Here's the Ratings Five-Spot for the week ending January 15, 2012:
- The Game - BET welcomed back The Game for its second original run on BET with 5.29 million viewers and a 2.8 A18-49 rating. The bad news: that's down a lot from its astonishingly huge BET premiere a year ago (7.68 million viewers, 3.6 demo on 1/11/11). The good news: it's still huge by cable standards. It easily beat its broadcast and cable competition in the timeslot and will finish as one of the week's top cable programs. The other amazing thing is that this number, even way down from its BET debut, is still twice what it got at the highest point of its three-season run on the CW. If this season is anything like last season, The Game will come down from this point but still contend for the timeslot lead on Tuesday at 10/9c.
- One Tree Hill - When One Tree Hill ends later this season, it'll amazingly leave behind at most one other scripted show that existed before the WB/UPN merger. Even in its last couple years of decline, it's still been a pretty competitive show on the CW spectrum. And at least on premiere night for the final season, that remains the case. OTH returned to 1.72 million viewers and a 0.9 demo, which was down from last season's premiere (2.14 million, 1.1 demo) and about where the show was at this time last year (its midseason return got 1.89 million and a 0.9 last year on January 25). The show may be on its way out, but a 0.9 is a really good number for its network right now. It exceeds recent results from all CW scripted shows not named The Vampire Diaries. The only thing is that I doubt that number will hold up in the short term, as American Idol invades the TV landscape next week.
- NBC's Shifting Comedies - Last week, NBC had a whooping four sitcoms that were either starting out in a new timeslot or starting out, period. The Up All Night/Whitney (2.0 demo each) flip hasn't meant much for either show so far, but keep in mind Whitney faced as little competition as it'll ever face (no American Idol or Survivor), while UAN faced a full complement of originals on the other four networks. Newbie Are You There, Chelsea? (2.3 demo) got an OK start after Whitney, but that may not mean a whole lot with American Idol joining the timeslot next week. Then there was the disappointing return of 30 Rock (4.47 million viewers, 1.8 demo), sharply down from last year's 2.6 demo premiere. It did a little better than Community in the timeslot (it averaged a 1.61 this fall, and the 1.8 tied Community's season high), but that may be short-lived with American Idol arriving next week.
- The Panned Sitcoms - This week brought quite a wave of poorly-reviewed new comedies across all the big four networks, and the ratings results were rather mixed. It started with week two of Work It on ABC, whose 1.5 demo was bad enough for it to get pulled from the schedule immediately. Rumors are that Cougar Town will be inhabiting the timeslot in February. NBC had the rather "meh" start from Are You There, Chelsea? described above. Then on Thursday and Sunday, a couple more new comedies got what look like pretty strong starts, Rob on CBS (13.47 million viewers, 4.1 demo) and Napoleon Dynamite on Fox (preliminarily looks to be above a 4.0 demo). But they both had extremely large lead-ins (Rob aired after The Big Bang Theory and Napoleon after a football-fueled The Simpsons), meaning the margin of error is thinner for these shows than it'd appear based on the raw numbers.
- The Finder - A spin-off of the always solid Bones had to seem like a pretty high-percentage play for Fox. But at least on premiere night, the results were quite discouraging. After Bones put up a decent 8.64 million viewers and 2.4 demo at 8:00, The Finder took a big drop to just 5.50 million viewers and a 1.7. Usually, a 1.7 demo for a series premiere with a decent lead-in means you can pretty much forget about it. This time, maybe not, as the show's lead-in will get even better starting next week. The Thursday premiere of American Idol should do about triple what Bones did, so it seems almost certain The Finder will be the first series of this season to grow in week two.
For more in-depth TV ratings coverage every day, check out my blog at SpottedRatings.com or follow me on Twitter: @spotupj.
Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI do not generally root for cancellations of shows I don;t watch (The Finder), but come on cancellation!
ReplyDeleteBecause of Fringe?
ReplyDeleteWell, Fringe is 90% of it yes....
ReplyDeleteAlthough there is a "big picture" argument too. There are so few Sci-Fi series out anymore and even fewer on network TV. Prrocedurals with gimmicky lead characters are saturating the market (Bones, Castle, Mentalist, and Unforgettable to name a few) and if The Finder fails it is likely some more Sci-Fi series will stay alive. Be that series Alcatraz, Fringe, Terra Nova or Touch....
I find those gimmick shows complete time-wasters (not a negative term, just escapist TV basically) and I prefer shows that make me think and have more depth to them. So if one more gimmick procedural falls off, perhaps a genre show can stay afloat. That would be a very good thing in the bigger picture to me.
Sounds familiar. Usually I don't care about shows I don't watch myself, but because of Community I'm rooting against Whitney and Chelsea/Vodka.
ReplyDeleteI hear you and i agree,i watch Bones,Castle,and a few others so i can escape,i am disabled and in pain most of the time so by the time the shows come on i am pretty wiped out.But i also miss Shows like LOST and even Fringe,considering the wait we just went thru.I started Downton Abbey,and a few others which are good and nothing like a Bones,but i must admit at times it hurts to much to think clearly,and that when those shows come in handy.
ReplyDeleteNope I like procedurals and escapist TV, but like you mentioned, its's nice to have variety and a choice of programming to fit your mood or need!
ReplyDeleteI watched each of the shows I listed and shows like CSI, NCIS etc. Most got old to me after a couple years, NCIS made it 4 or 6 before I grew tired of it. CSI and Criminal Minds are the only network procedurals I watch now and Criminal Minds may be off my list soon if this season continues to spiral downward like it has been.
Yep, I'm not a fan of cheering against shows, but some series just make it so easy! XD
ReplyDeleteI gave up on Criminal Minds 2 years ago,i tune in every once in awhile just to see whats up,and what changes have taken place,and really i'm here all the time,so i basically know whats happening..
ReplyDeleteDoes it seem like a slow day today in terms of posts coming out?
This is funny,i just received my SpoilerTV update,and a red flag came up saying it "phishing",that's a first!
thanks
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm totally with you! I'm rooting against Whitney and Chelsea and even against 30 Rock if I have to, in order to get another season for Community!
ReplyDeleteI hear that. 1. Good for Fringe! 2. I did not like the back door pilot and had no inclination to watch the series. 3. Procedurals, while crazy popular, need to take a down a notch. There's too many. And too many rely on a main character who is has some kind of special talent. I'm over it.
ReplyDeleteI don't really even think that a 1.8 for the premiere represents "improvement" for 30 Rock vs. Community. I do understand the need to try something different in a given timeslot, especially on such an ad-dollar rich night as Thursdays - I just wish it was something I could back on a personal level...
ReplyDeleteThanks! :)
ReplyDeleteThe Game will still do well even though the #s are down from last season. Hopefully with a full season orders 22 episodes the storyline will be better then last season.
ReplyDelete