Published: September 08, 2011
PBS KIDS Series' Viewership Jumps 33 Percent among Children 4-8 and 17 Percent with 2-5-Year-Olds
ARLINGTON, Va. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - With literacy and science curriculum-based series leading the charge, PBS
KIDS is seeing a significant
boost in ratings. Four PBS KIDS series - SUPER WHY, CURIOUS GEORGE,
THE CAT IN THE HAT KNOWS A LOT ABOUT THAT! and DINOSAUR TRAIN landed
in the top-10 kids programs among kids 2-5 in July. Three of those
series were among the top-5 programs with 2-5-year-olds during the same
period, according to Nielsen NPower national program ratings.
Continuing to serve more and more children with educational media, PBS
KIDS programming overall was up 33% for the current season (September
20, 2010-July 31, 2011) among kids 4-8, and up 17% with kids 2-5. As a
group, viewership of all PBS KIDS programs is up 23% among 2-11
year-olds, which means PBS is reaching approximately 127,000 more kids
this season in an average minute of programming.
Moms help fuel tune-in too; PBS KIDS was #1 in July among Ladies of the
Household ages 18-49 with children under the age of 3, as PBS KIDS
programs held the top six spots among their most-watched children's
series.
Recent ratings demonstrate that parents are turning to PBS KIDS'
educational series to help their kids build critical skills, especially
during the summer months when kids are out of school and at a greater
risk for learning loss. Maintaining reading skills in particular proved
to be important to families over the summer, as the PBS KIDS literacy
series SUPER WHY took the number one spot for both Ladies of the
Household, and - for the first time - for kids 2-5 in July.
PBS' newly heightened focus on STEM education - science, technology,
engineering and math - is also proving to resonate with viewers.
STEM-focused series CURIOUS
GEORGE, THE
CAT IN THE HAT KNOWS A LOT ABOUT THAT! and DINOSAUR
TRAIN continued to delight children in July, ranking third, fifth,
and sixth among 2-5-year-olds, respectively.
"Years ago, we identified a gap in children's media - there was very
little content available for kids to build critical literacy and STEM
skills - especially on TV," said Lesli
Rotenberg, senior vice president, Children's Media, PBS. "We saw
this as an opportunity to develop great narratives grounded in core
curricular areas. Since then, we've worked with the best producers in
children's programming to develop a lineup of preschool series that meet
this need. And we're seeing great results - it's clear from our ratings
that kids are responding to this content."
Online, PBSKIDS.org
continues to be the go-to location for kids and parents, with nearly 9
million unique visitors in June, a 15% increase over a year ago (Google
Analytics, July 2010 - June 2011). PBS KIDS has been the #1 kids site
for free videos streamed based on the number of videos viewed for 10
consecutive months, from September 2010 through June 2011 (comScore
Video Metrix June 2011). And PBS
KIDS mobile apps have been downloaded over 1 million times.
"Kids are connecting the dots between what they see on-air and what they
can do online, extending and elevating their learning experience with
PBS KIDS properties," said Rotenberg. "Learning becomes more meaningful
when kids are able to step into the driver's seat with their favorite
PBS KIDS characters and tackle math, reading, science and other
educational games and activities."
PBS KIDS also continues to be recognized with industry awards. In June,
PBS KIDS series won 12 Daytime Emmy Awards, marking the 14th
consecutive year that PBS earned more Daytime Emmy Awards for its
children's programming than any other broadcast or cable network.
As high ratings, online and mobile content usage, and awards
demonstrate, PBS KIDS is increasingly serving children wherever they
live, learn, and play - on TV, online, through mobile devices, in the
classroom, and with a new line of educational toys.
About PBS KIDS
PBS
KIDS, the number one educational media brand for kids, offers all
children the opportunity to explore new ideas and new worlds through
television, online and community-based programs. For more information on
specific PBS KIDS programs supporting literacy, science, math and more,
visit PBS.org/pressroom,
or follow PBS KIDS on Twitter
and Facebook.
Ratings Source: Nielsen NPower national program ratings for PBS KIDS
properties and select cable networks (Cartoon Network, Disney Channel,
The Hub, Nickelodeon, and Nick Jr.), 9/20/2010-7/31/2011.

PBS
Maria Vera, 703-739-3225
mvera@pbs.org
or
360
Public Relations
Caitlin Melnick, 617-585-5775
cmelnick@360publicrelations.com
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