Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Success of AFC Championship on Paramount+ bodes well for Super Bowl

A promo image for the AFC Championship game on Paramount Plus.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

The numbers are in, and CBS Sports says that Sunday’s AFC Championship game (think of it as the NFL’s semifinals) is the “most-streamed live event ever” on Paramount+.

That’s obviously a good thing for everyone involved, but even more so given that Super Bowl 2024 will be available on Paramount+ on February 11. That’s in addition to the usual CBS broadcast feeds, which include streaming on YouTube TV or Hulu with Live TV, or on cable, or even watching for free via an over-the-air antenna. The Paramount+ numbers saw double-digit growth over the 2023 matchup, according to a press release, including in the streaming minutes and average minute audience categories. (Actual numbers weren’t given, though.)

Recommended Videos

Paramount+ was just one part of the picture, however. CBS says that the game — which saw the Kansas City Chiefs dismantle the Baltimore Ravens — was the most-watched in the history of the AFC Championship, averaging 55.473 million viewers. The previous record was slightly lower, with the Jets and Steelers pulling in 54.850 million in 2011.

In other useful numbers, the Chiefs-Ravens matchup saw a 17% increase in audience for the same early window (as in the afternoon time slot), which in 2023 featured the 49erstaking on the Eagles. This year’s game peaked at just over 64 million viewers.

And the game was the most watched non-Super Bowl program on CBS since the 1994 Winter Olympics on February 25, 1994 — which was headlined by Nancy Kerrigan going up against Tonya Harding — just a month or so after Kerrigan was assaulted during practice as part of a plot orchestrated by Harding’s ex-husband.

So the AFC Championship was big — but there’s a very likely chance that we’ll see even bigger numbers for the Super Bowl. It’s a bigger game, for starters. And then there’s the fact that folks are going to tune in just to watch the Super Bowl Halftime Show, which is an event unto itself. And then there’s Taylor Swift, presuming that she’s able to make it to the game after her own show in Japan the day before. Or, erm, after. Or however that international date line thing works.

Super Bowl LVIII kickoff is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on CBS, Paramount+, and Nickelodeon, among other places. Stay tuned. It’s going to be a big one.

Phil Nickinson
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
Best TVs for the Super Bowl
A scene from The Greatest Showman on a Sony A95L QD-OLED.

Not that you need our permission, but if you're going to watch the Super Bowl, it's a perfect excuse to pick up a new television. Yes, just for the big game. Or at least for the Super Bowl halftime show, should the showdown between San Francisco and Kansas City just not really matter to you.

There are a ton of TVs out there, with model names that don't always make sense. So we're going to boil it down to some very simple choices. And we're touching a few price points here, so there should be something for every budget.

Read more
How to watch Puppy Bowl 2023
Puppy Bowl info in a puppy bowl.

For some, Super Bowl 2023 is the second-biggest game around on February 12. That's because Animal Planet is back again with its annual Puppy Bowl (it’s Puppy Bowl XIX, if you’ve been keeping track, or the 19th iteration if you refuse to do Roman Numerals). Basically, it’s the Super Bowl for dogs.

This year’s event features 122 puppies, benefiting some 67 shelters and rescues from 34 states. It’s all in good fun — dogs aren’t doing anything untoward, though occasionally a penalty flag is thrown for accidentally leaving it all out on the field. There’s plenty of wrestling and tugging of toys, and lots of water breaks. And you’ll also learn the stories of the pups themselves, as well as the organizations that enable their adoption.

Read more
Super Bowl delay is real — here’s how to avoid it
Super Bowl hub on Peacock.

There's a phenomenon with the modern Super Bowl -- and of all live sports today -- that our parents never had to deal with. And it's just one of those things that comes with modern digital entertainment.

In other words, the Super Bowl delay is real.

Read more