‘It’s All About Screens.’ This is the Daily Diary of Screens. For Wednesday, August 31, 2016.
NBC finished #1 broadcast network as ‘America’s Got Talent‘ was the top broadcast program.
In the UK, BBC One #1 network as ‘The Great British Bake Off‘ was the top program outside of soaps.
In Australia, ‘Nine‘ finished #1 as ‘Seven News‘ was the #1 newscast as ABC’s ‘Gruen‘ finished as the #1 program.
‘Don’t Breathe‘ #1 at the U.S. box office on the weekend 26-28 August 2016.
‘Jason Bourne‘ #1 at the International box office weekend 26-28 August 2016.
Sales of movie theater ads jumped 13.4% in 2015 as it reached $716 million in advertising sales. There are 3.734 Billion Unique Mobile 68% Social Ad Clicks Are Now Mobile. Users as of this quarter, account for a 51% worldwide penetration. Direct uploads of user videos to Facebook now exceed YouTube.
The latest social media stats include Facebook having 1.7 billion monthly users watching 8 billion videos each day. Instagram has 400 million users. 88% of Twitter users are on mobile. An average of 500 million tweets are sent every day with 320 million active users. The Google+1 button is hit 5 billion times per day. 80% of Internet users on Pinterest are female. Pinterest has 100 million active users. LinkedIn has 347 million registered members with 100 million active users. Tumblr has 555 million users and Weibo has 100 million daily users. Skype has 300 million active users and there are 1.000 billion users on Whatsapp. With 900 million active users on Facebook Messenger, 60 billion messages are sent via Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp every day. Netflix now has 75 million streaming subscribers. QQ has 853 million active users. WeChat has 697 million active users while QZone has 640 million. Baidu Tieba has 300 million active users while Viber has 249 million. Sina Weibo has 222 million active users while Line has 215 million. Snapchat has 200 million users and 150 million users are active each day, watching 10 billion videos each day. YY has 122 million active users; VKontakte has 100 million active users as does BBM and Telegram.
Cliptomize continues to grow as it has 88,679 users and 128,987 clipbooks with 644,477 visitors and 345,766 unique visitors with over 3.158 million pageviews. 5 minutes 4 seconds average time spent on spent on site since the beginning. In August, average time spent on site is 3 minutes 46 seconds. Cliptomize For Business Service Bureau during recent NDA client campaign including 20 sends delivered a remarkable open rate of 49.16% and a click-through rate of 48.72% #clipit, #clip4biz🖇 Double Your Open Rate & Click-Through Rate Now!: http://www.cliptomize.com/Clipbook/View/250922?secret=h42qm2ns5g The First step to engagement is click-through 🆕 THURSDAY AUSTRALIAN OVERNIGHT TV RATINGS (*SEE BELOW)
Today, traditional TV still accounts for the lion’s share of video viewing, but online and mobile are where the growth is. When managed together, TV/digital/mobile hold the potential to drive real impact for advertisers—enabling them to maximize the customers they reach and/or reinforce key messaging across screens. After all, ‘It’s all about screens’.
The Home Of #dailydiaryofscreens
For Wednesday, August 31, 2016 (Posted on September 1, 2016)
NBC
The Peacock Network finished #1 Wednesday in prime time with the power of ‘America’s Got Talent’.
8P ‘America’s Got Talent‘ clip show finished with an average 6.959 million viewers and a 4.6/8.
9P ‘America’s Got Talent‘ finished with an average 10.765 million viewers and a 7.1/12.
10P ‘The Night Shift‘ season finale finished with an average 5.801 million viewers and a 3.6/7.
FOX
The Animal Network of Broadcast was All-Gordo on Wednesday.
8P ‘MasterChef‘ finished with an average 4.223 million viewers and a 3.0/5.
9P ‘MasterChef‘ finished with an average 4.200 million viewers and a 2.9/5.
CBS
The Tiffany Network
8P ‘Big Brother‘ finished with an average 6.197 million viewers and a 3.9/7.
