Website Logo
  • Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • Ask Skip
    • Basics of Streaming
    • From The Archives
    • Insiders Circle
    • Myths in Streaming
    • The Streaming Madman
    • The Take
  • Resources
    • Directory
    • Reports
      • AI & The Modern Media Workflow
      • The Future of Media Jobs
      • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI
  • For Companies
  • Support TSW
  • Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • Ask Skip
    • Basics of Streaming
    • From The Archives
    • Insiders Circle
    • Myths in Streaming
    • The Streaming Madman
    • The Take
  • Resources
    • Directory
    • Reports
      • AI & The Modern Media Workflow
      • The Future of Media Jobs
      • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI
  • For Companies
  • Support TSW
Subscribe

Where Did Election Night TV Viewers Disappear To? New Data Suggests They Flocked to YouTube

The Hollywood Reporter
November 15, 2024
in Insights, Programming, Technology
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Where Did Election Night TV Viewers Disappear To? New Data Suggests They Flocked to YouTube

Election night 2024 saw its TV ratings fall sharply compared to 2020, but new data suggests that tens of millions of Americans were still tuning in … they were just watching on YouTube.

The Google-owned video platform said Thursday that more than 45 million people in the U.S. watched election-related content on Tuesday, Nov. 5. That is an enormous number, and while obviously not everyone was watching live videos in primetime, it suggests that tens of millions of people were nonetheless turning to YouTube for election-relayed information.

For comparison, Nielsen said that an average of 42.29 million viewers tuned in across 18 cable and broadcast networks from 7-11 p.m. ET. The YouTube data is not an exact comparison, but still shows a scale that is only matched by traditional TV.

When it comes to election livestreams, YouTube said that the most-watched stream was from Fox News, which peaked at more than one million concurrent viewers when Donald Trump addressed supporters that evening. Fox was followed (ranked by highest number of concurrent viewers) by streams from NBC News, LiveNOW from Fox (another Fox stream), and ABC News.

Notably, a stream hosted by the popular podcaster Patrick Bet-David rounded out the top five, and underscored the extent to which podcasters and creators have been able to break through in today’s media environment.

YouTube also, of course, also carries Fox News, MSNBC, CNN and the broadcast networks on its YouTube TV service.

YouTube also revealed the most viewed election-related videos in the U.S. in the weeks and days leading up the election, and they underscored just how much influence and reach Joe Rogan has.

The comedian and podcaster had the two most-watched election-related videos on YouTube, topped by his interview with Trump, and followed by his interview with Vice President-elect JD Vance. The number three video was a supercut of Trump working at McDonalds from the creator Dylan Anderson, who makes videos featuring wholesome stories.

The Saturday Night Live cold open featuring Vice President Kamala Harris was the fourth most-watched election-related video on YouTube, while the top five was rounded out by a Surrounded video from Jubilee featuring the conservative podcast host Ben Shapiro surrounded by 25 Harris voters.

The data clarifies the degree to which traditional media has lost influence in the last four years, though the viewership of streams from Fox, NBC and ABC suggest that there is still an audience for their work on platforms other than traditional pay-TV platforms.

Still, the surprising success of Bet-David’s PBD Podcast and the strong showing from Rogan also suggest that a new power center may be emerging, one more fragmented, but where strong voices can find a significant audience.

Johnny Harris, Brian Tyler Cohen, Megyn Kelly, and Alex Cooper’s Call Her Daddy also received significant viewership on election-related content, all outside the traditional news ecosystem.

The Streaming Wars is intentionally ad-free

We don’t run display ads. Not because we can’t, but because we don’t believe in them.

They interrupt the reading experience. They cheapen the work. And they burn advertisers’ money on impressions nobody actually wants.

So we chose a different model.

We say the things people in this industry are already thinking but don’t say out loud. We connect the dots beyond the headline and focus on explaining why things matter to the people working in this business.

If you believe industry coverage can exist without clutter and interruption, you can support it here → SUPPORT TSW.

Support is optional. But it directly funds research and continued coverage — and helps prove this model can work.

Support TSW →
Tags: digital platformsElection 2024election contentFox NewsJoe Roganlivestreamsmedia fragmentationPatrick Bet-DavidYouTube
Share213Tweet133Send

Related Posts

Fox to Buy Roku. The Home Screen Has Become Television’s Most Valuable Asset

Fox to Buy Roku. The Home Screen Has Become Television’s Most Valuable Asset Kirby Grines

June 15, 2026
The Subscriber War Was a Cover Story

The Subscriber War Was a Cover Story Kirby Grines

June 15, 2026
Paramount Cleared Washington. The Hard Part Starts Now

Paramount Cleared Washington. The Hard Part Starts Now The Streaming Wars Staff

June 14, 2026
Basics Of Streaming: How Fake CTV Inventory Steals Real Ad Dollars

Basics Of Streaming: How Fake CTV Inventory Steals Real Ad Dollars The Streaming Wars Staff

June 12, 2026
Next Post
Reliance-Disney $8.5 Billion Merger Over 100 Channels and 50 Million Subscribers Combined

Reliance-Disney $8.5 Billion Merger Over 100 Channels and 50 Million Subscribers Combined

Recent News

Fox to Buy Roku. The Home Screen Has Become Television’s Most Valuable Asset

Fox to Buy Roku. The Home Screen Has Become Television’s Most Valuable Asset

Kirby Grines
June 15, 2026
The Subscriber War Was a Cover Story

The Subscriber War Was a Cover Story

Kirby Grines
June 15, 2026
Paramount Cleared Washington. The Hard Part Starts Now

Paramount Cleared Washington. The Hard Part Starts Now

The Streaming Wars Staff
June 14, 2026
Basics Of Streaming: How Fake CTV Inventory Steals Real Ad Dollars

Basics Of Streaming: How Fake CTV Inventory Steals Real Ad Dollars

The Streaming Wars Staff
June 12, 2026
Website Logo

The Streaming Wars is an independent research and media platform covering the future of streaming, distribution, and media economics.

Explore

About

Find a Vendor

Have a Tip?

Contact

Podcast

For Companies

Support TSW

Join the Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 by 43Twenty.

Privacy Policy

Term of Use

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • Ask Skip
    • Basics of Streaming
    • From The Archives
    • Myths in Streaming
    • Insiders Circle
    • The Streaming Madman
    • The Take
  • Resources
    • Directory
    • Reports
      • AI & The Modern Media Workflow
      • The Future of Media Jobs
      • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI
  • For Companies
  • Support TSW

Copyright © 2024 by 43Twenty.