It’s been an evolutionary year in television. Original programming on streaming services like Netflix and Amazon are now competing with broadcast television, certain cable shows are performing better than network shows, and Nielsen ratings even stepped into the 21st century by beginning to account for viewership on all platforms, in addition to a show’s Twitter ratings.

NCIS continued its dominance as the number one show on television in viewers, Big Bang Theory was the top show in the 18-49 demo that matters, while Duck Dynasty was the highest rated show on cable, and The Walking Dead was the highest rated scripted show on cable. Shows like Dynasty, Breaking Bad, Sons of Anarchy, American Horror Story and The Walking Dead also regularly beat their network competition in their respective time slots, as well. And while NBC rose to number one among the broadcast networks, thanks to The Voice and Sunday Night Football (not to mention their new drama, The Blacklist), it’s Thursday night lineup hit new lows.

Let’s take a look at 10 ratings facts that stand out in 2013.

1. Cable’s share of the 18-49 audience now stands at 70 percent; the networks share is 30 percent.

2. The viewers of the last first runs of Thursday’s comedy line-up Parks and Recreation, Sean Saves the World and The Michael J. Fox Show combined equaled 9.21 million viewers. The last first run of Big Bang Theory was almost double that, with 17.6 million. In fact, the COMBINED Thursday night comedy line-up on NBC gets fewer viewers than reruns of Big Bang Theory on TBS.

3. More people watch the number one new show of the year, The Blacklist, on their DVRs (6.3 million) than live-watch episodes of New Girl and The Mindy Project combined (6.15 million). Likewise, The Blacklist now has more DVR viewers than Agents of SHIELD has live viewers (6.1 million).

4. The COMBINED ratings of critically acclaimed Girls, Veep, Orphan Black, Portlandia, and Comedy Bang! Bang! (3 million combined) is less than the ratings for Dog with a Blog (3.5 million)