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Tech

New York Times Got a Huge Number of Views on Facebook Live

By
Reuters
Reuters
By
Reuters
Reuters
December 28, 2016, 2:19 PM ET
New York Times' Quarterly Profits Falls 58 Percent
Ramin Talaie Getty Images

Presidential politics and celebrity interviews helped The New York Times surpass 100 million views for its Facebook Live videos, the company said on Wednesday.

Facebook launched its livestreaming platform in August of 2015 and it is in its infancy. The New York Times has used Facebook Live to showcase its journalism, hoping to reach potential subscribers as the newspaper publisher relies more heavily on digital to grow its revenue.

It was not clear how much revenue The New York Times has derived from producing these videos.

Multiple media outlets reported that Facebook was paying certain media companies to produce Live videos through a one-year period from March 2016 to March 2017. The Wall Street Journal also reported that The New York Times was being paid around $3 million for the one-year period.

A New York Times spokeswoman declined to comment on any financials or the Wall Street Journal report. A Facebook spokesperson confirmed the company has been offering “temporary financial support” to a “relatively small number of companies” to produce videos.

The Times said it reached the 100 million views benchmark earlier this month. Comparative figures were not available for how the New York Times ranks against similar publishers, including The Washington Post.

The Times got more 5 million views on its livestream of the first presidential debate between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton. There were 3.9 million views for a concert by Erykah Badu and another popular Times livestream featured singer-actress Kristin Chenoweth.

For more about Facebook Live, watch:

Digital is becoming more important for many major U.S. Media companies, particularly the New York Times, where print advertising revenue has been in freefall. During its most recent quarter, ad revenue from print slid 18.5% from the previous year, accounting for just 22 percent of its total revenue, said chief executive Mark Thompson during the Nov. 2 earnings call.

Digital ad revenue, which saw a 21.4% rise, now accounts for 35.5% of revenue at the New York Times. During that same earnings call, chief revenue officer Meredith Kopit Levien said video was becoming more of a factor in growing digital ad revenue.

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