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Kids prefer the TV for their viewing, but love other devices

NEW YORK — Grace Ellis has never known a time when you needed a TV to watch TV.
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NEW YORK — Grace Ellis has never known a time when you needed a TV to watch TV.

The North Attleboro, Massachusetts, fifth-grader watches shows like Liv and Maddie, Jessie and The Lodge on her laptop, iPad and phone.

“Sometimes I watch TV in the car,” she says. “I have ballet every day, so I watch on the way.”

She has a TV in her bedroom that isn’t hooked up to cable but is perfect for watching DVDs.

And the family’s flat-screen has advantages of its own.

“It’s much bigger,” Grace explains, “and on the couch, it’s comfier.”

Ever since freckle-faced puppet Howdy Doody ushered in children’s television nearly 70 years ago, each new generation of viewers has been treated to a growing bounty of programs on a mushrooming selection of gadgetry.

But nothing compares to the current wave: “The generation coming up now is used to having everything at their fingertips,” says Stacey Lynn Schulman, an analyst at the Katz Media Group.

Why not? From birth, theirs has been a world of video digitally issuing from every screen. And for them, any of those screens is just another screen, whether or not you call it “TV.”

“When they love a (show), they love it in every form and on every platform,” says Nickelodeon president Cyma Zarghami.

This keeps the bosses at each kids’ network scrambling to make sure that wherever children turn their eyes, that network’s programing will be there.

Even so, it may be surprising that children nonetheless watch most television on, well, a television. As in: old-fashioned linear, while-it’s-actually-airing telecasts.

A new Nielsen study finds that in the fourth quarter of 2016, viewers aged 2-11 averaged about 17 hours of live (not time-shifted) TV each week. Granted, that’s a drop of about 90 minutes weekly from the year before. But by comparison, kids in fourth quarter 2016 spent about 4 1/2 hours weekly watching video content on other devices.

“Linear TV is still the lion’s share of where kids’ time is spent,” says Jane Gould, senior vice-president for consumer insights for Disney Channel. “But it’s important for us to be in all the OTHER places where they are, as well.”

One reason: Those other outlets can pave the way for a new program’s arrival on linear TV.

Gould points to Andi Mack, an ambitious comedy-drama that debuted on Disney Channel on April 7. Weeks before it landed there, the series could be sampled on digital platforms including the Disney Channel app, Disney.com, Disney Channel YouTube, iTunes, Amazon and Google Play.

Count Grace Ellis among the legions of kids whose attention was snagged by this mega-buildup. When Andi Mack premiered, Grace was one of the 9 million TV viewers who tuned in.

When Sesame Street premiered on PBS back in 1969, it joined a bare handful of TV shows (chief among them Captain Kangaroo and Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood) devoted to uplifting their young audience.

Nearly a half-century later, Sesame Street is going strong.

“PBS is still at its core,” says Sesame Workshop COO Steve Youngwood. So is TV overall, as demonstrated by the series expanding to HBO a year ago. TV currently accounts for 40 per cent of its viewership.

But Sesame Street has never stopped adapting to an evolving media landscape that today finds 18 per cent of its audience viewing on tablets, 14 per cent on mobile phones and 25 per cent on other streaming devices and computers.

That includes YouTube, where its program content has been a presence for some time. Now it’s getting special focus with the launch of Sesame Studios, which Youngwood describes as “a separate production unit specifically for that platform. We want to harness the power of YouTube to educate kids just like we harnessed the power of TV 50 years ago.”