Business A&E Has Lost Half Its Viewers Since Dropping ‘Live PD’

A&E Has Lost Half Its Viewers Since Dropping ‘Live PD’

Network’s prime-time viewership was up 4% this year before it canceled its hit police reality show, Nielsen data show

Ratings for A&E Network have plummeted since it canceled the hit police reality show “Live PD” on June 10, a sign of how much the network relies on law-enforcement programming.

Average prime-time viewership for A&E between June 11 and July 19 was 498,000 people, down 49% from the same period last year, according to data from Nielsen. In the key demographics of adults 18-49 and 25-54, the declines are 55% and 53%, respectively.

The show, which follows police on their rounds in multiple cities simultaneously, averaged about 1.9 million viewers for its Friday and Saturday night episodes, repeatedly re-aired on other days. It spawned several successful spinoff shows, also canceled.

A&E, co-owned by the Walt Disney Co. DIS -0.53% and Hearst Corp., dropped “Live PD” in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. The death has sparked protests about police violence, a movement to defund the police and broader discussions about race and diversity.

ViacomCBS Inc.’s Paramount Network last month canceled “Cops,” another long-running reality show following police on the beat. With under 500,000 viewers an episode, “Cops” has a much smaller audience than “Live PD.”

Before A&E pulled the show, its prime-time viewership was up 4% from the same period in 2019, according to Nielsen. The network has other popular shows, including “The First 48”—which follows the first two days of a criminal investigation—and “Court Cam,” about outbursts inside courtrooms, but none as successful as “Live PD.”

A&E’s ratings declines go beyond prime time. Total daily average viewership in the weeks since the show was pulled is down 36% from a year earlier, to 319,000 people. In the 18-49 and 25-54 age groups, the declines are even larger: 42% and 46%, respectively.

In a statement to The Wall Street Journal, A&E called the drop a “temporary hit in the ratings” that it expected given the success of “Live PD” and that it has been mostly replaced by reruns. The network said it has always been able to “find new hits and reinvent ourselves.”

The sister shows of “Live PD”—also canceled—include “Live PD: Police Patrol” and “Live PD Presents: PD Cam.” In some weeks, the “Live PD” universe accounted for more than 85% of A&E’s daily programming.

The programs were very profitable to the network, due in part to their low production cost. In 2019, the “Live PD” empire brought in $292.6 million in advertising, according to ad-tracking firm Kantar Media. For the first quarter of 2020, the programs sold $95.8 million in advertising.

In the entertainment industry, Mr. Floyd’s death has led to discussions about the role television and movies play in shaping perceptions of law enforcement and whether portrayals of police have been too one-sided and have failed to address concerns about excessive force and bad policing.

When A&E canceled “Live PD,” the network said: “This is a critical time in our nation’s history and we have made the decision to cease production on ‘Live PD.’ Going forward, we will determine if there is a clear pathway to tell the stories of both the community and the police officers whose role it is to serve them. And with that, we will be meeting with community and civil-rights leaders as well as police departments.”

The franchise’s fan base—the self-dubbed “Live PD Nation”—has been very active on social media, encouraging a boycott of the network until the programs are returned, which A&E hasn’t ruled out.

“We are continuing to listen to both community leaders and ‘Live PD’ fans to find a way to serve both moving forward,” A&E said in its statement to the Journal.
 
Wouldn’t have cameras on cops be a good thing?
Let me put it in reddit terms, as they said on the /r/justiceserved subreddit:

Due to the new reddit updates to it's policies and rules, as well as administrator conversations with users; we can no longer allow any posts, comments, or other content that shows a POC as the aggressor. This is considered hate speech and/or harassment towards an important minority group and is no longer allowed.

It's the same thing with camera's on cops. It makes people unjustly racist towards POC if they see footage of POC's as aggressors.
 
I know in South Carolina, they were trying to get any young black offenders rehabilitation if they were good students or promised to be better students in high school or college. (The police and judge would keep tabs on their schooling and if their grades did well, got all charges dropped and record cleaned.
 
