After the first four weeks of the 2005 season of Australian idol, it’s clear that the Ten Network has a problem. Australians are tuning in, but not in the numbers they did last year.

Call it fatigue, a surfeit of Big Brother and don’t mention the X-Factor failure, but Idol is no longer as cool as it once was with the 16 to 39 target age group (and all other age groups for that matter).

Perhaps some of the sniping from Seven on Today Tonight and A Current Affair on Nine (and in magazines and papers) is having an impact. And unlike BB,
where Ten simply reached for a raunchy solution to boost ailing 2005 ratings,
it’s hard to see how the network can boost interest except to promote
it harder and to play up nasty judge, Sydney radio announcer, Kyle
Sandilands. He’s already had a bagging from Seven’s Today Tonight and is retaliating with legal action.

Just like when it started in 2003, Australian Idol is down
this
year in the first four weeks on air: 2004 saw a very sharp rise in the
audience numbers from the opening week. Oztam figures show that the
average audience last week (week four) was 350,000 lower than the
average audience in week one: 1.212 million versus 1.560 million. 2003
saw a decline from 1.638 million down to 1.161 million in that period;
2004
however saw the audience rise from 1.702 million to 1.852 million.
Sunday night’s audience of 1.156 million indicates another drop
this week and the 1.055 million for Monday night’s half hour verdict
wasn’t encouraging either.

Ten will be hoping that viewers hang in there and then return in
November as the competition heads towards its climax: like it did in
2003. But it won’t be the huge hit it was in 2004.