Barack Obama’s
audience for his acceptance speech likely topped 40 million people, and the
Democratic gathering that nominated him was a more popular television event
than any other political convention in history.
More people watched Obama speak from a packed
stadium in Denver on Thursday than watched the Olympics opening ceremony in
Beijing, the final “American Idol” or the Academy Awards this year, Nielsen
Media Research said Friday. (Four playoff football games, including the Super
Bowl between the Giants and Patriots, were seen by more than 40 million
people.)
His TV audience nearly doubled the amount of
people who watched John Kerry accept the Democratic nomination to run against
President Bush four years ago. Kerry’s speech was seen by a little more than 20
million people; Bush’s acceptance speech to GOP delegates had 27.6 million
viewers.
Through four days, the Democratic convention
was seen in an average of 22.5 million households. No other convention — Republican
or Democratic — had been seen in as many homes since Nielsen began keeping
these records for the Kennedy-Nixon campaign in 1960. There weren’t enough
television sets in American homes to have possibly beaten this record in years
before that.
The convention that comes closest in interest
was the 1976 Republican gathering, which averaged 21.9 million homes. That was
the year President Gerald Ford fought off a challenge for the nomination from
future President Ronald Reagan. For Democrats, the closest came during the 1980
convention where Sen. Edward Kennedy challenged President Jimmy Carter for the
nomination.
This year’s nomination fight was another epic
battle, between Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton. Even though it was decided
before the convention, viewers apparently were drawn to the historic nature of
the first black man nominated as a major party presidential candidate.
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