Looking back it's very difficult to see what role Bleakley would have played for the BBC in the Olympics, certainly not as a sports presenter and there were howls of protest when Mishal Hussein (who is a journalist) was brought in.I suspect it was a promise that would never have been kept.
Maybe she does have a wide sporting knowledge and she is married to Frank Lampard. However, the presenting team they used was on the whole good.
No problem. Among men in Wales aged 35-44, the rugby had a peak share of 82.6%, and a peak TVR of 39.3!
Among men over 65 in Wales, who of course watch more TV generally than the younger guys, the peak share was lower at 79.0%, but the peak TVR was a stupendous 56.3! Considerably more older men watching the rugby than doing anything else at 17:40.
Bit of ratings granularity there.
Thanks for the stats but I'm trying to work out what on earth "TVR" stands for.
Surely the problem with moving the soaps back to Sundays is that there's not really any room for them there in the Autumn. With X Factor, Downton and I'm A Celebrity, there wouldn't be enough advertising minutes to go round.
There would be enough just about - 10.5 minutes within X Factor and for a 90-minute edition 17.5 minutes within I'm a Celeb/Downton leaves 12 minutes for the soaps and ad slots between shows. Most weeks The X Factor and Downton combo would eat up 24 minutes between them.
Yes, and as Adam Hills pointed out on The Last Leg (which was far better as a fifty minute show as it actually seemed to have time to actually do stuff in depth, but still suffers from going at all the same subjects as 8 Out Of 10 Cats right before it), that's the first time any British TV channel has ever covered the Winter Paralympics. Be interesting to see how they cover that, the Winter Olympics themselves don't get that much coverage. I assume it'd probably get three or four hours in daytime then a highlights show.
It's worth remembering the Winter Paralympics is a very small event in comparison to the Summer Paralympics, with only 5 sports out of I think the 18 or so there are at the Winter Olympics. Most medal events will be between 6am and 12noon our time, so nothing C4 couldn't drop in the morning for coverage. Curling and hockey goes into the afternoon, while the ceremonies take place from 4-7pm.
I just hope they put highlights at 8pm rather than 11pm, though suspect like the athletics they'll use the 7.30-8pm slot after the news, and then air The Last Leg nightly probably at 10pm.
I cannot put into words how anti-moving the soaps back to Sunday I am. I can see that there's logic to it but at the same time it feels so counterproductive and lazy.
Wherever they are the soaps hog the schedule - in an ideal world ITV would have both Corrie and Emmerdale five nights a week in the 7-8pm hour, leaving 8-10pm and the weekends soap free - except perhaps for the odd Corrie displaced due to football.
However in the real world ratings wise it's been a bit of disaster moving them from Sundays. I believe ITV pretty much used to be guaranteed victory on Sunday nights throughout much of the year, while now I guess it's only the autumn where they can win the night (not even sure if they do with the X Factor/Downton combo)
Can I ask the ratings boffins on here, how is BBC One doing in the afternoon from 3.00pm to 5.15pm without CBBC and their new daytime lineup and BBC Two in the morning without CBBC and CBEEBIES repeating BBC offerings the day before or sign zone
Much better basically. It's really helped BBC One and less so BBC Two. BBC Two Daytime wise has been hit badly but I am pleasantly surprised how they have stayed in touch with C4 even with repeats. I personally prefer the BBC Two repeats schedule to it's old one. I think it suits the channel more. It's hurt it though. And it will mean BBC Two wild dip below 6% and they may lose out to C4 from now on.
I'd like to know how Life on Earth has been doing on BBC Two. I have recorded it all as it is a brilliant series. Living planet starts mid next week. Another great series from DA.
The way the Dancing on Ice 'axe?' story was reviewed on the BBC news this morning it almost came over as ITV blaming the viewers....We paid a fortune for superstar Pamela Anderson and you lot threw her out in week one.
I assume they had to pay her the same however long she stayed but the failing here was the assumption that ITV viewers would regard her as such a big star the fact she could not skate was irrelevant.
If they really understood this show they would know that viewers warm to people like Joe Pasquale - useless triers who make you smile, or plucky non entities who put in the graft despite the bad injuries you can get in this programme.
It is about personality not celebrity. ITV need to figure out the difference.
Though if they had got Pamela Anderson to do that Sky circus show then she might just have been kept in as the challenges got scarier.
