Fox News Muscles Past ABC and NBC as CBS Holds Q2 Lead

Nielsen’s second-quarter figures show Fox News edging broadcast rivals while streaming takes the largest slice of U.S. viewing time.

CBS

Early Nielsen data for the second quarter put CBS on top of the weekday TV chart with 3.42 million viewers, yet the standout story is Fox News climbing to second place, slipping past ABC and NBC and becoming the only cable outlet in the top three. Fox averaged about 3 million Monday-to-Friday viewers, 77 percent ahead of TNT and 81 percent beyond ESPN during the same stretch.

The cable network’s momentum has carried through the spring. Fox’s weekday primetime audience in May hit 2.9 million—enough to beat ABC in that daypart—and its week of May 12 tally of 3 million viewers even outdrew playoff hockey and basketball on broadcast rivals. Adweek’s monthly scoreboard shows Fox alone posting year-to-year gains among the three big cable news brands, while MSNBC and CNN both recorded double-digit slides in key demos.

CBS remains secure thanks to procedurals such as Matlock and FBI, while ABC and NBC trail despite steady franchise output. NBC’s nightly newscast did post a seven-percent jump in adults 25-54 after Tom Llamas replaced Lester Holt, yet total-viewer gaps with Fox’s Special Report persist. CNN averaged 559,000 weekday viewers in the quarter, less than one-fifth of Fox’s haul.

Behind the jockeying lurks a structural shift: streaming captured 44.8 percent of U.S. television usage in May, eclipsing broadcast and cable combined. Nielsen’s April Gauge put streaming at 44.3 percent and broadcast at just 20.8 percent, with news now representing only 14 percent of linear viewing. Fox is preparing its own paid streaming offer and expects subscribers in the mid-single-digit millions by launch late next year, a hedge against the fast-shrinking linear universe.

While traditional networks can still marshal sizable nightly crowds—CBS’s The Masters finale drew 13 million in April—audience gravity is tilting toward on-demand platforms. Fox’s ability to top two legacy broadcasters highlights that tilt: cable’s share of the pie is sliding, but opinion-driven news, bolstered by headline-making exclusives with political leaders, is holding on longer than most genres.

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