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Seven’s golden ratings week

Ratings: Seven scores a 42% share for the week and in Brisbane it went through the roof.

It was all about the Commonwealth Games last week giving Seven a massive 42% share for the week.

Number never fell below the 40% share for Seven, with Tuesday the biggest crowd of the week at 1.48m viewers.

But while it was an official survey week, it will be separated from annual share because it was a special event.

Network:
Seven: 42.2
Nine: 23.0
ABC: 14.5
TEN: 14.4
SBS: 5.9

Primary channel:
Seven: 30.9
Nine: 15.8
ABC: 10.4
TEN: 10.1
SBS: 4.0

Multichannels:
7TWO: 4.9
7mate: 4.2
9GO!: 2.6
ABC KIDS COMEDY / 9GEM: 2.4
7flix / 9Life / ONE: 2.2
ELEVEN: 2.1
ABC NEWS: 1.2
SBS VICELAND: 1.0
SBS Food Network: 0.8
ABC ME: 0.6
NITV: 0.1

Seven topped the demos 16-39, 18-49 and 25-54.

Seven won every night of the week, and every city (including a 51.9% share in Brisbane). ABC bettered Nine and TEN on Saturday, and TEN on Friday.

Best brands last week were:

Seven: Commonwealth Games (Night 6: 1.48m), Seven News (Sun: 1.15m), AFL (Fri: 402,000) and The Front Bar (345,000).

Nine: Nine News (1.01m), Young Sheldon (755,000), 60 Minutes (636,000) and The Big Bang Theory (635,000).

ABC: ABC News (Sat: 652,000), Four Corners (625,000), Father Brown (617,000) and Hard Quiz (517,000).

TEN: Bachelor in Paradise (Wed: 739,000), Gogglebox (539,000), Hughesy We Have a Problem (438,000) and The Project (7pm: 436,000).

SBS: Leonardo: The Man Who Saved Science (246,000), Egypt’s Sun Kings (236,000), Hunting the Nazi Gold Train (228,000) and Great British Railway Journeys (215,000).

Ratings now continue until December 1st.

3 Responses

  1. To keen observers some fundamentally interesting points: Seven News Sydney has huge problems, given a sizeable lead it failed to win so often. Given viewer inertia, that must be very concerning for them, and points to a lack of product appeal to viewers generally in that market.
    Secondly Sunrise in Perth copped some very average figures, with Today actually rising over them frequently. Given the games gloss – it points to a very mixed message over there about the gravitas of that program – unable to capitalise. More concernong for them is that it is often the figures from the West which win sunrise the national slot.
    Brisbane must be thrilled – they’ve really gained the most (as would expected) by this whole exercise.

    1. I don’t know how Seven News looks normally, but during the Games, it was an annoying interruption. If an event was in progress on Seven at six o’clock, we were switching to the other channel to keep watching the event.

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