Part of the problem with DOI is that it can take a few weeks to get going as the skills need to develop. But it has to hook viewers from the off.
The way the Dancing on Ice 'axe?' story was reviewed on the BBC news this morning it almost came over as ITV blaming the viewers....We paid a fortune for superstar Pamela Anderson and you lot threw her out in week one.
I assume they had to pay her the same however long she stayed but the failing here was the assumption that ITV viewers would regard her as such a big star the fact she could not skate was irrelevant.
If they really understood this show they would know that viewers warm to people like Joe Pasquale - useless triers who make you smile, or plucky non entities who put in the graft despite the bad injuries you can get in this programme.
It is about personality not celebrity. ITV need to figure out the difference.
Actually Pammy was blamed for Big Brother being cancelled in Australia.
However, I think maybe viewers are getting tired of the show now as it's been on for seven years and maybe the pool of celebrities is drying up.
Actually Pammy was blamed for Big Brother being cancelled in Australia.
However, I think maybe viewers are getting tired of the show now as it's been on for seven years and maybe the pool of celebrities is drying up.
It is noticeable that Phil does not discuss viewing figures on This Morning these days....:)
But figures are falling everywhere and 6 million is not a terrible audience. It is still (just) better than Heartbeat, which was axed because too many oldies liked it. At least DOI will have more younger viewers I imagine.
All shows run their course - though - and I do not see any way they are going to significantly increase this unless they radically alter things (Dancing on Sharks?) (draft in Ant and Dec to skate?) So it is going to end sometime soon.
BTW reference earlier to a new ITV 'musicals' show as in Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Recall that the Simon Cowell funded/ Harry Hill scripted (and reportedly wicked - in both senses) X Factor stage musical for a 2014 tour needs to cast a singer to play Cowell himself and it has been mooted that a TV search show might be involved.
When Saturday Night Takeaway returns on the 23rd, how long would it run for?
The last four series were six weeks apiece, but that was years ago and it's being re-formatted so we shall see. They may just do six weeks as a try-out, as there's no guarantee viewers will welcome it back.
Out of a population of 1.5 million, this is about 40 pc of the population.
The Welsh obviously find time to do things other than watch rugby, as there are now over 3m of them. It would still be a highly impressive TVR though; speaking of which....
Thanks for the stats but I'm trying to work out what on earth "TVR" stands for.
TV ratings points. A TVR of 1.0 means 1.0% of the whole population (or of a particular demo) watched a programme. Americans typically use the 18-49 demo, so if a US show gets a 3.0 in that demo it means 3% of all 18-49-year-olds (not just those watching TV) saw it.
It is noticeable that Phil does not discuss viewing figures on This Morning these days....:)
But figures are falling everywhere and 6 million is not a terrible audience. It is still (just) better than Heartbeat, which was axed because too many oldies liked it. At least DOI will have more younger viewers I imagine.
All shows run their course - though - and I do not see any way they are going to significantly increase this unless they radically alter things (Dancing on Sharks?) (draft in Ant and Dec to skate?) So it is going to end sometime soon.
BTW reference earlier to a new ITV 'musicals' show as in Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Recall that the Simon Cowell funded/ Harry Hill scripted (and reportedly wicked - in both senses) X Factor stage musical for a 2014 tour needs to cast a singer to play Cowell himself and it has been mooted that a TV search show might be involved.
All shows have a shelf life, but I think DOI is in decline now. Actiually the Daily Mirror had its predictions for 2013 and one of the most popular ones was TXF being cancelled. However, please don't give an executive ideas for a show involving a Simon Cowell lookalike.
The way the Dancing on Ice 'axe?' story was reviewed on the BBC news this morning it almost came over as ITV blaming the viewers....We paid a fortune for superstar Pamela Anderson and you lot threw her out in week one.
I assume they had to pay her the same however long she stayed but the failing here was the assumption that ITV viewers would regard her as such a big star the fact she could not skate was irrelevant.
If they really understood this show they would know that viewers warm to people like Joe Pasquale - useless triers who make you smile, or plucky non entities who put in the graft despite the bad injuries you can get in this programme.
It is about personality not celebrity. ITV need to figure out the difference.
Though if they had got Pamela Anderson to do that Sky circus show then she might just have been kept in as the challenges got scarier.
Part of the problem with DOI is that it can take a few weeks to get going as the skills need to develop. But it has to hook viewers from the off.
