Didn’t it beat Raw one week in America too...in the all important 18-34 demo?
I see they’re moving TV production to The Amway center from the performance center starting this Friday for Smackdown!. If they don’t have Retribution all but demolish the performance center on Raw tonight or on NXT Wednesday then they’ll have missed a big opportunity with yet another faction.
Wow, Joseph Parks (Abyss’ alter-ego in TNA) was on SmackDown last week as, well, Joseph Parks...playing what appeared to be the same suited character/version of himself as he was in TNA. Had there been a Live crowd I wonder how many people would have known who he is. I’ll be honest it took me a while to remember.
As for Retribution, it’s already turned into a gooseberry fool nWo. Over two decades have past and WWE still can’t do an invasion storyline properly.
KKLEIN do you have a reliable way of finding historic Nielsen ratings? I know you've posted wrestling numbers from the States before and I could do with finding some niche information about a re-run of The Simpsons from 1992.
Also a chance a fan website or blog would have it, though library records of newspapers and books that reported on ratings would be another option (USA Today, World Almanac, TIME Almanac and local newspapers). On Wikipedia, for first run episode figures, they’ve cited USA Today.
Also a chance a fan website or blog would have it, though library records of newspapers and books that reported on ratings would be another option (USA Today, World Almanac, TIME Almanac and local newspapers). On Wikipedia, for first run episode figures, they’ve cited USA Today.
That's brilliant, they've got audience ratings for all showings of the show, and the particular one I need - a re-run of Stark Raving Dad from January, 1992. Thanks mate, you're a hero. Is there a formula for calculating how many millions that, say, an 11.6 translates into?
You would need to find out how many million TV homes there were at that point (which has probably been mentioned in the Wrestling Observer at some point). For example for the 2018-19 TV season there were 119.9 million TV homes in the US. So a 11.6 rating in 1992 wouldn’t equate to the same amount of viewers as if a programme got that today.
The rating is the percentage of total TV households tuned into a programme at a given time (or of a specific group, such as adults aged 18-49). So if a show has a 2.0 rating, it means that 2% of those 119.9 million households watched that programme. This number is always out of the total estimated TV households and not how many of those total households actually had their TVs on at the time.
Nice one! The translation of the numbers is more of a nice to have than the number themselves, but it's good to understand how the Nielsen ratings work for a wider project I'm working on for a bit of fun. This is hugely appreciated KK, cheers.
This WWE Thunderdome sounds laughable. Like it's gonna be a big version of the WWF War Zone setting, complete with cardboard crowd. The only way I'll be interested is if they do a VR ringside POV thing, like they did that time with the world cup on PS4.
Guys Grocery Games on the Food Network (which for those that don't know appears to be a cross between Dale's Supermarket Sweep and Masterchef) averaged 769,000 viewers on August 12th, and did a 0.22 in 18-49. NXT on the USA Network managed 619,000 viewers and a 0.16. In terms of the DEMO GOD, it also lost out to stuff like Home Town Repack on Home and Gardens TV (0.18), All in with Chris Hayes on MSNBC (0.20) and Real Housewives of Beverly Hills on Bravo (0.18).
AEW Dynamite managed a 0.32 in 18-49 and 792,000 viewers overall.
So basically, NXT is fantastically unpopular with the youth, even on the weeks NXT beats AEW overall. Which is not good for WWE as it's supposed to be the trendier show compared to RAW and SmackDown.
I'm interested to see the Thunderdome set I have to admit. WWE have largely wasted lockdown as they should have used it as a chance to experiment with new looks for the show. I think WWE would do well to go with darker tones, a darker arena, a less polished looking setting. The Raw set they use now is basically a miniature of the same visual style they have used since the PG era started.
They seem to be stuck with a mid 2000s HBO boxing style presentation which is beyond stale.