9P ‘Criminal Minds‘ rerun finished with an average 3.203 million viewers and a 2.1/3.
10P ‘American Gothic‘ finished with an average 2.564 million viewers and a 1.8/3.
ABC
The Alphabet Network
8P ‘The Goldbergs‘ rerun finished with an average 3.456 million viewers and a 2.5/4.
830P ‘The Goldbergs‘ rerun finished with an average 3.111 million viewers and a 2.1/4.
9P ‘Modern Family‘ rerun finished with an average 3.149 million viewers and a 2.2/4.
930P ‘Black-ish‘ rerun finished with an average 2.528 million viewers and a 1.8/3.
10P ‘Modern Family‘ rerun finished with an average 2.530 million viewers and a 1.9/3.
1030P’The Middle‘ rerun finished with an average 2.271 million viewers and a 1.7/3.
The CW
The Little Network That Couldn’t didn’t.
8P ‘Penn & Teller:Fool Us‘ finished with an average 1.753 million viewers and a 1.2/2.
9P ‘Whose Line Is It Anyway?‘ finished with an average million 1.368 viewers and a 0.8/1
930P ‘Whose Line Is It Anyway?‘ rerun finished with an average 1.385 million viewers and a 0.7/1.
For The Record
NBC finished #1 Wednesday in prime time with an average 7.842 million viewers and a 5.1/9.
FOX finished with an average 4.212 million viewers and a 2.9/5.
CBS finished with an average 3.988 million viewers and a 2.6/4.
ABC finished with an average 2.839 million viewers and a 2.0/3.
The CW finished with an average 1.565 million viewers and a 1.0/2.
Broadcast (English Speaking) Networks finished Wednesday in prime time with an estimated average of 20.446 million viewers.
Today In Communication History
On this date in 1949, ‘Martin Kane, Private Eye’ debuted on NBC-TV.
So?
In 1900, the term ‘television‘ is coined by Constantin Perskyi at the International Electricity Congress, part of the 1900 Paris Exhibition.
Quote Of The Day
‘So my idea of neurotic is spending too much time trying to correct a wrong. When I feel that I’m doing that, then I snap out of it.’.
Gene Wilder,
Actor
Social Media News
The Typical Millennial Age Range is Fairly Wide. Within It Are Varying Social Media Preferences.
There’s no consensus view of the Millennial age bracket, but most research simply describes them as being 18-34-years old (though that doesn’t seem to change from one year to the next!). But an 18-24-year-old might have a very different lifestyle and outlook than a 30-34-year-olds, and new research from Fluent suggests that social media preferences differ within the wider Millennial bracket.
Based on a survey of 1,769 Millennials, Fluent found that of 7 social networks identified, 43% reported using Facebook the most often. However, that result masked a significant discrepancy among narrower age brackets: 30-34-year-olds were far more likely to cite Facebook than 18-24-year-olds (50% vs. 36%), while the youngest bracket was likewise much more likely to point to Instagram than the oldest set (24% vs. 13%).
So while Facebook is the most-used platform across each of the Millennial age groups, its appeal appears to be lower among the younger brackets. This fits with recent research from the Temkin Group, in which 18-24-year-olds demonstrated the biggest drop in Facebook use of all adult age groups, on both desktops and mobile phones. (We pause to remember the media frenzy of 2013, when there was a big fracas about Facebook and teens. Seems to have really hurt Facebook’s bottom line… /sarcasm.)
Nevertheless, there’s reason to believe that other platforms simply have more appeal with youth. The 18-24 set, for example, are about as likely to say they use Snapchat (30%), Instagram (34%) and YouTube (36%) each day as they are to say the same about Facebook (38%). By contrast, the 30-34 group is more than twice as likely to use Facebook each day as Snapchat (48% and 20%, respectively).
One more result:
- Facebook was the only social platform of the 7 identified in which Millennials were less likely than non-Millennials (35+) to report everyday usage
.
Lessons? Not all Millennials are created equal. And for parents, if you want to get your kids off a social platform, start by creating an account on it.
