Breitbart: With the first quarter of 2018 behind us, the ratings show that CNN is already having a humiliating year. Not a single CNN program cracked the top 20 in cable news, and only two CNN programs managed to squeak out a million average total viewers.
For the first quarter of 2018, the highest rated show on the far-left cable channel is Anderson Cooper 360, which came in at a pretty sad #24 and averaged only 1.132 million total viewers.
After that, Erin Burnett rolls into #25 with just 1 million average viewers.
Anti-Trump activist Jake Tapper only managed to attract a sorry 945,000 average viewers while skidding into a humiliating 33rd place. Tapper was walloped by his timeslot competitors. At Fox News, Neil Cavuto came in at #18, with nearly 1.5 million viewers. MSNBC’s Deadline: White House came in at #23 with 1.3 million viewers.
Coming in at #42, the lowest rated show in all of cable news (that airs after 5 a.m.) is Chris Cuomo’s New Day, which has only managed to attract a paltry 609,000 viewers. Nevertheless, as if to prove CNN chief Jeff Zucker likes to double down on failure, Cuomo has just been promoted to a primetime slot. read more
Who?
CNN: The Clownfart News Network where the “news” always smells funny!
Even their ratings say they STINK!!
their core audience just isn’t that into them
CNN would have no audience at all if it wasn’t for airports and doctors offices.
Their anti Trump position has gone way past ridiculous and is now almost comical. CNN’s demise cannot come soon enough. If CNN dies then perhaps some other MSM networks may reevaluate their positions, as they well should.
And that’s with every airport, hotel and bar television tuned in too!
AT&T is looking to buy Time-Warner and you have to wonder whether they’ll sell off properties like CNN which is probably losing money under Zucker’s leadership (he took NBC from 1st place to 4th when he ran the joint and was the reason he was dumped). A standalone CNN may prove to be an attractive property if the purchaser was willing to bring them back to what they were when they were launched.