Showing posts with label RATINGS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RATINGS. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' RATINGS SLIGHTLY DROP FROM PREMIERE NIGHT


The numbers are in and The Voice comes out on top for the Tuesday night premiere tying for 1st place with Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. while still pulling in more viewers!

Check out the entire Broadcast primetime ratings below:

On NBC, The Voice earned a 4.6, down from yesterday's colossal 5.1 adults 18-49 rating, but up from last fall's Tuesday debut (which earned a 4.0 adults 18-49 rating).

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' COMES IN AT #1 IN RATINGS ON PREMIERE DAY


Since it was announced that Christina Aguilera and Cee Lo Green were returning to their positions as coaches on The Voice people were quick to predict that ratings would fall drastically after Shakira and Usher left.

The Voice had its biggest premiere since the Super Bowl. The bitter housewives just got bitterer!

The Voice season 5 premiere earned a 4.9 adults 18-49 rating, up from last fall's 4.2 and last spring's 4.8 adults 18-49 rating, and the highest Voice premiere premiere since the post-Super Bowl start of the second season on Feb. 5, 2012.
Stay seething haters! The power of Legendtina!

UPDATE: FINAL RATINGS: 'THE VOICE'
'The Voice' has been adjusted up two tenths. This boosts the 18-49 Rating to a 5.1 Demo, and amassing 15 Million Viewers Live.

Friday, April 5, 2013

[NEWS] THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER UNVEILS 2013'S REALITY TV HEAT LIST

The $10 Million+ Music Mentor Club

This story first appeared in the April 12 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. The specialized skill of judging talent is not one every megastar can manage, but for those who succeed, the pay is handsome. Just ask Simon Cowell, who pockets north of $35 million a year as judge and co-creator of The X Factor, or radio jock Howard Stern, who brings in a reported $15 million salary for America's Got Talent. It's a good gig for guys who, unlike the other club members, don't have music talent to fall back on.

Mariah Carey, American Idol The diva co-wrote/co-produced dozens of songs from a catalog of 60-plus singles. Album sales: 61.5 million Most recent hit song: Her 2011 collaboration with Justin Bieber on “All I Want for Christmas Is You (SuperFestive!)” Grammys: 5 Ratings impact: Since Carey joined Idol in season 12, the Fox show has seen an 18 percent drop in ratings.

Christina Aguilera, The Voice The former Mickey Mouser-turned-vocal powerhouse sat pretty for three seasons. Album sales: 50 million Most recent hit song: Pitbull’s “Feel This Moment,” featuring her, hit No. 8 in March on Billboard’s Hot 100. Grammys: 5 Ratings impact: Aguilera helped viewership jump in 2010, from 12.3 million in season one to 15.6 million in season two.

Adam Levine, The Voice He’s the full-time frontman for rock-pop band Maroon 5 and an actor/heartthrob. Album sales: 9.5 million Most recent hit song: The platinum-selling “Daylight,” released in November, is No. 12 on Billboard’s Hot 100. Grammys: 3 Ratings impact: One of two original coaches, he’s kept a loyal legion of viewers (even while touring!) and hosted SNL.

Source: THR

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

[NEWS] 14 MILLION PEOPLE TUNED IN TO WATCH 'THE VOICE' SEASON 3 FINALE


The Voice‘s Season 3 finale played to 14 million total viewers while scoring a 4.9 demo rating, hitting season highs and up 18 and 11 percent from the NBC competition’s second coronation ceremony.
Source: TV Line

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' RATINGS RISE FROM LAST WEEK

Monday's ratings played out as they have for much of the fall, with ABC scoring a win in viewers and NBC leading the 18-49 demographic thanks to "The Voice" and "Revolution," both of which improved on their numbers from a week ago.

Monday hour by hour:
• 8 p.m. - NBC: "The Voice" (12.35 million, 7.4/11) - 18-49 leader: "The Voice" (4.4)  
• 9 p.m. - NBC: "The Voice" (13.2 million, 7.6/11) - 18-49 leader: "The Voice" (5.1)

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS MONDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS, UP 2% FROM LAST WEEK


NBC was number one with adults 18-49, while ABC won with total viewers.

On NBC,the final night of blind auditions on The Voice scored a 4.5 adults 18-49 rating, up 2% from last week's 4.4.

Source: TVByTheNumbers

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS TUESDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS, ADJUSTED UP, WINS DEMO


The Voice was adjusted up two tenths and Dancing with the Stars, Ben & Kate, and New Girl (both at 8 & 9) were adjusted up a single tenth among adults 18-49 versus the preliminary Tuesday broadcast ratings.
 