About the Data: The Fluent survey was conducted online among 2,960 US adults, including 1,769 Millennials (18-34) and 1,191 adults aged 35 and up.
A Couple Of Things You Should Know About Millennials
► Millennials were born between approximately 1977 and 1995.
The birth years for Millennials in the United States stop at 1995 because those born later cannot process the significance of September 11, 2001 in the way those born before 1995 do. In other words, if 9/11 has always been history, then you are not a Millennial.
► When you think about how to market to Millennials, start with their life stage.
Millennials are approximately 20 to 37 years old. This age range covers a broad range of key life events, from earning an education and moving into your own apartment (with three roommates) to being married with two kids. The subgroups within the generation are key for marketing and sales.
► Millennials are breaking into two different generational groups.
a. One group of Millennials is reaching all the traditional markers of adulthood, just a few years later than previous generations. This group is entering their wealth accumulation life phase and commanding more power in the marketplace.
b. The other group of Millennials, however, is not creating “real-world traction.” It is important to identify which group represents the ideal customer for your products, services and solutions because each group has different purchasing criteria.
► Millennials are the most consistent generation in the world.
Whether you work in Texas, London, Sydney, South Africa, Japan, Chile, Egypt, India or elsewhere, Millennials are the most consistent group of all the generations. This is due to many factors, including inexpensive mobile technology.
► Millennials are primarily visual buyers and learners.
This generation has been conditioned to make purchases while looking at a screen, skipping blocks of marketing and advertising text. One needs to increase conversion with Millennial customers by improving visual layout, overall copy and specific calls-to-action.
► Millennials communicate differently than other generations in the market.
It has been found that Millennial customers prefer to communicate in this order:
a. Text—in many cases, IM apps such as WhatsApp are used more than texting
b. Email, with the subject line being most important
c. Social media
d. Phone call
e. In-person
► Millennials are paying for products and services differently than other generations.
If companies, salespeople and brands don’t adapt, Millennials will simply not buy from them—they’ll go to the next guy who has adapted. For example, in a recent national study, it was discovered how shockingly little cash Millennials actually carry on a daily basis. What does this mean for you? If you want to attract and keep Millennial buyers—especially for small transactions where a couple of dollars can make all the difference (i.e., tipping)—make it easy to pay with a card.
► Millennials don’t just spend their own money.
It’s important to remember that their Baby Boomer parents often provide access to more money and credit. Millennials are entering adulthood later, and as a result, many Baby Boomers are providing financial resources and a financial backstop to their grown children, sometimes well into their 30s. Or maybe it’s the other way around: Baby Boomers continue to offer financial support, so Millennials don’t need to enter adulthood. In either case, this expands the spending and economic power of the Millennial generation. Even if they don’t personally have the funds, they can direct money from other sources. Thanks Mom and Dad for the “emergency” credit card!
► Winning Millennials is not just about Millennials. You need to keep all generations of customers in mind.
Gen Xers and Baby Boomers are starting to communicate, shop and buy similarly to Millennials. Thus, if you win Millennials, you are in a strong position to attract and keep other generations—but if you lose or miss Millennials as customers, you increase your risk of losing your Gen X and Baby Boomer customers as well.
Digital/Mobile News
Hey! Millennials Are NOT Ignoring Your eMail.
There’s been some talk about the death of email among America’s youth. But there is data to contradict that notion. According to a new Fluent study: Millennials (18-34) are 63% more likely than their older counterparts to say that promotional emails impact their purchase decisions most or all of the time.
Did you hear that? A solid 26% of 18-34-year-olds said that was the case, compared to just 16% of Americans aged 35 and older.
Looking at this from another angle, Millennials were almost as likely to say that promotional emails impact their decisions most or all of the time (26%) as they were to say they never impact their decisions (32%). By comparison, Americans aged 35 and older were more than twice as likely to say they’re never impacted by email (36%) as to claim an impact most or all of the time (16%). In fact, Millennials ascribe more influence to email than to other digital channels: almost half (48%) say that promotional emails impact their purchase decisions at least some of the time, topping that level of impact for social media ads (44%), ads on news and entertainment websites (44%) and promotional text messages (42%).
