"Did you get that, NINE ?"Friday's two episodes of Big Bang got about the same as recent BB Friday shows. 468,000 and 448,000 and were still fourth in that time period.
I do, I like it. I've never really watched or read any superhero stuff though so I'm probably not the target demographic. I just like the corrupt police force sort of story lines.Anyone actually watching Gotham? I lost interest part way through the first episode, and haven't been back.
I wonder what caused the slight number increase....
For the analysts; what does it mean if numbers INCREASE but demographics DECREASE ?Monday
702,000
Total # 13
25-54 #3
18-49 #3
16-39 #3
Last Monday demos were 8, 6 and 6For the analysts; what does it mean if numbers INCREASE but demographics DECREASE ?![]()
Last Monday demos were 8, 6 and 6
Monday before 8, 6, 4
So demos did improve
Also still a great position for Nine. Big Bang got #1 and 2 in all demos.
Total people ratings are used for headlines. Now I'm not saying that has nothing to do with a show's chances. Because the headlines help the ratings as the articles are written using the total people ratings - so of course that has an impact on demos.Ok, but when they had say 620K total, with demos of 2,2,1 compared to 700K with a 3,3,3, how does that translate to advertisers?
EDIT: note I'm not using real figures, and it's a sincere question.![]()
It makes it even more of a joke that Nine isn't attempting to strangle the Big Adventure at birth by using Big Brother against it on Sundays and Mondays. Even with a poor season I think most BB fans would stick with BB rather than giving a rival show the chance.Good figures! Not the greatest ever episode last night, but at least the novelty value of the 4 new people was there.
The Big Adventure is a joke. I watched some of the first episode, and have not been back since, it is just a cheap and bad rip-off of Survivor.
Ahhhh. so we really SHOULD be looking at the actual "bums on seats" number WITHIN the each of the demos. Are those figures published or are they derivable from other published figures?Total people ratings are used for headlines. Now I'm not saying that has nothing to do with a show's chances. Because the headlines help the ratings as the articles are written using the total people ratings - so of course that has an impact on demos.
However as far as I can tell, advertisers buy their slots based on the demo averages for the season. Probably more so the # not even he rank in the demos.
Ahhhh. so we really SHOULD be looking at the actual "bums on seats" number WITHIN the each of the demos. Are those figures published or are they derivable from other published figures?
Ok, but when they had say 620K total, with demos of 2,2,1 compared to 700K with a 3,3,3, how does that translate to advertisers?
EDIT: note I'm not using real figures, and it's a sincere question.![]()