Source: TVByTheNumbers

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS MONDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS, ADJUSTED UP


Our readers predicted that The Voice would be the highest-rated show of the night with adults 18-49, while I flipped a coin and went with 2 Broke Girls. Our readers > coin toss! The Voice drew a 4.2 adults 18-49 rating between 8-10p vs. the 3.7 adults 18-49 rating for 2 Broke Girls.


Source: TVByTheNumbers

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS TUESDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS, CONTINUES TO CLIMB 13%

The really good news for NBC: The Voice is continuing its upward trend, rising 13 percent this week compared to last Tuesday’s performance. The one-hour Voice had 13.3 million viewers and a 4.5 rating among adults 18-49. After last week’s softer-than-hoped-for return of the music competition series, NBC has to be pretty thrilled that both Monday and Tuesday editions posted gains, gathering strength before next week’s deluge of premieres.

Source: EW

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

[NEWS] CARSON DALY SPEAKS OUT ABOUT 'THE VOICE' VS. 'X FACTOR' & SHUTS DOWN SIMON

If you’ve been keeping tabs on Simon Cowell lately, then you’re aware he’s none too pleased with The Voice.

The singing competition, hosted by 97.1 AMP/Los Angeles’ very own Carson Daly, decided to extend its premiere week to 3 days, which means it overlapped with last night’s premiere of the revamped X Factor.

Cowell has gone on an all-out media blitz to voice his frustration, telling TMZ, “This is a cynical, cold-hearted, unprofessional way of doing business…Britney’s not going to appreciate the fact that Christina, who has been a bit of a rival, isn’t allowing Britney to have a night of her own.”

For the most part, The Voice has chosen to stay out of the fray, but Carson felt the need to address the elephant in the room on his radio show Thursday morning.

“I wanted to watch X Factor last night. I think you can’t deny that there was some buzz on this show…I was very curious to see how my old friend Britney Spears was….what she was going to be like and when she speaks in full sentences, was it going to seem sort of medicated or was she going to spring a new personality that I haven’t seen?”

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS MONDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS, CLIMBS 10% & SCORES BEST NUMBERS


On NBC, The Voice scored a 4.6 adults 18-49 rating, up 10% from a 4.2 for last week's premiere on Monday and scoring its best numbers since Monday, March 19, 2011.
Source: TVByTheNumbers

Thursday, September 13, 2012

[NEWS] NBC'S 'THE VOICE' (THE BEST. HANDS. DOWN.) TOPS 'THE X FACTOR'


Metered Market Wednesday Ratings
Fox "Wins," but The Voice on NBC Beats The X Factor
Wednesday 9/12/12
Metered Market Results

Household
Rating/Share
Fox 6.7/11
NBC 6.0/.10
CBS 4.1/ 7
ABC 2.5/ 4
CW 0.6/ 1
Ratings Breakdown:

Fox led this second Wednesday in September care of the two-hour season-premiere of The X Factor, which scored a very respectable 6.7 rating/11 share in the overnights from 8-10 p.m. (peaking at a 7.5/12 at 9:30 p.m.). But compared to its year-ago series-opener (8.7/14 on Wednesday 9/21/11), this was down by 23 percent.
And a one-hour edition of competing The Voice on NBC (7.3/13 from 8-9 p.m.) bested the first hour of The X Factor (6.1/10) by 20 percent.
Given all the hoopla of Britney Spears and Demi Lovato joining the judges table, the initial sampling could of…and should of…been higher. Keep in mind, that the 8.7 in the overnights last year translated into 12.49 million viewers and a 4.4/12 among adults 18-49 (based on the Live Plus Same Day results).

At 9 p.m., The X Factor moved into the top spot, with a four percent advantage over America’s Got Talent on NBC (7.4/12 vs. 7.1/12, which was a season-high on the night for AGT). America’s Got Talent concludes with a two-hour installment tonight. As a benchmark, here are the half-hour results for The X Factor:
The X Factor (Fox)
8:00 p.m.: 5.8/10 (#2)
8:30 p.m.: 6.4/10 (#2)
9:00 p.m.: 7.2/11 (#2)
9:30 p.m.: 7.5/12 (#1)
Sorry, Simon Cowell…The Voice is a stronger option in the overnights. Stay tuned for the demos.

Source: TVMediaInsights

UPDATE: 'THE VOICE' BEATS 'THE X FACTOR' VIA: TVBYTHENUMBERS.COM:

FOX was the number 1 network with adults 18-49, but NBC won with total viewers.

Update: in time zone adjusted fast nationals (basically, finals) The X Factor was adjusted up to a 3.4 adults 18-49 rating between 8-10p.