Look I usually refrain from this constant axe tlak about entertainment programs. But. DOI is from what I can see properly dying now. Now that could be the program makers fault but I think it's because people have had enough now. It's old hat and people want something different.
All ITV need to do as I am sure they already are is they need to look for a replacement. Talk of soaps on a Sunday is dangerous. They really should not be anywhere near a Sunday. ITV is already milking them and I think putting them on a Sunday is a big ask.
What ITV should not do is axe a program that can still pull okay figures before they have a replacement. C4 and Big Brother springs to mind. Splash! is a start for ITV but it's not the nest big thing in my opinion. ITV need to look at what worked with splash and go down the less serious route. The BBC are worse they have a few ageing formats they roll out across the year and pray to the gods they don't die on them.
Entertainment seems to be causing the two big guns some big problems. If I was going to put my money on who will find the next big thing it would be ITV.
The way the Dancing on Ice 'axe?' story was reviewed on the BBC news this morning it almost came over as ITV blaming the viewers....We paid a fortune for superstar Pamela Anderson and you lot threw her out in week one.
I assume they had to pay her the same however long she stayed but the failing here was the assumption that ITV viewers would regard her as such a big star the fact she could not skate was irrelevant.
If they really understood this show they would know that viewers warm to people like Joe Pasquale - useless triers who make you smile, or plucky non entities who put in the graft despite the bad injuries you can get in this programme.
It is about personality not celebrity. ITV need to figure out the difference.
Though if they had got Pamela Anderson to do that Sky circus show then she might just have been kept in as the challenges got scarier.
Part of the problem with DOI is that it can take a few weeks to get going as the skills need to develop. But it has to hook viewers from the off.
Were the ITV people who thought that Pamela Anderson would boost the ratings for DOI the same individuals who thought that Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley would be ratings gold for their morning TV just because the tabloids were running are they/aren't they having a relationship stories that only the tabloids were interested in?
Honestly, some of these TV bosses are nearly as out of touch with the general public as our politicians are. Even if Pamela Anderson was still in the programme, the ratings would be exactly where they are now.
There is nothing they can do to reverse DOI's ratings decline. It's just old age setting in.
I was wondering why no terrestrial network has thought about the rights to Murdoch Mysteries.
This long running Canadian series about a Holmes like policeman in Victorian Toronto is seen here only on Alibi but seems a perfect fit as a cheap option for BBC 1 afternoons.
It has a light touch for murder mysteries that will suit the Murder She Wrote fans (and Father Brown last month proved that works), has lots of British actors and characters in it and also a quirky touch.
I am really surprised nobody has thought to try this. Do Alibi have an exclusivity deal to stop it?
Last week SVU had 992k (exc +1) and a (4.8%) share.
Last week Criminal Intent had 715k (exc +1) and a (4.7%) share.
This week SVU had 980k (exc +1) and a (5.1%) share.
This week Criminal Intent had 740k (exc +1) and a (5.6%) share.
Those shares for last night's new episodes of L&O are very good. I'm glad to see the back of the repeat next week and a slightly earlier start for SVU, hopefully we'll see further growth.
Did you catch the trails for Jack Taylor last night? Looks like a good addition to the channel's drama lineup. No idea how this one will rate though.
The early start is definitely harming Dancing on Ice; last year the show obtained 7.24m viewers for the week four performance show but pulled in a share of 26.1%. Last week it 'only' had 6.73m viewers but the share was higher - 27.4% - so maybe ITV will try and change the scheduling before axing the show.
Look I usually refrain from this constant axe tlak about entertainment programs. But. DOI is from what I can see properly dying now. Now that could be the program makers fault but I think it's because people have had enough now. It's old hat and people want something different.
All ITV need to do as I am sure they already are is they need to look for a replacement. Talk of soaps on a Sunday is dangerous. They really should not be anywhere near a Sunday. ITV is already milking them and I think putting them on a Sunday is a big ask.
What ITV should not do is axe a program that can still pull okay figures before they have a replacement. C4 and Big Brother springs to mind. Splash! is a start for ITV but it's not the nest big thing in my opinion. ITV need to look at what worked with splash and go down the less serious route. The BBC are worse they have a few ageing formats they roll out across the year and pray to the gods they don't die on them.
Entertainment seems to be causing the two big guns some big problems. If I was going to put my money on who will find the next big thing it would be ITV.
