More than 71 million Americans tuned in to see Tuesday's climax to the historic U.S. presidential campaign
on television, far more than watched prime-time returns from the last
two White House races, figures released on Wednesday showed.
The viewer tally measured across 14 U.S. broadcast and cable networks
amounted to more than half the 130 million-plus Americans thought to
have voted in Tuesday's election and surpassed the big audiences drawn
by the presidential and vice presidential debates weeks ago.
Nielsen Media Research
said 71.4 million viewers watched TV election coverage during the three
hours between the 8 p.m. EST poll closings in many Eastern states and
the declaration that Democrat Barack Obama had been elected America's first black president.
By comparison, 59.1 million viewers across 10 television networks
watched prime-time election night coverage of the 2004 presidential
race, which ended with President George W. Bush's victory over Democratic challenger John Kerry.
Some 61.5 million tuned in for the election night 2000 battle between Bush and Democrat Al Gore.
The size of Tuesday night's average audience declined somewhat to 70.6
million when counting the additional 90 minutes that included coverage
of Obama's victory speech in Chicago and Republican Sen. John McCain's
concession speech in Arizona, Nielsen reported.
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