On FOX, the premiere of The X Factor earned a 3.3 adults 18-49 rating, down considerably from last years premiere 4.4 18-49 rating. Your predictions were way too optimistic For those interested, during the common hour The X Factor and The Voice shared, The X Factor notched a 2.7, effectively giving The Voice the win for the 8PM hour.

On NBC, The Voice scored a 3.3 adults 18-49 rating, down seven tenths from yesterday's 4.0 18-49 rating.

Source: TVByTheNumbers

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' TOPS MONDAY NIGHT'S RATINGS


The Voice made its first ever appearance on the fall schedule last night with the premiere of the third season. NBC's flagship competition was down from previous premieres and its most recent Monday average, but up from the last month's worth of Monday broadcasts in the spring. The two-hour episode earned a 4.1 rating among adults 18-49, growing every half hour. That's a 15 percent dip from its spring Monday average but only a seven percent loss from the recent season finale. In total viewers, The Voice was also Monday's biggest winner, pulling in 12 million viewers.

Source: THR
Credits: Paddy

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' FINALE TOPS LAST SEASON

NBC brought home a healthy win on Tuesday with the two-hour finale of The Voice topping all other broadcasts among adults 18-49. Fast affiliate ratings give the crowning of winner Jermaine Paul a 4.3 rating among adults 18-49. That's a 16 percent jump from last summer's one-hour finale and the series' best performance since March 25. The super-sized show did not work out as well for Fashion Star, though. Displaced to 8 p.m., the series pulled a low of a 1.3 rating in the demo, giving the network an average 3.3 with 18-49-ers for the night and 9.2 million viewers.

Source: THR

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' LIFTS NBC TO MONDAY NIGHT VICTORY

Part one of the two-part season finale of "The Voice" boosted NBC to first place last night in primetime.

It marked NBC's 11th Monday win this season, after not winning a regular-season Monday night in the previous four years.

"Voice" averaged a 3.7 adults 18-49 rating from 8 to 10 p.m., according to Nielsen overnights, up 6 percent from a 3.5 last week.

The show grew 31 percent from its first half hour to its last, going from a 3.2 to a 4.2, and it tied for the No. 1 program of the night with CBS's "Two and a Half Men."

"Voice" did decline from part one of last season's finale, which drew a 4.4, but that aired in late June against much less competition.

Last night "Voice" aired against CBS's strong comedy lineup and ABC's "Dancing with the Stars."

Meanwhile, the season finale of CBS's "2 Broke Girls" averaged a 3.2 at 8 p.m., second in the hour behind "Voice," though it did mark a season low.

"Dancing" averaged a 2.6 from 8 to 10, off 7 percent from last week, but it dominated the competition in total viewers with 16 million.

Source: Media Life

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' WAS TOPS IN RATINGS ON TUESDAY FOR NBC

From 9-10 p.m. ET,“The Voice” Results Show (3.1/8 in 18-49, 8.9 million viewers overall) is the #1 telecast of the night on ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox in adults 18-49 for a fifth Tuesday in a row, on a night that included original telecasts of CBS’s “NCIS” and “NCIS: LA,” ”ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” and Fox’s “Glee” and “The New Girl”(pending updates).

“The Voice” won its hour in 18-49 by a 3 percent margin (with a 3.1 rating vs. a 3.0 for CBS’s second-place “NCIS”) and prevailed over ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” Results Show by a 35 percent margin (3.1 vs. 2.3). In the time period, “The Voice” is also #1 among adults, men and women 18-34 and women 18-49.

Source: RBR

Saturday, March 10, 2012

[NEWS] WHY 'THE VOICE' IS HITTING THE HIGH NOTES

The Voice is suddenly on a hot streak - the kind of streak reserved for lightning-in-a-bottle pop-cultural phenoms that elevate hope and talent over hype and humiliation. The kind of streak that suddenly threatens to cast American Idol in the shade.

How is The Voice better than American Idol? Let me count the ways.

. The Voice has coaches, not judges. Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Maroon 5 frontman Adam Levine, and country vocalist Blake Shelton have a vested interest in the success of their 12 chosen team members.

. The Voice auditions focus on performing ability; American Idol auditions focus, as often as not, on humiliation and the vocal train wreck. The Voice's contestants are chosen in advance, based on their singing ability; Idol's contestants are chosen from whoever walks in the door.

. The Voice is tailored to the individual performer's chosen field of singing. American Idol forces contestants into a box. This week, disco, next week, power ballads, the week after that, duets with Pauly Shore. The Voice simply asks: Do you have a good voice? Good. Now show us how good. And do it your way.