These results align with MarketingCharts’ primary research into purchase influencers. In the latest edition of our popular study, Advertising Channels With the Largest Purchase Influence on Consumers, more Millennials say they had been influenced to make a purchase in the prior 6 months as a result of opt-in emails than of social media ads. On a generational basis, Millennials were close behind Gen Xers as the cohort most influenced by email marketing, with Baby Boomers and Silents bringing down the average for the overall 35+ crowd.
Perhaps now it’s worth shelving the concerns over email. As one report put it last year, B2C email marketing is very much “alive and kicking.” And as a new study from Brightwave notes, Millennials prefer email over all other channels for brand communications.
According to a Harvard Business Review study released in November 2015, written by Kristin Naragon (111215), Millennials have become every brand’s coveted customer. But what’s the best way to reach them? The answer is email. eMail remains the standard for digital communication. In fact, Millennials check email more than any other age group, and nearly half can’t even use the bathroom without checking it, according to a recent Adobe study.
That same study found nearly 98% of Millennials check their personal email at least every few hours at work, while almost 87% of Millennials check their work email outside of work. Email is not only relevant for Millennials, it also happens to remain the channel where direct marketers get the highest ROI ($39 for every dollar spent, according to the Direct Marketing Association). But that doesn’t mean the same old email marketing will work on Millennials. Instead, marketers need to adjust, or run the risk of that dreaded swipe to the trash bin. Consider these ideas the next time you’re planning an email campaign and Millennials are a key part of the audience:
Mobile is a must. Millennials are more likely than any other age group to check email on smartphones, with 88% reporting that they regularly using a smartphone to check email. If you’re not mobile first, you’re not putting your Millennial customers first. Responsive design has been a mantra for some time, but if you’re not employing it, you’re alienating an important generation of consumers who live, breathe, and sleep with their mobile devices.
Timing is everything. Looking at opens and clicks won’t get you anywhere without analyzing the day of week and time of day those emails are opened and clicked. For example, we found that Millennials are more likely than any other age group to check email while in bed (45.2%). Why not experiment with sending emails first thing in the morning or late in the evening with content relevant to that time of day?
Pictures are worth a thousand words. They’re also an important mechanism for Millennials to filter messages. Why send an email survey asking for written feedback when all you need to do is provide a choice between a smiley face and a frown? Images are an integral part of Millennial language, even in the workplace. A third of Millennials believe it is appropriate to use an emoji when communicating with a direct manager or senior executive, so it’s a safe bet they’re even more comfortable when it comes to emoji from brands. Millennials are thinking and communicating in images, so marketers need to optimize emails for images and allow for quick feedback through emoji.
Less is more. Email marketing to Millennials isn’t about sending more of the same. Many Millennials want to see fewer emails (39%) and fewer repetitive emails from brands (32%). Marketers take note — stop spamming your lists and start marketing to individuals by understanding who they are first.
Not every Millennial communicates the same way, of course. And digital communication is constantly evolving. Nonetheless, for now it seems safe to say that email is here to stay and will remain a critical channel even for reaching mobile customers. Just don’t expect the same old email tactics to work.
About the Data: The Fluent survey was conducted online among 2,960 US adults, including 1,769 Millennials (18-34) and 1,191 adults aged 35 and up.
Some Social Media Behaviors Are Turning Off Your Followers
It’s a tough world out there: a recent study from Sprout Social shows that brands need to strike a very delicate balance with their social media promotions or risk losing their followers. Case in point: posting too many promotions is considered the most annoying action taken by brands on social media. But at the same time, consumers say they need to see a product multiple times on social media before they’ll buy it.
Let’s get into more specifics.
Far and away the most annoying action a brand can take is posting too many promotions, cited by 58% of respondents to Sprout Social’s survey, which was fielded among more than 1,000 Facebook, Instagram and Twitter users. Further back, around one-third or more said it’s annoying when brands use slang and jargon (38%), lack personality on their accounts (35%) and try to be funny when they’re not (32%). Let’s deconstruct that for a second: some of your followers want you to have more personality, but you can’t try too hard and you can’t use certain terms. So good luck with that.
