What the World Watched. Where. Today.
A live test desk for world-scale events across sport, politics, entertainment and streaming — built from reported market audiences, platform data and broadcaster figures.
21 June Test Desk
| Event | Category | Markets watched | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spain vs Saudi ArabiaFIFA World Cup | Football | Spain, Saudi/MENA, US, UK | Tracked |
| Belgium vs IranFIFA World Cup | Football | Belgium, Iran/MENA, Europe, US | Tracked |
| U.S. Open Final RoundShinnecock Hills | Golf | US, UK, Canada, Australia | Tracked |
| House of the Dragon S3HBO / Max premiere | Entertainment | US, UK, HBO/Max markets | Tracked |
| India W vs South Africa WWomen’s T20 World Cup | Cricket | India, South Africa, UK | Tracked |
Not everything that aired. Only what the world had reason to watch.
We track world-scale events — and the audiences they actually earn. A huge event with a disappointing audience belongs here. A small event with a tiny audience does not.
Sports
World Cup matches, finals, major tournaments, global fights, title deciders and events that move markets beyond one local fanbase.
Politics & news
Debates, election nights, state events, major interviews and live broadcasts that pull meaningful national or international audiences.
Entertainment
Awards, streaming premieres, live specials, music events and global releases where real viewership can be estimated from reported markets.
We count viewers. Not reach.
No impressions. No potential audience. No “available in 190 countries” nonsense. We estimate actual viewers from reported market audiences, broadcaster data and platform figures.
When a single worldwide number does not exist, we build the best available market-by-market estimate and preserve the source trail.
Test first. Sell later.
The 21 June page is only a proof run. We track the events, collect the numbers as they appear, publish the Monday brief, and then decide what deserves to be public or private.
See the report planMonday’s brief comes after the child is born.
This page is not selling anything yet. It is a test board for Sunday 21 June. The first real proof is whether Monday morning’s brief can rank world-scale events cleanly, without reach, hype or filler.
Before the events
List only world-scale events worth tracking. No routine broadcasts, no tiny streams, no calendar padding.
After the events
Collect reported market numbers, estimate viewers, and update as credible broadcaster or platform data appears.
Monday morning
Publish the first test brief: what was watched, where it was watched, and which events beat or missed expectations.