I’ve been watching the first couple of stages of the Tour de France which have been held in England (Yorkshire). They had around 2.5 million people over the two days.
So this would be at least 1.25 million people actually there watching a live one-day sporting event. Could this be a record for a live event, sporting or otherwise?
Depends on what you mean by an event. I’m sure more people than that have watched some solar eclipse live. But if you count that, I’d guess a lunar eclipse would beat it. They obviously only occur at night, but are visible to half the earth.
The USA-Portugal match in the World Cup had 24.7 million in the USA alone. That was a new US record for any live sporting event, nearly doubting most World Series baseball games. Brazil-Croiatia match was 47 million just in Brazil.
That’s nowhere near a record for live sports in the US. I can well believe it’s a record for soccer, but the 2014 Super Bowl had over 111 million viewers.
The last US Football Super Bowl went over 160 million.
The record is probably the burning of the Twin Towers on 9-11, but I cannot find any figures on that, and if anybody knows, it is not something anyone would be in a hurry to proclaim. It is coneivable that the number of people who saw at least part of that live coverage was around a billion, worldwide.
I think the OP was looking for the largest number of people actually at the event, not watching on TV. And there’s a Wikipedia list of the largest peaceful gatherings. Some of these events, mostly religious gatherings, have many millions of people.
That’s what I thought when I saw the thread title. Obviously on TV, but live in the sense of “as it happened.” But I have no idea what the audience numbers were.
At least four, though: me, my parents, and Burt Cooper. Probably others besides.
Missed the edit window. Anyway, regarding Apollo 11, Wikipedia says that “…images of the first lunar EVA were received and broadcast to at least 600 million people on Earth…” Suck on that, World Cup!
" The cumulative audience of all matches of the 2006 World Cup is estimated to be 26.29 billion.[1] 715.1 million individuals watched the final match of this tournament (a ninth of the entire population of the planet). "
I don’t really see the entire World Cup as one event.
The Apollo moon landings were extremely watched in terms of percentages of persons with television. I believe essentially every place on earth that had television broadcasts aside from the countries behind the Iron Curtain were showing it live, and I don’t believe much if anything else was even being offered to view. So essentially if you weren’t under the Soviet thumb, had a television, and it was on during the moon landings that is what you were watching.
But television adoption was in its meteoric phase during this time, there were vastly more global television sets deployed in 1980 than 1969. In 2014 just about anywhere has some level of television exposure, that may not mean a television in a home, but it does mean places people can go to watch TV, even in very poor countries. This wasn’t really the case in 1969.
There were about 1.25 million people THERE, on the actual road for the TdF. Not watching on TV, physically AT the event.
The TdF is a pretty big spectator sport with a lot of opportunity for live viewing of the event (along the sometimes 200km+ course). I can’t think of any venue that allows for that many people to attend a sporting event.
The New York City Marathon claims 2 million spectators, which I find hard to believe. This year’s Boston Marathon had its biggest spectator turnout ever and I’ve seen estimates of 1-2 million, which is also likely bogus. Both of those have spectators lining both sides of the course for pretty much the entirety of their 26 miles, while the rural parts of the TdF can be pretty desolate. TdF probably comes out ahead.