Ken
I think once the tabloids turn on a show they used to like, or ignore it, this is the end. Remember in 2005 The Sun used to devote 10 pages to BB every day, by 2009 the only attention it was getting was negative. DOI is fading now, OK it's not in the danger zone yet, but ratings are down by 3 million on its peak. Maybe viewers are getting tired of zelebs, although the continued success of IAC bucks a trend, continuing it is a very passe form of reality and it's the only stripped ITV reality show left.
I was wondering why no terrestrial network has thought about the rights to Murdoch Mysteries.
This long running Canadian series about a Holmes like policeman in Victorian Toronto is seen here only on Alibi but seems a perfect fit as a cheap option for BBC 1 afternoons.
Perhaps as a consequence of DQF, BBC One seem to have cleared imports out of their schedule pretty much entirely, leaving aside feature films (usually consigned to late night), and US versions of BBC shows (such as WDYTYA, also shown fairly late). The most recent one I can remember was Diagnosis Murder, which last aired in November 2011.
It's a far cry from my youth when there was imports aplenty on BBC One, particularly at teatime on Saturdays, including Due South (also from Canada), The Simpsons (for a while) and The New Adventures of Superman. (Hmm, perhaps one of them should be brought back to help out in Q1! ) There was also Neighbours of course. I can remember the dying days of Dallas; imports in primetime seemed to go out of fashion on both major channels in the mid-to-late 1990s.
I see no reason why ITV couldn't use Murdoch Mysteries to freshen up their weekend daytimes a little, perhaps paired up with Murder, She Wrote. They don't seem to want to spend any money on anything new there, though, even a new import.
I think once the tabloids turn on a show they used to like, or ignore it, this is the end. Remember in 2005 The Sun used to devote 10 pages to BB every day, by 2009 the only attention it was getting was negative. DOI is fading now, OK it's not in the danger zone yet, but ratings are down by 3 million on its peak. Maybe viewers are getting tired of zelebs, although the continued success of IAC bucks a trend, continuing it is a very passe form of reality and it's the only stripped ITV reality show left.
I think it's more down to the quality of the show. If it's entertaining you watch it if it's dull and boring you loose interest. DOI look's really stuffy to me and not very entertaining. It's gone the way I thought SDC would go and was going until a turn around happened.
I think the era of these big brash LE shows are coming to an end. By that I meant the ones that feed off Tabloid gossip like X Factor. BGT bucks the trend because they have Ant and Dec a good panel and a very entertaining show. People want to be entertained. They want a good laugh.
That's why I think if someone talented enough like ant and Dec did a Morecambe and wise old style variety show. with sketches, music, dancing and guests it could really be the next big thing. In the relative gloomy times we live in we want to have a good laugh and watch something lighter. Light Entertainment.
I think once the tabloids turn on a show they used to like, or ignore it, this is the end. Remember in 2005 The Sun used to devote 10 pages to BB every day, by 2009 the only attention it was getting was negative. DOI is fading now, OK it's not in the danger zone yet, but ratings are down by 3 million on its peak. Maybe viewers are getting tired of zelebs, although the continued success of IAC bucks a trend, continuing it is a very passe form of reality and it's the only stripped ITV reality show left.
and Strictly of course.
The tabloids don't want to turn on these shows too much, if all reality tv came to an end, what would they fill their column inches with?
Those shares for last night's new episodes of L&O are very good. I'm glad to see the back of the repeat next week and a slightly earlier start for SVU, hopefully we'll see further growth.
Did you catch the trails for Jack Taylor last night? Looks like a good addition to the channel's drama lineup. No idea how this one will rate though.
Yeah Criminal Intent's share was good especially (rising from 4.7% for premiere to 5.6% last night). Yeah hopefully they will both grow even further over the coming weeks.
Yeah Criminal Intent's share was good especially (rising from 4.7% for premiere to 5.6% last night). Yeah hopefully they will both grow even further over the coming weeks.
Comments
Maybe she does have a wide sporting knowledge and she is married to Frank Lampard. However, the presenting team they used was on the whole good.
There would be enough just about - 10.5 minutes within X Factor and for a 90-minute edition 17.5 minutes within I'm a Celeb/Downton leaves 12 minutes for the soaps and ad slots between shows. Most weeks The X Factor and Downton combo would eat up 24 minutes between them.
