Aaron
Thursday 2nd February 2012 1:26am [Edited]
Royal Berkshire
69,947 posts
Quote: dennispennis123 @ February 2 2012, 1:06 AM GMT
Under 3m for a 9pm Monday slot in January is very poor. Mondays are usually one of the most watched nights of the week and Mrs Brown is getting around 5m Under 3m for a 9pm Monday slot in January is very poor. Mondays are usually one of the most watched nights of the week and Mrs Brown is getting around 5m afterwards which should put TRB's performance into context.
It's also a bit misleading by comparing TRB's ratings in January to IWTF and My Family both which aired in the summer when viewing is much lower.
Comparing any show to the inexplicable hit of Mrs. Brown's Boys is equally 'misleading', I'd argue! There's no denying that The Royal Bodyguard pales in comparison, but a truly poor rating for the show would be far closer to 1m, given that circa 5m MBB comparison. No one's claiming that TRB has done well, but it's not done nearly as badly as some portray.
It may be misleading to compare summer with winter (I don't believe there's that much difference in overall viewership as is sometimes claimed, as an aside, but that's a different discussion), but My Family had the traditional comedy scheduling working in its favour, and In With The Flynns a more suitable timeslot for its style. So, y'know, swings and roundabouts on each of the three.
Quote: dennispennis123 @ February 2 2012, 1:06 AM GMT
No offence Aaron but there is no way you can call the ratings healthy. It's gone from 8.3m to around 3m in a few episodes.
You call my stats misleading, then go with that?! Not sure where the 8.3m figure comes from, but I assume it's the first episode? On Boxing Day. They could have broadcast a photograph of a plate of half rotten fish and chips for 30 minutes in that slot and it would have got a broadly similar audience figure. Let's be fair and look at episode 3 onwards, where it kept a steady audience of just under 3 million. Continue to keep in mind the amount of negative coverage the series got, and that's a healthy number.
Anyway, the above is irrelevant: no one's claiming the show was any kind of sleeper, underground smash hit, nor that it met the BBC's hopes; but the bottom line is that the circa 3 million figure and 11% share is within the realm of comparable recommissions, and I'm sure higher than some.