Thursday, October 30, 2008

30 Rock is back!

I'm so excited that 30 Rock is finally back on, starting tonight!

There's some concern in the blogosphere that this show may follow in Arrested Development's footsteps - lots of Emmys, very few viewers - and get axed by NBC.

I can't bear to have this happen - 30 Rock is one of the best shows on TV. I'm hoping that Tina Fey's recent performances on SNL as Sarah Palin will help ramp up viewers. Tell all your friends to tune in.

Nielsen: How would you measure up? - UPDATE

It's been pointed out to me that I forgot to include The Daily Show and The Colbert Report in my last post. I actually watch those two every night, so I forgot to put them on my list because I never DVR them. Another show I forgot is South Park, which would fall into the Live Viewing category.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Nielsen: How would you measure up?

Just to expand a bit on my latest post, today I read this article on Media Post's TV Watch: "First week: Viewers don't sink their teeth in." In the article, Wayne Friedman talks about the decreased ratings for premieres this year compared to last year. He includes some insight about DVRs. As I've said before, Nielsen finally got smart and started factoring in DVR viewings to the ratings.

Nielsen uses three measures - live viewing, DVR playback within three days (L3), and DVR playback within seven days (L7). So that got me thinking - what would Nielsen discover about me, were I one of the chosen few to be included in their ratings? And what about you? What are your live shows, your L3 shows, and your L7 shows? And are you like me, with shows you're all backed up on? Those wouldn't make it in at all.

So here are mine, generally...

Live viewing:
- The Office
- 30 Rock
- How I Met Your Mother
- Heroes
- Bones
- It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia

L3:
- Grey's Anatomy

L7:
- House
- Pushing Daisies
- One Tree Hill

And unless I forgot something, I guess everything else falls off due to viewing after more than a week. At least so far. (But I need to get back into some of my old shows and also a couple new shows... that might change some things.) So what about you?

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Strike fallout?

I've been saying from the start that the writers' strike would impact TV ratings this year. So far, my predictions are coming true.

According to Advertising Age today, in its article "Save the Serial Dramas, Save TV Ratings?", TV viewers turned to reality tv during the strike last year, and are reluctant to jump back in to serial dramas.

Shows like NBC's Chuck and Life have decreased viewership, while sitcoms and shows like CSI: Miami (blech) don't, and the theory is that it's due to the serials being difficult to come in to if you've missed a week, if you failed to see the premiere last season, or if you blatantly don't remember what happened before the strike because it was so long ago.

However, there are shows bucking the trend, including CW's Gossip Girl and One Tree Hill, both serials with increased viewership. But I have theories for that as well.

First of all, the CW's marketing of Gossip Girl was GENIUS. The OMFG ad was brilliant in itself to capture the teeny bopper crowd. But the campaign that used negative quotes from the Parents' Television Council and others is really the ace in the hole here. It even made my sister, a Gossip Girl hater, want to watch the show. The ads are shown here as well.



For One Tree Hill, I think the CW did a great job turning its storylines around from last season and making the show interesting again. It also helps that its lead-in program is Gossip Girl. What more could you want?

Regardless, I don't blame TV viewers for not wanting to get back into some of their old shows. I myself am having a difficult time getting involved in as many hour-long dramas as I used to watch, and for me it's absolutely about the writers' strike. As I've said before, I've gotten used to doing other things while I watch TV, or not tuning in at all, since all that was on in the second half of last season was reality tv. I'm trying hard to get back into the groove.

What say you Televisionistas -- are you having trouble like I am and like the Nielsen ratings show? Or are Nielsen ratings, this Wall St. Journal article, and my opinion just bogus? (Well, we know Nielsen ratings are.) Sound off!