Moving on to the actions that really hurt…unfollows…the survey indicates that overdoing it on promotional messages (46%) is again the biggest culprit. Tweeting too much (35%) is also in the mix, though irrelevant information is a bigger turn-off (41%). Yet, you can’t be too quiet either: almost 1 in 5 say this would make them unfollow your brand.
So be active, but not overly promotional. However, some repetition appears to be necessary. About 85% of survey respondents said they need to see a product or service multiple times on social media before they purchase it, with most of those (61% overall) wanting to see it 2-4 times. (If you’re promoting something only organically on Facebook, this means you’ll need to post it about 6,000 times in the hope your audience sees it 2-4 times…)
There are some interesting stats surrounding social media’s influence on purchase behavior:
► 58% are more likely to buy from a brand that they follow on social media
► Three-quarters have purchased something because they saw it on social media.
Social’s influence is indeed rising as a paid advertising medium: social ads are now second only to TV ads in purchase influence among Millennials, according to MarketingCharts research.
In other results from the survey,
► Almost 6 in 10 respondents said they follow brands because they’re interested in promotions, trailing only interest in the brand’s product or service (73%)
► Retail edges media/entertainment and consumer goods as the most-liked industry on social media
► Government and banking/finance are the most annoying industries on social media, with marketing and advertising close behind.
About the Data: The consumer survey was conducted by Survata, an independent research firm. Survata interviewed 1,022 online respondents between July 05, 2016 and July 11, 2016.
Cinema News
Sean Hanish’s film ‘Sister Cities’, starring Jacki Weaver, Stana Katic, Jess Weixler, Michelle Trachtenberg, and Troian Bellisario, will be premiering on the silverscreen in two major US cities. The Sean Hanish-directed film will open in Hollywood on 2 September at the Ahrya Fine Arts cinema. Tickets will be on sale starting 30 August at 7p. For more information, you can visit the movie page at LAEMMLE.
The film will also open in New York at the Cinema Village theatre on the same day. You can purchase tickets at the cinema’s official website.
Then finally, the television premiere will be on the Lifetime Network on 17 September at 8/7c. The rights of the film was acquired by the network a few weeks ago. ‘Sister Cities’ is a story of a mother and her four children, fathered by four different men, and named after four different cities. The four estranged sisters are reunited when they learned of their mother’s passing only to be threatened by past familial issues. It is directed by Sean Hanish and written by Colette Freedman, based on her internationally acclaimed play. The film also stars Alfred Molina, Amy Smart, Tom Everett Scott, and Kaia Gerber.
The film was first seen on 29 July at the Traverse City Film Festival in Michigan to a sold-out audience.
