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Showing posts with label rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rules. Show all posts

The Sked: Thou Shalt Not Appeal Directly to Nielsen Homes

Oprah Winfrey broke a cardinal rule of the Nielsen ratings game by appealing directly to Nielsen sample members to watch her struggling network.  As reported in the New York Times and elsewhere, Oprah tweeted Sunday night "Every 1 who can please turn to OWN especially if u have a Neilsen box" as she wrote about her interview program Oprah's Next ChapterOprah promptly apologized and removed the offending tweet (presumably after a flurry of phone calls and emails from upset lawyers, executives and media relations professionals).  Nielsen has threatened to put an asterisk next to any rating for the telecast, notifying any advertiser or client of the circumstances.  The problem is the asterisk might fight for attention next to the "hash mark" that OWN receives in many time periods (a "<<" symbol Nielsen publishes when ratings fall below a 0.10 and are deemed statistically unreliable).   


Nielsen and other ratings measurement companies such as radio's Arbitron have longstanding policies against broadcasters directly addressing members of their research samples.  A network or program can advertise, promote and market all they want to a general audience, but a message targeted to sample members is strictly forbidden because it might distort normal behavior.  Some TV stations in small markets still measured by paper diaries go right up to the line by running announcements such as "You are watching WXYZ...write it down."  Even occasional local TV news stories about the ratings process raise concerns by Nielsen.   

At the extreme, "sample tampering" could occur if a broadcaster somehow identified Nielsen homes and communicated directly with them.  For that reason, the sample's identity (names, addresses, phone numbers, emails) is one of the best kept secrets in the world.  A fictional scheme to tamper with the ratings sample was the subject of Danny DeVito's directorial debut in The Ratings Game, a 1984 comedy produced for Showtime/ The Movie Channel and also starring Devito and Rhea Perlman.  (In the film, a disgruntled researcher at the ratings company falls in love with a schlocky producer, and she provides him with a list of people in the sample.  He gives away trips to a number of these families, moves his friends into their homes, and have them watch the stunningly bad and ethnically-stereotyped situation comedy The Goombas, making it a massive overnight hit.  Any parallels to the success of 2 Broke Girls is strictly coincidental.)


So what happened to Sunday's ratings for Oprah's Next Chapter?  The telecast at 9 pm did not crack the top 100 cable program list for the night on tvbythenumbers.com (generally a 0.3 rating or higher with Adults 18-49).  (When the actual rating, asterisk and all, is available, we will report it.)  But in the fourth quarter of 2011 in prime time, the struggling OWN channel averaged a lowly 0.07 rating with young adults (representing about 85,000 Adults 18-49 in an average minute), meriting the dreaded hash mark.  In its target sales demographic of Women 18-49, OWN averaged a 0.10 rating and 63,000 young women, about the same delivery as the National Geographic Channel (and just above the hash mark line).  That means in a typical moment in prime time, approximately five (yes, 5) women aged 18-49 in the Nielsen sample are watching OWN (5 out of the roughly 5,500 women 18-49 with Nielsen PeopleMeters in their home).  What are the odds that even one of the other 5,495 young women in the sample were following Oprah on Twitter at exactly the right moment (sometime around 9 pm Sunday when the tweet was posted) and then felt compelled to turn on the TV or change the channel to OWN (assuming they can find it)?  Those odds are for another post.  The point is, a broadcaster simply can't do something like that, even if the action had little to no chance actually lifting the ratings.  

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THE SKED'S THURSDAY NETWORK SCORECARD



Silent Night = America's TV sets during holiday season...

FOX:  Reality competition shows are supposed to build as contestants are eliminated and the show nears its conclusion.  THE X FACTOR, though, has been steadily slipping, and as it heads into its final week, it's now shed 35% of its early ratings.  The show is still a success for FOX, but like Dancing With the Stars and The Biggest Loser this season, it may reflect an audience that's getting a bit tired of the genre.  BONES was a repeat.


CBSPERSON OF INTEREST took some advantage of the fact that for the first time, it didn't air against any regular competition, with reruns on NBC and FOX, and a weak special on ABC--not that it zoomed upward last night, but holding steady from the prior week and a couple of ticks above a low looks like a win at this point.    THE MENTALIST technically faced a new competitor on NBC, but that was a straw foe, and it also held even with last week.  A repeat BIG BANG THEORY at 8PM held down RULES OF ENGAGEMENT at 8:30.

ABC:   A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS was down 10% from last year, and there was coal in the stocking for Katie Couric, whose Year In Review special could only muster a 1.5.

