SBS
beats Seven last night in sportathon:
A big, big weekend in sport. It started with the AFL, NRL and Ashes
cricket on Friday night and finished Monday morning with Roger Federer
beating Andre Agassi at the US Open. Meanwhile, minor sports like golf
popped up on Pay TV, and Rugby Union on the ABC in NSW Saturday
afternoon.
So who
won this head to head? Well in terms of audience numbers it was the AFL on
Friday and Saturday nights in southern states: a massive 53% of the Adelaide audience was
tuned to Ten on Saturday night for the local derby
between Port and the Crows. The
Crows-Port audience averaged more than 1.241 million on Saturday night, the
biggest audience for any of the sports.
The
fifth Ashes test saw SBS peak last Thursday night and run third nationally: the
telecast lost ground Friday night and Saturday night as competition from the
AFL and the League intensified, but last night, the nation tuned back in with SBS
running third again with the national share up 17.6% (compared to 12.7% on
Saturday night, 18.0% on Friday night and a massive 20.2% last Thursday
night).
Peking to Paris pushed back:
On Friday
I wondered: “When will the ABC’s ambitious series on the
recreation of the Peking to Paris car
race appear?”
Well, according to the latest edition
of the email newsletter,Inside The ABC that was sent
to interested viewers on Friday morning (September 9), the “extraordinary journey” will premiere next month on ABC TV. But ABC
TV now says it won’t be seen till next year. This is
what Lesna Thomas, the Head of ABC TV Publicity told Crikey.
“The
series has no ‘troubles’ as you claim. The guys got back in the country in late
July and editing for four hours of television does take time, so it was decided
that the project deserved more post-production time than initially planned
for. The
very idea that Sandra left ABC TV for Nine over this
project is insulting to both networks and the program, and boarders on the
ridiculous.”
So the
program is late. It won’t be going to air in 2005, as originally planned. It’s
on air date, according to Ms Thomas, is 2006.
Last night’s TV
ratings:
The Winners |
Nine, Ten and the cricket on SBS. 60 Minutes with 1.794 million (thanks to a promoted story on Super Dope, and we don’t mean any of the presenters, do we?). Nine News was second with 1.752 million and Backyard Blitz was third with 1.728 million. The cricket on SBS averaged 617,000 across the night from 7.15 pm and after 8.30 the network ran second at times, especially after about 10 pm. Australian Idol lifted for Ten for the first time in weeks as the live finals started. The 1.308 million will give the network some hope that the third series will not be a washout. The ABC did well and held up, especially Cheap Tricks at 8.30 pm: head to head with the final hour of Idol, Seven’s telemovie and Nine’s movie Strange Bedfellows (1.072 million), Cheap Tricks was watched by 1.135 million people |
The Losers |
Seven from after the news. The special Dancing with the |
News & CA | Nine News with a strong finish thanks to good figures in Sydney where the NRL final provided a good lead-in. 60 Minutes was again strong as the most watched program (news was second). Seven news also had good numbers (1.267 million) as did ABC News on 1.174 million. The Sunday morning chat shows were influenced by the US Tennis broadcast running over into Business Sunday’s time. It finished around 8.30 am. Therefore Business Sunday’s numbers of 523,000 were unrealistic. Sunday had a more normal 361,00, Weekend Sunrise on 293,000, The Insiders, 168,000, Inside Business (126,000 which was sharply higher) and Ten’s Meet the Press with 79,000. |
The Stats |
Nine won last week with a strong finish on Saturday night after Seven snuck a win on Friday night. Nine won the week 27.1% to 25.0% for Seven. Ten was third, the ABC was fourth and SBS was last. Last night it was again Nine(29.2%) with a solid win, Ten was second (20.8%), SBS third(17.6%) with the Ashes telecast, Seven was a weak fourth(16.8%), just in front of the ABC on 15.5%. |
Glenn Dyer’s comments |
For a peak Sunday night only 8 programs with a million viewers or more. The consistent cricket audience on SBS drained viewers away from just after 7 pm. And tonight it doesn’t get any easier for the Networks with the Ashes telecast on SBS a major disruption. Nine’s The Alice and Seven’s Grey’s Anatomy, along with Numb3rs on Ten will all battle, as will Millionaire on Nine and Law and Order on Ten at 9.30 pm. A week ago the ABC had a big Monday night without the cricket; they’ll be hurt tonight but Australian Story and Andrew Denton’s Enough Rope will do well. |
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