State of Streaming Podcast
Have a question? Send us a text! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2512452/fan_mail/new] Tim sits down with Josh Matthews [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrjoshmatthews/], Founder of StreamScoop [https://streamscoop.substack.com/], a Substack publication that aggregates open-source viewership data across streaming, broadcast, and cable into weekly data dumps, monthly deep dives, and the best streaming TV guide being published right now — which SOS syndicates weekly. 📺 Get This week's StreamScoop Streaming TV Guide Here [https://www.stateofstreaming.com/articles/this-weeks-streamscoop-streaming-tv-guide-mqz6dt13] Nobody was aggregating open-source streaming viewership data in one place. So Josh built it. StreamScoop started as a graduate independent study at the University of South Carolina — a journalism student who saw that all the conversation about streaming was happening at the business level, while the actual viewership numbers were scattered across Nielsen reports, Luminate, Samba, and dozens of individual PR pages. He pulled them all together. * 1:11 – How StreamScoop started as a graduate independent study * 3:18 – Print journalism in 2024 and betting on the thing you're most passionate about * 5:01 – One year post-grad: what StreamScoop has become The monthly data crunch goes where self-reported data won't. Streaming companies don't self-report when the numbers are bad. Josh does the work anyway — pulling Nielsen, Luminate, Samba, and platform PR data to answer questions like how Daredevil Born Again actually performed against She-Hulk and Moon Knight, or whether the Savannah Bananas' ESPN expansion is as dominant as the headlines suggest. * 6:59 – Why streaming companies don't self-report negative data — and why that matters * 7:10 – How the monthly deep dives find the comparisons platforms won't make for you * 8:53 – The Daredevil Born Again analysis: what the data actually showed AI search is not solving the streaming discoverability problem. It's making it worse. Josh has tested Grok, Claude, ChatGPT, and Copilot trying to pull viewership data. The results are consistently wrong — not wrong in obvious ways, but subtly wrong, often citing numbers from two and a half years ago with no indication they're stale. If AI can't reliably surface what's streaming this week, the discoverability gap is wider than the industry is admitting. * 10:22 – Why AI search fails at streaming data specifically * 9:36 – What ComScore and Reelgood found about AI as the default discovery method * 14:24 – What the consumer journey looks like when they can't find what they're looking for The weekly streaming TV guide: every major release, double-checked. Three sources minimum per entry. Josh cross-references Vital Thrills, TV Insider, and official platform press releases every week — and still misses things. If a human going through this process every single week with established sources can miss a release, imagine what the end consumer is up against trying to find it in two searches. * 13:05 – How Josh compiles the weekly streaming TV guide * 13:20 – Why English-only coverage is still almost impossible to keep complete * 14:04 – The Among Us example: missed by every aggregator, including StreamScoop Connect with Josh Matthews on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrjoshmatthews/] · StreamScoop on Substac [https://streamscoop.substack.com/]k Thanks to Looper Insights for sponsoring today’s show! Ready to unlock your streaming strategy edge? Head over to mystreamingvalue.com [https://mystreamingvalue.com] to compare CTV home screens and find out which spaces are worth the most. You’ll even learn exactly why Fox was willing to pay $22 billion for Roku. Stop guessing and start scaling—visit mystreamingvalue.com [https://mystreamingvalue.com] to get your free insights today! Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2512452/support]
29 Episoder
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