NBC:  Repeats at 8-10PM, with all ratings below a 1 except THE OFFICE's 1.1, set things up for a terrible PRIME SUSPECT result, and the show delivered:  even with a new episode, it barely breathed a 0.8 on its way to the Island of Misfit Television Shows.

CW:  Repeat after me:  Repeats!

Tonight, NBC airs new episodes of CHUCK and GRIMM, and ABC is also all-new.  FOX goes the holiday special route, with yet more Charlie Brown plus ICE AGE and SIMPSONS repeats, and CBS is in rerun mode.

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THE SKED'S THURSDAY NETWORK SCORECARD



Whatever America is doing early in this holiday season, it's not watching network television.

NBC:  The network attempted to help GRIMM in its return after a 3-week hiatus by giving it a showcase Thursday night run, but its 1.6 rating didn't suggest bubbling fan interest (and may prefigure an ugly score in its timeslot return tonight)--it scored better than PRIME SUSPECT, but that's the definition of "not saying much."  Earlier in the evening, a parade of season lows:  PARKS & RECREATION, THE OFFICE and WHITNEY all tied their lows, while the "winner" was COMMUNITY, a whopping 0.1 above its low for its last pre (permanent?) vanishing episode.


CBSBIG BANG THEORY was just above its season low, while RULES OF ENGAGEMENT narrowly set a new one.  Initial numbers have strong results for PERSON OF INTEREST and THE MENTALIST, but CBS in Pittsburgh aired the Steelers vs Browns game, so those numbers are due to come down.

FOX:  The FOX affiliate in Cleveland had the other end of the NFL game, so these numbers are probably high as well.  That won't be good news for FOX, since even with the NFL boost, right now X FACTOR is at a season low and BONES is only 0.1 above its own low.

ABCWIPEOUT's season premiere at 1.9 was 20% below last season's average.  After that, AMERICA'S FUNNIEST HOME VIDEOS and  THE GREAT BIG AMERICAN AUCTION specials were nothing of the sort, with lousy 1.9 and 1.4 numbers respectively.  

CW:  Gone fishin till January.

Tonight, as noted above, the question is how GRIMM will fare in its return to timeslot, against atypical competition:  CBS and FOX are airing holiday specials and reruns.

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THE SKED'S THURSDAY NETWORK SCORECARD



The final Thursday of November sweeps wasn't impressive for anyone.

ABC:  The network had to be disappointed with the 2.5 earned by its 2-hour, much-promoted "intervention" episode of PRIVATE PRACTICE, which was down not only from Grey's Anatomy numbers but even from Practice's 2.8 last week.  (It was, however, a strong episode, especially the first hour written by Shonda Rhimes.)  The Katie Couric/Regis Philbin interview special at 8PM did better than recent episodes of the dead CHARLIE'S ANGELS, but not by much.


FOXX FACTOR continued its slide, with last night's 3 its lowest Thursday number by a factor of 10%.  That was, however, still good enough for an easy 2d place finish in its hour.  The news was better for BONES, which capitalized on the absence of Grey's to win at 9PM.  

NBC:  Well, on the plus side COMMUNITY and PARKS AND REC were both up slightly from last week.  But THE OFFICE, despite reduced competition in its hour, tied its season low, and WHITNEY, preparing for its move to Wednesday--where it will have to be a self-starter--hit a new all-time low and went below a 2 for the first time.  The cancelled PRIME SUSPECT played out the string, tying its series low.

CBS:  Even though all its shows except RULES OF ENGAGEMENT were down from last week (and PERSON OF INTEREST and THE MENTALIST both tied their season lows), the network was able to win the night thanks to the absence of Grey's.  

CW:  As the network's Thursday is on hiatus until January, it filled in for the night with an obscure aquatic action movie that happened to star VAMPIRE DIARIES' Paul Wesley.  Even with the temporary and artificial boost of NY and Denver preemptions for the brutal (if you're a Jets fan) football game, the movie did no better than the CW norm, and that will be reduced later today as national numbers come in.

Tonight the Grimm watch will continue for NBC.

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THE SKED: Thursday Ratings - Network Scorecard



On a night when atypical competition should have made for some shuffling in the numbers, the news was that there wasn't much at all.

ABC:  The network had to be hoping that with a repeat Office on NBC and the male-skewing World Series on FOX, they could get some extra viewers for GREY'S ANATOMY.  But the show actually went down 0.1 from last week, which means its 3.5 rating, down over 20% from last year's average, is about where it's going to be for a while.  The weird thing about CHARLIE'S ANGELS isn't its 1.2 last night, but the fact that as of now, the network is still planning to air another dead episode on November 3, in the midst of sweeps.


