and watching Fox all day in between The Price is Right, Murder She Wrote, and afternoon sponge bath and bible study is not what advertisers are after nor is it something you should be bragging about. But then again, you never were too bright, were you Otis?
MSNBC's daytime news coverage generally doesn't distort facts. Fox News does, for their regular daytime coverage. Example? When the Fox reporter at one of the teabadger parties was throwing her hands up in the air trying to get the fat fucks riled up to look good for TV. They're a mouth piece for the GOP and inbred fucks nationwide.
P2+ Prime Time
FNC – 2,589,000 viewers
CNN – 578,000 viewers
And yet, every $1 of ad time you spend on FOX during Prime Time will cost you $1.50 on CNN. Those numbers are not the numbers web sites portray them as.
Posted 12/16/2009 6:18 am
This is a perfect example of the typical Fox News viewer, doesn't know the difference between network news and primetime news, and just believes whatever crap Fox spoonfeeds them without checking out the facts for themself.
NBC Nightly News With Brian Williams: 7.57 million viewers
ABC's World News With Charles Gibson: 6.51 million viewers
CBS Evening News With Katie Couric: 5.10 million.
Yeah ONE HOUR of news programming, compared to the most viewers of an entire day. That means that Fox News viewers are more in tune with the issues compared to people who just watch an hour of b/s watered down network news that's as P.C. as it gets.
Do you really think that people who have time to watch more than one hour of cable news a day are the most in tune with what the world is really like? We are talking about retirees, the unemployed, the housebound, etc.
So you're saying retired people and people who work at home are worth less than others? I don't think so, and in fact I'd say those people have more experience than people who don't.
Unemployed? They'd be watching msnbc for their handouts.
No, it doesn't - that 1.3m is the _total daily viewership_ - I.E. the total number of people who watched the channel for a significant period of time (>15 minutes, IIRC) at some point during the day.