. The Voice's coaches are singers themselves. They're working in the industry now, and their music is contemporary, relevant and on the song charts. Shelton is on tour now, with his finalist from The Voice last season, Dia Frampton.

. The Voice is changeable and adaptable to shifts in musical tastes and tracking trends. American Idol is locked into more of a stiff format. The Voice bends and moves with the times; American Idol is trapped in the past. The Voice is karmic; American Idol is dogmatic.

. The Voice is inclusive. Last season, two of the four finalists were openly gay, and no one cared. American Idol appears uncomfortable with the subject, at least during the competition phase. (One theory holds that, because Idol's core fan base lies in the conservative, U.S. red states, alternative lifestyles are deliberately downplayed on the show.)

. The Voice makes no secret of the fact that many of its contestants have previous experience in the recording industry. In some cases, they've had record deals, only to be dropped by their label over time. American Idol, on the other hand, likes to pretend its contestants fell off the back of a turnip truck, even though some of them have experience, too.

. The coaches are expected to be themselves, not play TV versions of themselves. Levine is high-energy, uptempo, combative, sarcastic and outspoken. He's all about the music, not the fame. As he told me last month, "I trust this show more than I trust the business," when it comes to finding new talent. Green is soft-spoken and watchful; he listens more than he talks. Aguilera is effusive and open-hearted, but also given to moments of reflection and introspection. And Shelton, who some Voice insiders have tabbed as the standout coach, is as much about nurturing and encouragement as he is about album sales and tour dates.

TV-reality competitions are not quite the same as real-world talent contests. They're designed for TV, for one; the talent part is secondary. They have to deal with issues of pacing, suspense, empathy and old-fashioned storytelling. They work best - as TV shows - when there's an element of challenge and overcoming the odds, and self-affirmation. There has to be a rooting interest, and a reason to watch other than mild curiosity about who will win in the end. There has to be a reason for viewers to come back, week after week. And when talent alone won't do it - some Idol seasons are stronger than others - there's always engineered drama.

The Voice has its share of contrived drama. Every second contestant, it seems, is an HIV-positive recovering addict or a 50-something lifelong music devotee looking for that one last shot at fame and stardom.

On Idol, though - especially this season - the contrived drama has overwhelmed the singing, at times.

There was no need, for example, to shamelessly keep replaying the moment when a 16-year-old fell off the stage during Idol's Hollywood audition phase. Contestant Symone Black, already suffering from dehydration, took a tumble off the front edge of the stage after performing a credible rendition of Otis Redding's Sitting on the Dock of the Bay. There was no need to show the accident what seemed like 67 times - no need, that is, except ratings and the fact that, thanks to the magic of video editing in the digital age, the moment could be packaged and used as a teaser for nearly two hours, followed by an episode-ending cliffhanger. Was she hurt? Did she injure her back? Will she ever sing again? Tune in tomorrow to find out.

Idol has now reached the audience knockout phase. A dozen contestants remain, following last week's systematic mauling of Adele songs. Idol will dial back on the engineered drama, in theory, from here on in and let the singers take over.

There's an inescapable feeling, though, that this year's field is weaker than in some past seasons, despite the judges' constant crowing about how this is "the best group ever!" It didn't help Idol's cause that Interscope Geffen A&M chairman Jimmy Iovine told one contestant last week that his "shtick" was getting old and that the show is called American Idol, not American Comedian.

Iovine remarked that another contestant was screechy and annoying, and said of one performance - which got a standing ovation from judges Randy Jackson, Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez - that it was cheesy.

Meanwhile, The Voice has wrapped its sensational blind-audition phase - the search for the mystery voice - and is now in the so-called "battle rounds," where the coaches assign a pair of singers in their teams to perform a duet, and choose the singer most likely to advance. The singers will be helped in their task by guest mentors: Lionel Richie and Jewel with Aguilera's group, Kelly Clarkson and Miranda Lambert with Shelton's group, Ne-Yo and Babyface Edmonds with Green's group and, perhaps most intriguing, Alanis Morissette and Robin Thicke with Levine's group.

Levine told Anderson Cooper recently that he's angling to get Kanye West involved with his group. Not so long ago, the very suggestion would have been laughable. Now, not so much. The Voice is suddenly serious business.

And music to the ears. The Voice has risen lately in the ratings, where American Idol has dropped.

For once, though, the bottom line is not just about the bottom line.

The Voice is simply the better show, pure and simple.

The Voice is more relevant, more meaningful, more compelling and more entertaining right now, because it's good to listen to, not just fun to watch.

Source: TheStarPhoenix

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

[NEWS] MONDAY'S FINAL RATINGS: 'THE VOICE' ADJUSTED UP


The Voice was adjusted up a tenth of an adults 18-49 ratings point vs. Monday's preliminary ratings. There were no other 18-49 adjustments with last night's originals, though the CW repeats were adjusted down.

