>
GCB gives, even while DST taketh away.
ABC:
GCB is a
very bad show, but not an unpopular one. Its 2.3 inched up over last week’s premiere, at least in preliminary numbers, and seemed to squeak out a timeslot victory, by 0.1 over NBC and 0.2 over CBS. It still looks awfully weak to inherit the
DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES mantle next season, but if it can hold at these numbers, it won’t be departing the scene either. The
GCB success tipped the night to ABC, but that was the end of the evening’s good news for the network. Daylight Savings Time smashed into
ONCE UPON A TIME, giving it a series low 2.8 that was down a painful 0.6 from last week (we’ll find out later in the week if the lower same-day viewing led to higher DVR eyeballs over the next few days). And although
Housewives was steady with last week, that was a disappointment considering that this was a hugely-promoted episode that started the march to the series finale by killing off a central character.
CBS: The uncharitable might say that Daylight Savings Time doesn’t affect CBS viewers because at that age, they mostly sit on their couches anyway. In any case, 60 MINUTES and THE AMAZING RACE held steady with last week, and thanks to Once Upon A Time‘s decline, that gave Race a tie for 1st place in the hour. THE GOOD WIFE, with a creatively sub-par episode (despite the presence of Dylan Baker) that very oddly seemed to abruptly end the arc of a continuing character, sank to another series low 1.7, in 4th place for its hour. With its pedigree and upscale audience, Wife doesn’t have to be a big hit to have a safe place on the CBS schedule–but it can’t be an outright flop either, not on CBS. Some viewers came back at 10PM for CSI MIAMI, which was even with last week at 2.1.
FOX: BOB’S BURGERS premiered lower than the numbers Napoleon Dynamite had been doing in the same slot, although in fairness THE SIMPSONS–possibly affected by Daylight Savings Time–gave it a lower lead-in. FAMILY GUY was even, and AMERICAN DAD was slightly up.
NBC:
HARRY’S LAW arrived on Sundays with a thud, matching the 1.1 series low it had set on Wednesdays. That didn’t help
CELEBRITY APPRENTICE (read
Mitch Metcalf’s post for an analysis of why the same lead-in number as last week was actually much worse for
Apprentice), which would have hit a series low with its 2.0 if the network hadn’t aired an episode opposite the
Oscars.
Tonight is SMASHWatch: can the show hold on to last week’s gains? That would be awfully impressive, because tonight is BACHELOR finale night at ABC, meaning the After the Final Rose post-show (which scored a 4.7 rating last year) will be direct competition. CBS and CW will be in repeats, while FOX plays out the string on HOUSE and ALCATRAZ.
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