broader current affairs and news programming in a tight spot, where the risks to media giants could outweigh their benefits.

"The late-night format as we've known it was certainly at risk prior to this year, and those risks are certainly more existential in the current environment," said Wieser, the Madison and Wall analyst.

As to the future of late-night shows, some are hoping streamers like Netflix will be saviors.

"Netflix, call me, I'm available in June," Colbert quipped in one of his "Late Show" broadcasts in August. "I will also entertain offers from Amazon."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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