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Nearly 25 million U.S. viewers watched Grammy awards

Nearly 25 million U.S. viewers tuned in to watch Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Bruno Mars take home the top honors at the annual Grammy Awards ceremony this year, CBS Corp said on Tuesday.
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February 16, 2016

Nearly 25 million U.S. viewers tuned in to watch Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran and Bruno Mars take home the top honors at the annual Grammy Awards ceremony this year, CBS Corp said on Tuesday.

The network, citing figures from Nielsen, said the show, which included numerous performances by music's biggest names, had the largest audience for any entertainment program this season.

The overall number dipped from last year's 25.3 million viewers, which was the smallest TV audience for music's biggest night since 2009's 19.1 million viewers. 

CBS's figures do not count the Super Bowl, a sporting event, which drew nearly 112 million viewers on Feb. 7, the most-watched show on U.S. television. 

The Grammys come ahead of the annual Oscars ceremony later this month, Hollywood's biggest night and typically the most-watched entertainment event, drawing more than 36 million U.S. viewers last year. Walt Disney's ABC television network will broadcast this year's Academy Awards. 

On social media, the Grammys dominated the conversation on Monday night, with 17.2 million tweets mentioning the show, Twitter said. Sheeran's win for song of the year was the most-tweeted moment, followed by rapper Kendrick Lamar's socially charged performance.

On Facebook, 21 million people posted about the show, and Lady Gaga's colorful tribute to late singer David Bowie was the most talked-about moment. 

On Instagram, 15 million people discussed the Grammys, and Swift's photo of herself posing with singer Selena Gomez earned the most 'likes' from 2.1 million fans.

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