Cricket viewers dropped off in the wee hours
Judging
by the comments on radio and around Australia over the past 24 hours a lot of
people were up watching the closing stages of the third Ashes Test on SBS in the
early hours of Tuesday morning. Well,
there were quite a few, but not as much as the knowing comments would seem to
indicate.
The
closing stages of the match, from 2am onwards, saw the SBS audience dip from
179,400 between 2am and 2.15am according to Oztam figures, down to 169,000 at 3.30am to 3.45am and
119,600 between 3.45am and 4am when the result was known. Compare this with midnight when there were 529,000 people watching.
By 1am just over
334,000 people were still fixed on the box. Between
1.45am and 2am, the audience eased to just over 234,000, and then dropped
sharply in the next quarter hour as eyelids began to
droop. More than 54,000 people went to bed in that 15 to 20 minute
period.
The Winners |
Seven, with Border Security (No. 1 with 1.922 million |
The Losers |
Well, Ten had a down night as expected, the semi-final |
News & CA |
Seven News and Today Tonight won nationally thanks to wins in Sydney and Perth. Nine News and A Current Affair won Melbourne and the two split Brisbane and Adelaide. |
The Stats |
Seven won with a 28.2% share from Nine with 27.0%, Ten with 23.8%, the ABC with 13.1% and SBS sans cricket with 7.9%. Seven won again in Sydney and in Melbourne. The wins in Sydney are becoming more frequent again for Seven, as Nine seems to have lost the edge in the country’s main market. The size of Nine’s win in Brisbane, which is CSI country, kept it to within 1.2% of Seven nationally. Nine also won Adelaide narrowly, but lost big time in Perth. |
Glenn Dyer’s comments |
Another close night in the end, despite Seven’s strength from 6pm to 8.30pm. Ten will be the one to beat tonight with House, Idol and Rock School. Forensic Investigators will also be of interest given it has underwhelmed so far in its latest series. Nine leads the week narrowly from Ten and Seven. |
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.