SE
Yes and by a massive margin. Given that BBC One has about an overall 22% share, ITV1 around 20% across all hours, any individual programme that gets a 42% share is performing exceptionally.
In the multi-channel age, that kind of share is only usually achieved by the main primetime soaps. So for a daytime show to gain 42% of the audience is remarkable.
Square Eyes
Founding member
dbl posted:
"Neighbours 2.4m 42% "
But it got 42% share - doesn't that still mean it won it's slot?
But it got 42% share - doesn't that still mean it won it's slot?
Yes and by a massive margin. Given that BBC One has about an overall 22% share, ITV1 around 20% across all hours, any individual programme that gets a 42% share is performing exceptionally.
In the multi-channel age, that kind of share is only usually achieved by the main primetime soaps. So for a daytime show to gain 42% of the audience is remarkable.
NG
Yes and by a massive margin. Given that BBC One has about an overall 22% share, ITV1 around 20% across all hours, any individual programme that gets a 42% share is performing exceptionally.
In the multi-channel age, that kind of share is only usually achieved by the main primetime soaps. So for a daytime show to gain 42% of the audience is remarkable.
Yep - and it is not at all unusual for the BBC One O'Clock News to reach that level either.
noggin
Founding member
Square Eyes posted:
dbl posted:
"Neighbours 2.4m 42% "
But it got 42% share - doesn't that still mean it won it's slot?
But it got 42% share - doesn't that still mean it won it's slot?
Yes and by a massive margin. Given that BBC One has about an overall 22% share, ITV1 around 20% across all hours, any individual programme that gets a 42% share is performing exceptionally.
In the multi-channel age, that kind of share is only usually achieved by the main primetime soaps. So for a daytime show to gain 42% of the audience is remarkable.
Yep - and it is not at all unusual for the BBC One O'Clock News to reach that level either.