LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) The Sox currently playing in the World Series come complete with a backstory of trying to deliver their long-suffering fans a championship after more than 85 years. Unfortunately for FOX, the Sox are White, not Red.
Absent the massive, East Coast media-fueled profile of either the New York Yankees or last year's champs, the Boston Red Sox, the 2005 World Series got off to a shaky start in the Nielsens over the weekend. Despite a contest between teams from two of the nation's 10 biggest markets -- the Chicago White Sox and Houston Astros -- the series could be on its way to its lowest ratings ever.
Which is not to say, exactly, that no one's watching. The first two World Series games, along with the final game of the National League Championship series, all finished in the top 20 in the Nielsen rankings. But the average audience for games 1 and 2, about 16.1 million viewers, is the smallest for the first two games of the World Series in a generation.
Source
Absent the massive, East Coast media-fueled profile of either the New York Yankees or last year's champs, the Boston Red Sox, the 2005 World Series got off to a shaky start in the Nielsens over the weekend. Despite a contest between teams from two of the nation's 10 biggest markets -- the Chicago White Sox and Houston Astros -- the series could be on its way to its lowest ratings ever.
Which is not to say, exactly, that no one's watching. The first two World Series games, along with the final game of the National League Championship series, all finished in the top 20 in the Nielsen rankings. But the average audience for games 1 and 2, about 16.1 million viewers, is the smallest for the first two games of the World Series in a generation.
Source