Source: TVByTheNumbers

Friday, March 2, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE': THE #1 TV SHOW IN FEBRUARY

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. – March 1, 2012 – Paced by the combination of NBC Sports’ February 5 coverage of the Super Bowl and primetime’s #1 series for the month, “The Voice,” NBC has won the February 2012 Nielsen Sweep in the key demographic of adults 18-49 and ranks #1 or tied for #1 in all other key demographics.

The hit Monday singing competition “The Voice” finished as the #1 series for the February sweep in adults, men and women 18-34; adults, men (tie) and women 18-49; adults and women 25-54; kids 2-11 and teens 12-17, led by results for its February 5 season premiere following the Super Bowl. In adults 18-49, “The Voice” averaged a 7.5rating for the month and in total viewers, “The Voice” delivered 19.4 million persons.
With all 28 nights of the February 2-29 period now measured, “most current” averages in adults 18-49 for the month are: NBC (a 3.7 rating), CBS (3.0), Fox (3.0), ABC (2.5) and CW (0.7). In total viewers, “most current” sweep averages are CBS (12.2 million), NBC (10.4 million), Fox (8.5 million), ABC (7.8 million) and CW (1.6 million).

With this year’s boosts from the Super Bowl and “The Voice,” NBC is up versus the year-ago February sweep by 131 percent in 18-49 rating (to a 3.7 from a 1.6) and up 86 percent in total viewers (10.4 million vs. 5.6 million). According to “most current” results for the sweep, NBC is #1 or tied for #1 in all key demographics – adults, men and women 18-34, 18-49 and 25-54.

The combination of “The Voice” and the critically acclaimed new drama “Smash” (3.1 rating in 18-49, 8.9 viewers overall) helped NBC triple its Monday 18-49 average rating from the year-ago February 2011 sweep (with a 5.2 vs. a 1.7).

February sweep figures are “most current” averages of “live plus seven day” data except for the two most recent weeks, which are “live plus same day.”

Source: TV By The Numbers

Thursday, February 23, 2012

[NEWS] 'THE VOICE' SINGS LOUDER THAN 'AMERICAN IDOL' IN THE RATINGS


Barring a surprise with Thursday's American Idol, this week's telecast of The Voice will rate higher with adults 18-49 and total viewers than American Idol. Monday's two-hour installment of The Voice drew a 6.0 adults 18-49 rating and and a smidgen over 16 million viewers. Last night's two-hour American Idol scored a 5.1 rating with adults 18-49 and 15.88 million viewers in the preliminary ratings. It's likely Idol will be adjusted up a tenth or two in the final numbers, but there's no chance it will overtake The Voice this week with adults 18-49 (though there's a good shot it will work its way into a virtual tie).

So now 'The Voice > Idol" meme ensues, and I'd guess in one fashion or the other we'll see those comparisons for a while regardless of what happens. Some have asked me if I am surprised by American Idol's ratings. I tend to ignore the intra-week machinations but barring a turnaround it does appear that American Idol will be down for the season than the typical ~10%-15% annual year over year declines that always have happened. That's a little surprising since This has led some to opine that there is singing show saturation where adding The X Factor and having both hurts both Idol and The X Factor. That's perhaps a reasonable thing to speculate, but it's impossible to quantify. To be a contrarian I'd have to ask "if there is singing show saturation, why is The Voice doing better than The X Factor, and at least this week, even better than Idol? The easiest explanation to me is that for whatever reason, people just like The Voice more than The X Factor and at least this week more than American Idol (at least in live and same night DVR viewing).

But I'm much more surprised that The X Factor didn't perform better than I am by Idol being down. With a major overhaul underway, it will be interested to see what happens with The X Factor next season.

But what surprises me the most is the interest in ratings for The Voice. It's rare that we ever got much interest in Idol's ratings (Simon leaving did generate more interest in Idol's post-Simon ratings last season though). There's almost never much interest in unscripted show ratings, so that wasn't a surprise. But there is interest in The Voice's ratings and that's backed up by both qualitative data in the comments, and quantitative data in our site stats. I'm not sure if it's just a case where we were already around when The Voice launched where is Idol was on for years before we launched, or bewilderment that something besides the NFL is performing so well on NBC.

For and against, people are interested in The Voice. There seems to be the perfect storm where there are an equal number of anti-fans who will proclaim "See, I knew it. The Voice is doomed!' if it drops to a 5.5 adults 18-49 rating next week.

Source: TVByTheNumbers

TOTAL PAGE VIEWS