Fail Whale: Japanese Agency to Offer New Television Viewer Rating Based on Number of Tweets

Recommended Videos

Much like Instagram users stereotypically take pictures of food, Twitter users tend to tweet about the somewhat mundane things they’re currently doing or watching. This includes scores and scores of tweets about various television programs. Video Research, a company which provides television audience ratings in Japan, has caught on to this trend, and now plans to provide a new kind of rating based on the number of tweets sent about a given show.

Twitter’s even working in conjunction with Video Research to provide access to the necessary hashtag API. This should allow the company to collate as much data as it likes before presenting its findings. They plan to offer two kinds of data points at first: Tweets per minutes for each program and the average from the past four weeks. What, exactly, this might actually mean in terms of audience engagement is still kind of hazy.

For example, how would the company determine if someone’s actually watching a show as it airs live? Measuring tweets per minute might be all well and good, but it still means that any errant tweet about the show might be calculated in. It all seems a bit too vague and spread out to be boiled down into an actionable rating.

In Japan, Video Research’s traditional view ratings are exclusively used by the television networks to sell spots to advertisers. Even a minor shift in ratings can allow a station to sell a more expensive spot to advertisers, and poor ratings lead to cancellations — much like they do in the United States. So a misleading rating from tweets could possibly end up causing more problems than it solves.

(Asiajin via The Next Web, image via buck82)

Relevant to your interests


The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article Going to the Kit Kat Club Was a ‘Cabaret’ Experience Like No Other
eddie redmayne with a hat in cabaret
Read Article Men Continue To Mansplain Things Literally Tattooed on Women
stevie nicks singing with a microphone
Read Article Stop Telling Me To Look Between Letters on a Keyboard
Poor Hayao Miyazaki. He's had enough.
Read Article Your Handy Guide to the Monsters That the Fourth Wing Heroes Are Fighting
cover art title for Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Read Article Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Ranked by How I Feel Today
Beyonce in a cowboy hat posing by leaning backwards
Related Content
Read Article Going to the Kit Kat Club Was a ‘Cabaret’ Experience Like No Other
eddie redmayne with a hat in cabaret
Read Article Men Continue To Mansplain Things Literally Tattooed on Women
stevie nicks singing with a microphone
Read Article Stop Telling Me To Look Between Letters on a Keyboard
Poor Hayao Miyazaki. He's had enough.
Read Article Your Handy Guide to the Monsters That the Fourth Wing Heroes Are Fighting
cover art title for Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Read Article Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ Ranked by How I Feel Today
Beyonce in a cowboy hat posing by leaning backwards