Box Office Weekend 19-21 August 2016 (Domestic)
#1 ‘Don’t Breathe’ $ 26,100,000 in 3051 locations
#2 ‘Suicide Squad’ $ 12,100,000 in 3,582 locations
#3 ‘Kubo & the Two Strings’$ 7,800,000
#4 ‘Sausage Party’ $ 7,700,000
#5 ‘Pete’s Dragon’ $ 7,300,000
Box Office Weekend 19-21 August 2016 (International)
#1 ‘Jason Bourne’ $ 58,600,000 in 62 territories
#2 ‘Ice Age: Collision Course’ $ 50,000,000 in 37 territories
#3 ‘The Secret Life of Pets’ $ 24,600,000
#4 ‘Suicide Squad’ $ 19,600,000
#5 ‘Light’s Out’ $ 9,600,000
COMING SOON
‘Morgan‘ September 2, 2016
‘Doctor Strange‘ November 4, 2016
‘Rogue One:A Star Wars Story‘ December 16, 2016
Welcome to new viewers in all 50 States of the U.S., all of the Provinces in Canada, all of the States in Mexico, the UK, Iceland, Ireland, Guernsey, Jersey, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, the Russian Federation, Belarus, Ukraine, Republic of Moldova, Georgia, Poland, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Portugal, Gibraltar, Spain, Monaco, Malta, Italy, Slovenia, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Macedonia the former Yugoslave Republic, Albania, Montenegro, Greece, Cyprus, Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan, State of Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, India, Bhutan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, China, Hong Kong SAR China, Macao, Taiwan, Japan, Republic of Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Brunei Darussalam, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Mauritius, Zambia, United Republic of Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Egypt, Malta, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya, Morocco, Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Gabon, Senegal, Benin, Nigeria, Cameroon, Ghana, Mozambique, Uganda, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Angola, South Africa, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, Panama, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvadore, Belize, Curaçao, Aruba, St. Lucia, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Dominica, Barbados, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Martinique, U.S. Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, Bahamas, Cuba, Puerto Rico and Bermuda (153). We are thankful to all of you with more than 47,455 views. Top areas in the world viewing overtheshouldermedia on Wednesday came from the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Guernsey, France, Spain, Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, Croatia, Austria, Hungary, Italy, Turkey, China, South Korea, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, Chile and Puerto Rico.
Across The Pond
BBC One
The Big One
8P ‘The Great British Bake Off‘ finished #1 overall with an average 10.14 million viewers and a 45% share of the available audience. It was the largest second episode ever in the history of the program as it peaked at 11.0 million viewers.
9P ‘The Chronicles of Nadiya‘
BBC Two
The Little Two
8P ‘Skies Above Britain‘
9P ‘An Hour To Save Your Life‘
ITV
The Independent One
8P ‘All Star Mr and Mrs‘
9P ‘DCI Banks‘
Channel 4
The Big Four
8P ‘Great Canal Journeys‘
9P ‘Britain’s Benefit Tenants‘
Channel 5
The Viacom Five
8P ‘GPs Behind Closed Doors‘
9P ‘Can’t Pay? We’ll Take It Away‘
Down Under
Nine Takes The Top Spot On Wednesday but ABC’s ‘Gruen’ top program.
Nine
The First Commercial Network finished #1 Wednesday in prime time with 793,333 viewers and a 26.5% share.
7P ‘A Current Affair‘ finished with an average 824,000 viewers.
734P ‘The Block‘ finished with an average 786,000 viewers.
842P ‘Married At First Sight‘ finished with an average 788,000 viewers.
Ten
The Third Commercial Network finished #2 on Wednesday with 724,000 viewers and a 21.5% share.
7P ‘The Project‘ finished with an average 702.000 viewers.
730P ‘The Bachelor Australia‘ finished with an average 821,000 viewers.
840P ‘Offspring‘ finished with an average 638,000 viewers.
940P ‘NCIS:Los Angeles‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
Seven
The Second Commercial Network finished #2 Wednesday in prime time by barely edging Nine with an average 705,500 viewers and a 26.7% share of the available audience
7P ‘Home and Away‘ finished with an average 752,000 viewers.
730P ‘Border Security:Australia’s Front Line’ finished with an average 732,000 viewers.
8P ‘The Force:Behind The Lines’ finished with an average 713,000 viewers
830P ‘The Durrells‘ finished with an average 625,000 viewers.
940P ‘Mrs. Browns Boys D’Movie‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
ABC
The Alphabet Network finished #4 Wednesday with an 18.3% share.
730P ‘7.30‘ finished with an average 745,000 viewers.
8P ‘Anh’s Brush With Fame‘ finished with an average 841,000 viewers.
831P ‘Gruen‘ finished #1 Wednesday in prime time with an average 901,000 viewers.
909P ‘The Katering Show‘ finished with an average viewers.
921P ‘You Can’t Ask That‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
940P ‘Soul Mates 2‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
SBS
The Special Broadcast Service finished #5 Wednesday in Australia with a 7.0% share of the available audience.