I dont see how Live PD should have been cancelled. It encouraged officers to wear cameras, encouraged good behavior from cops and perps, and most importantly it showed the average protocol for a police stop.

For people who truly do feel discriminated against by the authorities, it gave a look at what you could expect. Going into an encounter with law enforcement, if you realize beforehand that they ask certain standard questions, not because they are looking to attack you or your race personally, it can help put you at ease.

I also cant count how many times on the show it was reiterated "running away bumped this up to a felony" or some shit. It showed quite clearly that cops arent going to put you under the jail for an ounce of weed, and cooperating is going to make the situation end quicker and cleaner.

Not to mention I loved watching the searches, the sheer amount of creative hiding places for drugs in a vehicle is fascinating.

Showing both the cops and the citizens they interact with in a purely documented setting humanizes both parties. It shows how they don't default to treating junkies like human garbage, and that there is a sort of "you get what you give" policy in terms of treatment.

We saw how quickly shit can go lethal, how stressful and unexpected events are a constant risk. It sheds light into the mindset of a policeman who resorts to drawing his weapon.

My stance on militarizing the police is one of great opposition. And this show displayed how easy the job could be if more people cooperated for petty crimes. I don't want to give the police more incentive to be afraid and up their firepower, because that makes me want to match that firepower per the 2nd amendment.

The talk is always so concentrated on educating the public, on both sides of the aisle. This show was education.
 
A&E started off as the Biography Network back in the 1990s and played reruns of The Rockford Files for filler.
It started off showing stage performances like ballets, operas, and orchestra concerts. The A and the E used to stand for Arts and Entertainment. It was boring as fuck back in the 90's.
 
According to some statistics from the FBI, nigs gonna nog against each other. Besides, it's better than some idiot going out there distracting the cops with their filming.

Pretty most crime is intraracial (that is, committed in your own ethnic group) especially murder and the like. Blacks do murder whites at a higher percentage, but its something like 14% white on black to 18% black on white.

Also fucking hilarious.

"We've got a hit show"

*Progtard in Marketing*

"Look at all these BLM protests! We could get a whole new audience! They'll totally sympathize with us, fuck the police anyway lol. Americans hate cops."

*Lose half their veiwship in a few months*

"I don't understand what happened.
 
I dont see how Live PD should have been cancelled. It encouraged officers to wear cameras, encouraged good behavior from cops and perps, and most importantly it showed the average protocol for a police stop.

Sometimes it showed cops that let the screentime get to their heads. But, you know, that's okay. Because when that happened, everyone could see it. Some of the absolute worst policing I've ever seen was on LivePD. Drug Recognition Experts who mistook heroin for marijuana, cops who needlessly took people out of their cars to do investigations with zero reasoning, cops who clearly wanted to feel powerful, etc.

But it also showed some of the best policing I had ever seen. And the good policing—heck, just the fact that they showed that cops mostly don't just shoot black people—far outweighed the bad stuff. It also taught great aspects of citizenship re driving, for instance. It's the reason I'll never smoke weed and drive ever again and the reason why I practice every now and then the tests they use to determine whether someone may be intoxicated.

But all that was dropped to gain social justice points, and look where it's gotten them. Fuck A&E for this. I hope the network burns and some other place picks up LivePD again.
 
I dont see how Live PD should have been cancelled. It encouraged officers to wear cameras, encouraged good behavior from cops and perps, and most importantly it showed the average protocol for a police stop.
It showed the truth. And if the truth doesn't fit the narrative, the truth must be cancelled. Same story with COPS.
 
Let me put it in reddit terms, as they said on the /r/justiceserved subreddit:



It's the same thing with camera's on cops. It makes people unjustly racist towards POC if they see footage of POC's as aggressors.
Let's face it: There will be an bigger banwave in Reddit for any acts of violence. All it'll take is an All Lives Matters movement taken seriously.
 
The irony of this is that black people weren't asking for Live PD to be cancelled any more than they were asking for Paramount to drop Cops or HBO to drop Gone with the Wind. This is all the result of useless pandering from progressive whites.
 
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