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Oscars TV audience shrinks 9% in US from last year

By Thomson Reuters Mar 17, 2026 | 8:09 PM

LOS ANGELES, March 17 (Reuters) – The Academy Awards telecast attracted 17.9 million U.S. viewers, a 9% ​decrease from the previous year ‌and the lowest since 2022, according to Nielsen data released by broadcaster ABC on Tuesday.

The figure for Sunday’s show reflected ‌viewing ​on ABC and on ⁠the streaming service ⁠Hulu. Both are owned by Walt Disney.

Hollywood handed the best picture prize to darkly comic thriller “One Battle ​After Another” during the more than three-hour-long ceremony. Comedian Conan O’Brien ⁠hosted for the second ⁠year in a row.

Viewership ​for awards shows has been declining for ​years as TV audiences have shifted ‌to streaming and social media.

ABC said social impressions for the Oscars increased 42% this year over 2025 to more ⁠than 184 million.

The highest-rated Academy Awards telecast aired in 1998, when megahit “Titanic” swept ⁠the ‌honors. More than 57 million ⁠people tuned in that ​year.

In ‌2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic, ​Oscar ratings ⁠hit their low point with 10.5 million viewers. The Oscars ceremony will be moving from ABC to YouTube in 2029.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by ​Cynthia Osterman)