CBSPERSON OF INTEREST is reportedly about to receive a full-season pick-up, but it didn't benefit from the repeats on NBC last night, and may have been slightly dented by the World Series.  The good news for CBS was that while RULES OF ENGAGEMENT will never be a blockbuster, it's far more compatible with BIG BANG THEORY than the deceased How To Be A Gentleman was.

FOX:  They now know that they'll have a Game 5 on Monday, removing the need to air House and Terra Nova reruns, but won't know until at least Sunday if they're going to get into the promised land of a Game 6 and potential Game 7.  Last night's number, like Wednesday's, looks to be again just about what they've been doing with X FACTOR.

NBC:  They sat out the night with repeats, and if Sunday's football game is on the low side (and with New Orleans a 2-touchdown favorite over the Colts, that's a possibility), the weekly average could be truly woeful.

CW:  In the universe of this network, where tenths are truly meaningful, the 0.9 for SECRET CIRCLE counts as good news.  The show has been improving creatively over the past couple of weeks as well, with less soap and more deadly villains.

In the stories about CBS's pending pick-ups, notably absent has been A GIFTED MAN, so tonight's rating for that show may be critical.  Also, EXTREME MAKEOVER will make its Friday debut for ABC.

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THE SKED: CBS Explains "How To Be" A Flop Sitcom


Well, that didn't take long.  Here's the difference these days between CBS and NBC:  earlier this week, NBC rewarded UP ALL NIGHT and WHITNEY, two sitcoms that most recently had 2.3 ratings, with full season back-orders, and has generally been treating them like new smash hits.  This afternoon, HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN, which had a 2.5 rating last night, was demoted by CBS to the wasteland of Saturday night and had its order cut from 13 episodes to 9 (the 9th episode being the one that's shooting tonight--Happy Yom Kippur, everyone!).  So basically, as close as a show can come to being cancelled without actually using that word. 


RULES OF ENGAGEMENT, which was supposed to have that Saturday slot (but which everyone knew was waiting in the bullpen for a summons to the real schedule), will take over Gentleman's slot.  Meanwhile, the cast of CHARLIE'S ANGELS, which had less than half of Gentleman's rating in their shared slot last night, may want to check their messages.

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THE SKED: WHAT TO WATCH THIS FALL ON WEEKENDS (1st Draft)


Just how big a fan are you of RULES OF ENGAGEMENT?  If CBS dropped it off the top of the Empire State Building, would you jump after it?  Because that's pretty much what they've done by (probably only temporarily) airing new episodes on Saturdays.  The rest of the night isn't even worth mentioning...


The networks have proclaimed their Fall schedules, the new series have been (partially) unveiled, so... what now?  What will actually be worth watching when network TV comes back to life in a few months?  SHOWBUZZDAILY is here to help you out.  The good news is that since virtually all TV series are available these days via DVR, on-demand and online streaming, we're well past the days when you had to choose one show in a timeslot and live with it--so where a slot offers a multitude of worthwhile entries, well, the only thing better than spending an hour watching TV is spending 2.  Also, these are "1st Drafts" because once the pilots come to light, some arrivals may look even better than they do now, while others will be far less impressive.  So consider this a work in progress.

7PM:  The advantage of living on the West Coast is being able to watch football--assuming it still exists this Fall--and also see the regular series that air that night. (And yes, per Woody Allen, the ability to make right turns on red lights.)


8PM:  ONCE UPON A TIME looks like a genuinely strange show, and it's hard to believe it'll find an audience, especially in a timeslot where THE SIMPSONS still gets a strong rating and AMAZING RACE has a loyal following.  Give ABC credit for gall, though, and at least a couple of spins on the DVR.  And if ALLEN GREGORY is as uninteresting as its promos suggest, they could get lucky.

9PM:  Even though FAMILY GUY is a favorite, and worth DVRing, there's no question that the class of the evening is THE GOOD WIFE, probably the best network 1-hour currently on TV.  DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES, on the other hand, has entered the twilight of its run, and is already in danger of overstaying its welcome.

10PM:  PAN AM looks like classy fun, and a smooth way to end the TV week.

WHAT TO WATCH THE REST OF THE WEEK:

Monday    Tuesday    Wednesday    Thursday    Friday    Weekend 

ALSO SEE MITCH METCALF'S PREDICTIONS OF FALL 2011 RATINGS:

MON      TUE      WED      THU      FRI      SAT      SUN      FULL WEEK

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