It's worth remembering the Winter Paralympics is a very small event in comparison to the Summer Paralympics, with only 5 sports out of I think the 18 or so there are at the Winter Olympics. Most medal events will be between 6am and 12noon our time, so nothing C4 couldn't drop in the morning for coverage. Curling and hockey goes into the afternoon, while the ceremonies take place from 4-7pm.
I just hope they put highlights at 8pm rather than 11pm, though suspect like the athletics they'll use the 7.30-8pm slot after the news, and then air The Last Leg nightly probably at 10pm.
Wherever they are the soaps hog the schedule - in an ideal world ITV would have both Corrie and Emmerdale five nights a week in the 7-8pm hour, leaving 8-10pm and the weekends soap free - except perhaps for the odd Corrie displaced due to football.
However in the real world ratings wise it's been a bit of disaster moving them from Sundays. I believe ITV pretty much used to be guaranteed victory on Sunday nights throughout much of the year, while now I guess it's only the autumn where they can win the night (not even sure if they do with the X Factor/Downton combo)
Much better basically. It's really helped BBC One and less so BBC Two. BBC Two Daytime wise has been hit badly but I am pleasantly surprised how they have stayed in touch with C4 even with repeats. I personally prefer the BBC Two repeats schedule to it's old one. I think it suits the channel more. It's hurt it though. And it will mean BBC Two wild dip below 6% and they may lose out to C4 from now on.
I'd like to know how Life on Earth has been doing on BBC Two. I have recorded it all as it is a brilliant series. Living planet starts mid next week. Another great series from DA.
Ken
It's still not a bad budget to be fair. I wouldn't get to worked up about it. BBC One remember has taken a small cut.
I must say I have not noticed it yet. There still seems to be plenty in the 10.35 slot.
Ken
I assume they had to pay her the same however long she stayed but the failing here was the assumption that ITV viewers would regard her as such a big star the fact she could not skate was irrelevant.
If they really understood this show they would know that viewers warm to people like Joe Pasquale - useless triers who make you smile, or plucky non entities who put in the graft despite the bad injuries you can get in this programme.
It is about personality not celebrity. ITV need to figure out the difference.
Though if they had got Pamela Anderson to do that Sky circus show then she might just have been kept in as the challenges got scarier.
Part of the problem with DOI is that it can take a few weeks to get going as the skills need to develop. But it has to hook viewers from the off.
Actually Pammy was blamed for Big Brother being cancelled in Australia.
However, I think maybe viewers are getting tired of the show now as it's been on for seven years and maybe the pool of celebrities is drying up.
Percentage of that total universe size.
So in Neil's bit above, 39.3% of men in Wales aged between 35 and 44 watched the Rugby yesterday.
It is noticeable that Phil does not discuss viewing figures on This Morning these days....:)
But figures are falling everywhere and 6 million is not a terrible audience. It is still (just) better than Heartbeat, which was axed because too many oldies liked it. At least DOI will have more younger viewers I imagine.
All shows run their course - though - and I do not see any way they are going to significantly increase this unless they radically alter things (Dancing on Sharks?) (draft in Ant and Dec to skate?) So it is going to end sometime soon.
BTW reference earlier to a new ITV 'musicals' show as in Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Recall that the Simon Cowell funded/ Harry Hill scripted (and reportedly wicked - in both senses) X Factor stage musical for a 2014 tour needs to cast a singer to play Cowell himself and it has been mooted that a TV search show might be involved.
The last four series were six weeks apiece, but that was years ago and it's being re-formatted so we shall see. They may just do six weeks as a try-out, as there's no guarantee viewers will welcome it back.
The Welsh obviously find time to do things other than watch rugby, as there are now over 3m of them. It would still be a highly impressive TVR though; speaking of which....
TV ratings points. A TVR of 1.0 means 1.0% of the whole population (or of a particular demo) watched a programme. Americans typically use the 18-49 demo, so if a US show gets a 3.0 in that demo it means 3% of all 18-49-year-olds (not just those watching TV) saw it.
If I was married to Frank Lampard I wouldn't be spending my time with him chatting about football...
All shows have a shelf life, but I think DOI is in decline now. Actiually the Daily Mirror had its predictions for 2013 and one of the most popular ones was TXF being cancelled. However, please don't give an executive ideas for a show involving a Simon Cowell lookalike.
Look I usually refrain from this constant axe tlak about entertainment programs. But. DOI is from what I can see properly dying now. Now that could be the program makers fault but I think it's because people have had enough now. It's old hat and people want something different.
