Are soap operas losing viewership?
- snitzoid
- Jan 4
- 4 min read
Why watch this crap when you can ingest or rather be spoon fed tabloid trash here on the Report?
Soap operas are long-form, serialized melodramas
1440 News
Jan 4,2025
The genre was historically aimed at housewives, and its storylines often involve romantic entanglements and family dynamics that transpired over many years. Media scholar Robert J. Thompson called the soap opera “arguably the most unique contribution that broadcasting has made to the art of storytelling.”

Soaps often rely on cliffhangers, along with many other tropes
The shows are written to encourage viewers to tune in for the next episode, so they often withhold resolutions for as long as possible. This has become a recognizable trait, or a trope, for the genre. Much like other narrative genres, soap operas intentionally embrace tropes rather than avoid them.
Soap operas earned their name thanks to the sponsorships of soap brands
Many early 20th-century radio programs for women were sponsored by brands that introduced each new episode. Because these dramas were aimed at women, many of their sponsors were for household products, like soap. The association led some to refer to the shows as “soap operas,” a title that stuck.
The adoption of modern appliances led to the soap opera's rise
Soaps grew more popular as they transitioned to television in the 1950s. At the same time, the adoption of modern appliances like the automatic dishwasher and the clothes dryer offered housewives more free time, which soaps could now occupy. By 1970, CBS, NBC, and ABC were airing 18 daytime soaps.
‘Guiding Light’ was the longest-running scripted drama in broadcast history
The show ran for 72 years, starting as a radio program in 1937, and eventually transitioning to television in 1952. Along the way, it launched several Hollywood stars, like Kevin Bacon, James Earl Jones, and Christopher Walken. CBS canceled the show in 2009.
Soaps launched the careers of countless Hollywood A-listers
Soap operas may not be considered high culture, but many actors who would go on to win television and film’s highest honors got their start with soaps. That includes Julianne Moore (“As the World Turns”), Morgan Freeman (“Another World”), Leonardo DiCaprio (“Santa Barbara”), and Michael B. Jordan (“All My Children”).
Soap operas were especially popular in the ‘70s and ‘80s
Shows like “As the World Turns” and “Love of Life” attracted tens of millions of viewers and had many high-profile fans, including Andy Warhol, Sammy Davis Jr. and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. This Time cover story from 1976 explores the pop culture phenomenon.
A 1981 wedding on 'General Hospital' drew 30 million viewers
The wedding of Luke and Laura was a pop culture sensation and remains the most-watched episode of any show in daytime television history. Even Elizabeth Taylor wanted to get in on the fun, requesting she be written into the episode, which the show’s staff happily made happen.
Soaps often air every day, leading to frantic production schedules
Unlike more typical primetime or streaming shows, soap operas often air every weekday. That means writers and actors often work every day to complete a new episode, making for a grueling schedule. It also explains why some of the dialogue and performances might seem a bit off-the-cuff.
‘Twin Peaks’ was David Lynch’s ode to the soap opera
In the 1980s, David Lynch was primarily known as the director of art films like “Eraserhead” and “Blue Velvet.” But “Twin Peaks,” his primetime ABC show with writer Mark Frost, was a take on the soap opera, leaning into the genre’s tropes: stilted dialogue, affairs, missing person, and melodrama.
The OJ Simpson case interrupted soaps’ daytime dominance, changing the genre
OJ Simpson's 1995 murder trial was broadcast for months, bumping soap operas from the airwaves. Fittingly, the trial provided the same salacious story lines, compelling characters, and open-ended narratives that soaps offered viewers. The key difference, of course, was that the Simpson trial was real life.
Soap operas are significantly less popular now than in past decades
In the genre’s heyday, soap operas commanded large audiences. But recent decades have found the soap opera in steep decline. One data journalist suggests it's an issue of classification: Shows similar to soap opera, like “Grey’s Anatomy,” remain popular, though they’re not considered soap operas because they resemble “prestige television.”
Some say soaps have been replaced by reality TV
Reality shows have much in common with soaps: massive melodrama, sweeping music cues, neverending plotlines, and a seemingly endless number of episodes. Some communications scholars suggest that’s why younger viewers are no longer interested in soap operas; reality programs provide the same content with the added appeal of being “real.”
Telenovelas are Latin American takes on the soap opera
Telenovelas share much with American soap operas, with storylines about romantic affairs, deceitful family members, and vengeful villains. However, the key difference is that they are confined to 120 to 180 episodes, while a traditional soap opera is written as an open-ended narrative, allowing it to go on for decades.
Telenovelas evolved alongside technology
Like soap operas, telenovelas began as radio programs and then transitioned to television as the medium became widely available in Latin American countries.
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