February 23, 2005
One Billion People Watch the Oscars? Nonsense.

Posted by Andrew Hearst

In the Talk of the Town section of this week’s New Yorker, the always sensible Daniel Radosh debunks the oft-parroted claim that the Academy Awards broadcast is seen by a billion people each year:

But the worldwide audience for the Oscars isn’t even close to a billion, as a little common sense makes plain. In the United States, 43.5 million people watched the show last year. That’s a lot, but it’s 956.5 million short of a billion. Can the show really pick up that many viewers in countries that most of the films and people being honored are not from, and where the speeches are in a language that most of the population does not speak?





Panopticist site map

» Five-Word Links archive

The Magazine Covers
The Palin Doctrine: Alaska governor Sarah Palin weighs in on international affairs and foreign policy, including globalization, the Russia problem, the China threat, and the arms race
Us Weekly as Harper's
Parents as Penis
Sementeen
Understatement Weekly
Angelina Jolie on the cover of Uterus Weekly
Sylvester Stallone on the cover of Sly
The National Enquirer as Esquire

» see all of the magazine covers



Panopticon
Panopticist sitemap

Home
About
Five-Word Links
Best Of
Blog Archives
Writing Archives
My Music
RSS

What is a Panopticist? Some insight is here.

About Andrew Hearst

I’m Andrew Hearst, a New York-based writer, editor, designer, musician, and gadabout. You can learn a bit more about me here.

Email: hearst@nyc.rr.com

This site is powered by Movable Type 4.21 and was lovingly hand-coded in BBEdit.

Search results powered by Mark Carey’s Fast Search plugin.

panopticist