All ITV need to do as I am sure they already are is they need to look for a replacement. Talk of soaps on a Sunday is dangerous. They really should not be anywhere near a Sunday. ITV is already milking them and I think putting them on a Sunday is a big ask.
What ITV should not do is axe a program that can still pull okay figures before they have a replacement. C4 and Big Brother springs to mind. Splash! is a start for ITV but it's not the nest big thing in my opinion. ITV need to look at what worked with splash and go down the less serious route. The BBC are worse they have a few ageing formats they roll out across the year and pray to the gods they don't die on them.
Entertainment seems to be causing the two big guns some big problems. If I was going to put my money on who will find the next big thing it would be ITV.
Ken
Were the ITV people who thought that Pamela Anderson would boost the ratings for DOI the same individuals who thought that Adrian Chiles and Christine Bleakley would be ratings gold for their morning TV just because the tabloids were running are they/aren't they having a relationship stories that only the tabloids were interested in?
Honestly, some of these TV bosses are nearly as out of touch with the general public as our politicians are. Even if Pamela Anderson was still in the programme, the ratings would be exactly where they are now.
There is nothing they can do to reverse DOI's ratings decline. It's just old age setting in.
This long running Canadian series about a Holmes like policeman in Victorian Toronto is seen here only on Alibi but seems a perfect fit as a cheap option for BBC 1 afternoons.
It has a light touch for murder mysteries that will suit the Murder She Wrote fans (and Father Brown last month proved that works), has lots of British actors and characters in it and also a quirky touch.
I am really surprised nobody has thought to try this. Do Alibi have an exclusivity deal to stop it?
Did you catch the trails for Jack Taylor last night? Looks like a good addition to the channel's drama lineup. No idea how this one will rate though.
I think once the tabloids turn on a show they used to like, or ignore it, this is the end. Remember in 2005 The Sun used to devote 10 pages to BB every day, by 2009 the only attention it was getting was negative. DOI is fading now, OK it's not in the danger zone yet, but ratings are down by 3 million on its peak. Maybe viewers are getting tired of zelebs, although the continued success of IAC bucks a trend, continuing it is a very passe form of reality and it's the only stripped ITV reality show left.
Perhaps as a consequence of DQF, BBC One seem to have cleared imports out of their schedule pretty much entirely, leaving aside feature films (usually consigned to late night), and US versions of BBC shows (such as WDYTYA, also shown fairly late). The most recent one I can remember was Diagnosis Murder, which last aired in November 2011.
It's a far cry from my youth when there was imports aplenty on BBC One, particularly at teatime on Saturdays, including Due South (also from Canada), The Simpsons (for a while) and The New Adventures of Superman. (Hmm, perhaps one of them should be brought back to help out in Q1! ) There was also Neighbours of course. I can remember the dying days of Dallas; imports in primetime seemed to go out of fashion on both major channels in the mid-to-late 1990s.
I see no reason why ITV couldn't use Murdoch Mysteries to freshen up their weekend daytimes a little, perhaps paired up with Murder, She Wrote. They don't seem to want to spend any money on anything new there, though, even a new import.
I think it's more down to the quality of the show. If it's entertaining you watch it if it's dull and boring you loose interest. DOI look's really stuffy to me and not very entertaining. It's gone the way I thought SDC would go and was going until a turn around happened.
I think the era of these big brash LE shows are coming to an end. By that I meant the ones that feed off Tabloid gossip like X Factor. BGT bucks the trend because they have Ant and Dec a good panel and a very entertaining show. People want to be entertained. They want a good laugh.
That's why I think if someone talented enough like ant and Dec did a Morecambe and wise old style variety show. with sketches, music, dancing and guests it could really be the next big thing. In the relative gloomy times we live in we want to have a good laugh and watch something lighter. Light Entertainment.
Ken
The tabloids don't want to turn on these shows too much, if all reality tv came to an end, what would they fill their column inches with?
Hopefully they wouldn't fill them at all. News papers are dying. I don't like them and I certainly wont miss them when there gone.
I want to formulate my own opinion not read something blatantly bias.
Waste of paper.
Ken
Yeah Criminal Intent's share was good especially (rising from 4.7% for premiere to 5.6% last night). Yeah hopefully they will both grow even further over the coming weeks.
No I didn't catch them. What's that about then?
http://forums.digitalspy.co.uk/showpost.php?p=63995872&postcount=1420
It's going on Thursday nights.