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TV Viewing Round Up – July 2000

TV Viewing Round Up – July 2000

Programmes George Orwell couldn’t possibly have foreseen that his 1949 literary classic 1984 would become the basis for commisioning editors’ great new programme ideas. With celebrity’s own personal hell being banished to Room 101 on BBC2, Channel 4 decided to use the book’s main protagonist Big Brother for its summer schedule.

Already a big hit in Holland, the show’s format has been transplanted around the rest of the world. At the start of the month ‘Nasty’ Nick, ‘Flirty’ Mel, ‘Noxious’ Nichola and ‘Monotone’ Tom weren’t even names in their own households, now up and down the country they are part of everyday conversation.

Big Brother got off to a good start with 3.66 million viewers tuning into the first edition on 18 July. Thereafter it was uphill all the way, with viewing figures eventually peaking last week at 6.2 million (see Nasty Nick’s Nightmare Notches Up Record Ratings For Big Brother). It remains to be seen whether the departure of the machiavellian Nick Bateman will effect viewing figures and whether new girl Claire Strutton will bond as well with the general public as she has with Craig.

July wasn’t just about Big Brother for Channel 4; returning to our screens were pencil-thin lawyer Ally McBeal and slightly incestuous Friends (with opening episode viewing figures of 3.51 and 4.93 million respectively). Two royal related documentaries also helped pull in the viewers for the channel, with The Real Queen Mother getting 4.55 million viewers and Wallis Simpson achieving an audience of 3.88 million.

Viewing With all the publicity regarding Big Brother plus the strong performance of several new programmes, it comes as no surprise that Channel 4 has managed to improve its year on year average hours and minutes total. During July 2000 Channel 4 was watched on average for two hours and thirty-one minutes, up 5.6% on July 1999.

Also doing well was BBC2, which screened the majority coverage of the second week of Wimbledon 2000 at the start of the month. The channel recorded a 12.6% year on year increase in average hours and minutes to stand out two hours and forty-one minutes.. The best performance goes once again to viewing for non-terrestrial stations (Others), watched on average for four hours and seven minutes (up 30.7% year on year).

Hours & Minutes
Month BBC1 BBC2 ITV C4/S4C Channel 5 Others
Jul-2000 6:14 2:41 6:40 2:31 1:23 4:07
Jul-1999 6:22 2:23 6:39 2:23 1:16 3:09
% Change -2.1 12.6 0.3 5.6 9.2 30.7
ChartObject Network Hrs/Mins YoY Comparisons

Despite an improved hours and minutes total, Channel 4 slips slightly with it monthly share of viewing (down 0.06 percentage points year on year). Of the terrestrial stations only Channel 5 and BBC2 increase their share of viewing, up 0.15 and 0.76 percentage points year on year. Others once again increased share the most, up 3.64 percentage points.

Viewing Share
Month BBC1 BBC2 ITV C4/S4C Channel 5 Others
Jul-2000 26.40 11.40 28.20 10.70 5.90 17.50
Jul-1999 28.69 10.64 29.85 10.76 5.75 13.86
% Point Change -2.29 0.76 -1.65 -0.06 0.15 3.64
ChartObject Network Share YoY Comparisons

BBC2 had the best monthly in terms of viewing by ITV franchise area, with only the East region falling year on year. The channel had a three-way tie between London, Midlands and North East region for its best year on year increase (up 1.1 percentage points).

The station with the biggest fall in franchise viewing share was ITV, which fell by 5.3 percentage points in the Ulster region.

Share by Franchise Area
Franchise Area BBC1 YoY Point Ch BBC2 YoY Point Ch ITV YoY Point Ch C4/S4C YoY Point Ch Channel 5 YoY Point Ch Others YoY Point Ch
London (Wkdy & Wknd) 27.4 -1.8 12.2 1.1 25.5 -1.3 10.9 0.0 6.8 1.1 17.3 0.9
Midlands (Central) 26.2 -0.3 11.1 1.1 28.5 -0.3 9.9 -0.3 7.4 -0.7 17.0 0.6
North West (Granada) 23.8 -4.7 10.2 0.4 29.1 -3.0 9.6 -1.0 5.9 0.9 21.4 7.5
Yorkshire 25.8 -2.4 11.1 0.7 31.7 0.0 11.2 0.0 6.4 -0.8 13.8 2.6
Central/North Scotland 23.9 -2.9 11.1 0.0 27.4 0.4 10.6 -0.6 7.2 0.2 19.8 3.0
Wales & West (HTV) 28.6 -3.7 11.3 0.1 27.3 -1.5 9.4 -0.6 4.3 0.2 19.1 5.5
South & South East & Channel Islands 27.3 -3.3 12.6 0.4 29.1 -3.6 10.7 -0.7 1.5 0.3 18.9 7.0
North East (Tyne Tees) 24.1 -2.5 10.5 1.1 29.4 0.1 10.0 -0.5 6.7 0.6 19.2 1.2
East (Anglia TV) 27.3 -2.7 10.6 -0.3 29.5 -1.3 10.2 -0.1 3.8 0.5 18.6 4.0
South West (West Country) 31.8 -2.4 13.4 0.7 30.6 -0.3 12.9 0.5 2.5 -0.5 8.8 1.9
Ulster (UTV) 24.7 -0.3 9.4 0.4 29.5 -5.3 9.9 -0.1 4.2 0.6 22.3 4.8
Border 24.6 -3.7 11.0 0.8 33.3 -1.6 10.7 -0.2 2.7 -1.0 17.6 5.6

Ratings BBC1 had a pretty bad month rating wise, with all audience categories falling year on year. Women and Housewive jointly fall the most, down 0.9 percentage points.

Unsurprisingly all of Channel 4’s peaktime ratings are up year on year, with the most improved being Housewives with children (up 0.7 percentage points).

Network Ratings – 8pm to 11pm
Station Day Adults YoY Ch Men YoY Ch Women YoY Ch Hwives YoY Ch Hswvs/Ch YoY Ch ABC1 Adults YoY Ch
BBC1 Mon-Sun 10.9 -0.6 9.8 -0.2 12.0 -0.9 12.5 -0.9 11.7 -0.2 10.8 -0.4
BBC2 Mon-Sun 3.8 0.2 3.9 0.3 3.7 0.0 4.2 0.1 3.0 -0.3 4.2 0.2
ITV Mon-Sun 13.2 0.4 11.3 0.1 15.1 0.9 15.7 0.7 12.2 -0.5 11.2 0.1
Channel 4 Mon-Sun 4.3 0.5 4.1 0.6 4.4 0.3 4.8 0.4 4.7 0.7 4.3 0.3
Channel 5 Mon-Sun 3.0 0.3 3.1 0.2 3.0 0.4 3.5 0.4 3.0 0.8 2.1 0.2

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