Awards shows like the Oscars are doomed
Now that the nominees for the 96th Academy Awards have been announced, ABC network executives will be keeping their fingers crossed for the main event: Oscars night, on 10 March.
How many people will tune in for one of Hollywood's biggest nights out?
The nominations will likely draw more attention and commentary than usual, primarily because Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie, the director and the star of Barbie, the year's top-grossing film, were snubbed in the best director and best actress categories. Ironically, that may also be the reason fewer people tune in to the show.
Even before the nominations were announced, the portents for the Oscars were mixed, at best.
The Golden Globes show earlier this month drew 9.4 million TV viewers, up 50% from last year, but it was still the fourth-worst of all time. Last week, the Emmy Awards were watched by just 4.3 million, the lowest number ever.
This bodes ill for the Academy Awards. Last year's Oscar night brought in 18.7 million viewers, a 12% increase but still among the lowest ever.
Ignoring the ratings is not a luxury available to ABC or the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which hands out the Oscars. Over the years, Ampas has tried to arrest the general decline in interest by doubling the number of finalists for the top award and flirting with the idea of adding an Oscar specifically for popular films.
These efforts were in response to the growing criticism that the awards were being cornered by high-brow films that had limited audience appeal. By including more blockbusters in the mix for awards, the Academy hoped more people would tune in.
It hasn't worked, however. Except for the odd spike in TV viewership, audiences have been drifting away – to TikTok, YouTube and other online options. Within 24 hours of Smith's slap, it was watched over 50 million times on YouTube, smashing the single-day record; only 16.7 million watched the show live on ABC, the second-lowest of all time.
The network has tried to prop up ratings with more skits and musical numbers. It has tinkered with the format – two hosts, multiple hosts and even, for a while, no hosts.
In its latest effort to goose the ratings, ABC has announced this year's show will start at 7 pm ET, an hour earlier than usual. This is an attempt to break the pattern of viewership declining sharply during the final hour of the show.
But even with disciplined timekeeping, it is hard to imagine that audiences, now used to entertainment delivered on TikTok videos, will have the stamina for a three-and-half-hour extravaganza.
Can the decline be halted? I am skeptical there will ever be a return to the golden days of the 1990s and 2000s when audiences in excess of 40 million were the norm. The 1998 peak of 55.25 million seems a wild fantasy.
But the Academy and ABC might want to try more drastic measures than they've attempted thus far: A tight show of no more than 90 minutes. Or they could take the leaf out of Hollywood's own playbook and try a little stunt casting.