735P ‘Great American Railroad Journeys‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
835P ‘24 Hours In Emergency‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
930P ‘24 Hours In Emergency‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
Top Newscasts In Australia Thursday
#1 SEVEN NEWS Seven 1,112,000 viewers #1 in Brisbane, Adelaide & Perth
#2 SEVEN News/TodayTonight Seven 1,036,000 viewers Melbourne top market
#3 NINE NEWS Nine 933,000 viewers #1 in Sydney & Melbourne
#4 NINE NEWS 6:30 Nine 931,000 viewers Melbourne top market
#5 ABC NEWS ABC 737,000 viewers Melbourne top market
THURSDAY AUSTRALIAN OVERNIGHT TV RATINGS
Thursday Australian Overnight TV Ratings
THURSDAY AUSTRALIAN OVERNIGHT TV RATINGS
Nine Stays On Top Of The Ratings On Thursday
Nine
The First Commercial Network in Australia finished #1 on Thursday in prime time with a 27.6% share of the available audience.
7P ‘A Current Affair‘ finished with an average 758,000 viewers.
730P ‘Nine’s Live Thursday Night Football‘ featuring the Brisbane Broncos V Sydney Roosters finished with an average 541,000 viewers.
940P ‘The Footy Show‘ with Fatty Vautin, Erin Molan, Beau Ryan and Darryl Brohman finished with an average 524,000 viewers.
Seven
The Second Commercial Network in Australia finished #2 with a 25.0% share.
7P ‘Home and Away‘ finished with an average 678,000 viewers.
8P ‘Selling Houses Australia‘ finished with an average 442,000 viewers.
910P ‘Bridget Jones’s Diary‘ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
Ten
The Third Commercial Network In Australia finished #3 with a 22.1% share.
7P ‘The Project’ finished with an average 637,000 viewers.
730P ‘The Bachelor Australia’ finished #1 overall in prime time on Thursday with an average 857,000 viewers.
840P ‘Googlebox’ finished with an average 619,000 viewers.
940P ‘Law & Order:SVU’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
ABC
The Alphabet Network in Australia finished #4 with a 18.6% share.
730P ‘7.30’ finished with an average 709,000 viewers.
801P ‘The Checkout’ finished with an average 725,000 viewers.
832P ‘The Code’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
930P ‘The Tunnel:Sabotage’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
SBS
The Special Broadcast Service in Australia finished #5 in prime time with a 6.6% share of the available audience.
730P ‘World’s Greatest Food Markets’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
800P ‘Luke Nguyen’s Street Food Asia’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
9P ‘Destination Flavour Down Under’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
930P ‘Versailles’ did not finish in the Top 20 programs in prime time.
Top Newscasts In Australia Thursday
#1 SEVEN NEWS Seven 1,032,000 viewers #1 in Adelaide & Perth
#2 NINE NEWS Nine 939,000 viewers #1 in Melbourne & Brisbane
#3 SEVEN News/TodayTonight Seven 936,000 viewers Melbourne top market
#4 NINE NEWS 6:30 Nine 899,000 viewers #1 in Sydney
#5 ABC NEWS ABC 803,000 viewers Melbourne top market
For continual updates on all things ‘screens’, go to: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dailydiaryofscreens
In this week’s Media Notes Canonical, go to: http://bit.ly/1JnoNS6 🆕💭📝📎 It’s FREE.
Media Notes Briefs: ‘Why Retailers & Brands Should Use Dynamic and Social Media Advertising in Tandem’ 🆕💡💭🌎💬 – http://eepurl.com/ccPX51 It’s Free!
New This Week: Do Consumers Really Know What They Want? 💬 – http://sophis1234.tumblr.com
Weekly Retail Media Notes. This week: ‘The Changing Manufacturer Evolution’ http://www.furninfo.com/Furniture%20Industry%20News/6425 🆕💡💭🌎💬
Why Don’t You Use Mobile Now? http://goo.gl/wlnJ8o
Today’s featured ‘Music To Read overtheshouldermedia By’ down at the bottom of the page
Jon Batiste ‘Blackbird’
Jon Batiste ‘What A Wonderful Life’