Love & Monsters Overnights

Sunday, 18 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Ratings for Love & Monsters, the eleventh episode of the new season, are in: according to the overnight viewing figures, 6.22 million people tuned in to see the episode, with a total audience share of 38.3%. The episode was Saturday's #1 most watched program in the UK in terms of number of viewers, though the episode was second on the list in total audience share (World Cup Match of the Day Live, which aired much earlier in the day, had a 38.9% share but only 3.1 million viewers at that time.) As usual, individual ratings on the five-minute period charts show the episode peaked at 7.15 million viewers in the final five minutes of the episode. The episode was also #12 on the list of most watched programmes for the week, after episodes of "Coronation Street," "EastEnders" and several instances of World Cup programming (including, so far, the week's top rated England v. Trinidad & Tobago match on Thursday.) More details later. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon' and Andy Parish)




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

Canada Gets Series Two in October

Friday, 16 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

CBC Television announced today that Canada will see series two of Doctor Who this coming October. "New Earth," the first episode of the new season, will premiere on Monday, October 9 at 8:00pm (8:30pm in Newfoundland); further episodes will likely air weekly on Monday nights. (Last season's episodes aired on Tuesdays.) More information about the network's fall schedules can be found here.




FILTER: - Canada - Series 2/28 - Broadcasting

US Ratings Report and Series Two Possibilities

Wednesday, 14 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Ratings for the broadcast of the first season finale on the Sci Fi Channel, The Parting of the Ways, in America are in: the telecast scored a 1.14 household rating with an average of 1.4 million viewers. According to Outpost Gallifrey's source at the Sci Fi Channel, the first full season of the series averaged a 1.26 household rating, with an average audience of 1.5 million views. (Some other statistics for the season: the audience was 63% male, with a median age of 46 years, and scored a 1.00 rating in men ages 18-49 and a 0.62 rating in men 18-34.)

Though the ratings for the broadcast of the first series seem to have been lower than expected, that now doesn't appear to be the case. As reported at the Sci Fi Channel's own news service, Sci Fi Wire, "the new updated Doctor Who boosted SCI FI Channel's ratings on Friday nights by double digits, the network reported. The new version of Doctor Who, produced by the BBC, wrapped its first season on SCI FI on June 9. Doctor Who averaged a 1.3 household rating and 1.5 million total viewers in its 9 p.m. Friday timeslot, a 44 percent increase in ratings and a 54 percent increase in viewership over the same timeslot in the second quarter last year. In key demographics, Doctor Who averaged 778,000 viewers aged 18-49, a 57 percent increase over 2005, and 942,000 viewers aged 25-54, a 56 percent increase." The Futon Critic, a respected source of industry and media news noted the "double-digit ratings growth this quarter on Fridays from 9pm to 10pm versus the time period last year," referring to the fact that Doctor Who was a broadcast original for the network in a time period (March to June) when it normally shows reruns. (Until this series broadcast, Sci Fi's original Friday night series -- Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis and Battlestar Galactica -- broadcast in two halves, July through September for the first half of each season, and then January to March for the second half.)

What does this mean for Series Two? A pop-culture website called ICV2 today stated that "The second season will kick off in the U.S. on Sci Fi Channel in October." However, this appears to be simple speculation on the part of the website; Sci Fi has not announced any plans to purchase the second season of the series at this time, although it's a foregone conclusion that if it did, October would be a likely timeframe for it to be shown (as the Stargate shows end their half-season runs in September, while Galactica returns in October, presumably in its regular 10pm timeslot... with, theoretically, space for Doctor Who to run before each new episode at 9pm.) Outpost Gallifrey will keep you posted.




FILTER: - USA - Ratings - Series 1/27

Series Three Brief Updates

Wednesday, 14 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Stephen Fry appears to have pulled out of his long-anticipated plans to write for the series' third season. In a recent chat hosted by the Douglas Adams Continuum website, Fry was asked about his episode, which had been pushed back to series three due to his schedule. His reply: "Ah, now, unfortunately, I've had to pull out of the Dr Who gig. Lack of time. I just couldn't find three minutes to string together. Barely enough time to go to the lavatory these days, let alone take on new projects. Sorry about that..."

Meanwhile, the official Doctor Who website says that plans are already "well underway" for series three. "At the BBC Worldwide Licensing Showcase event held this week in St Albans, Doctor Who's Executive Producer Julie Gardner gave the assembled delegates a few exciting hints about what's to come. 'We're in pre-production on Doctor Who 3', she said. 'We'll be filming for 34 weeks, beginning with a Christmas special.' Julie then went on to say that the TARDIS will be travelling into the future during the third series: '...and into the past, where we will meet Shakespeare - and why wouldn't you?!'" Filming on Series Three starts in July.




FILTER: - Production - Series 3/29

Impossible Planet Final Ratings

Wednesday, 14 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

The final ratings for The Impossible Planet, broadcast a week ago Saturday, have been announced by the BARB: adjusted for time-shifted viewing, Doctor Who scored 6.32 million viewers, to be ranked #18 for the week in total series viewings and #8 in weekly series (allowing for multiple episodes of shows), after "Coronation Street" (which held the top ratings slot for the week of only 9.56 million viewers; all shows were skewed downward in total viewers with the onset of summer), "Match of the Day Live," "EastEnders," "New Tricks," "Heartbeat," "Emmerdale" and "Casualty".

In other ratings news: Doctor Who was first on BBC3 for the week ending 4 June, with the Sunday 4 June airing of "The Impossible Planet" scoring 689,000 viewers according to the BARB timeshifts, which also scored seventh on the list of total non-terrestial channel broadcasts for the week. The Saturday night broadcast of "Doctor Who Confidential" was second for the week on BBC3 with 551,000 viewers; the Friday night 2 June repeat of "The Idiot's Lantern" was fifth with 416,000 viewers; and Sunday night 4 June's repeat of "Confidential" was seventh on BBC3's list for the week with 393,000 viewers. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon')




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

The Satan Pit Overnights

Sunday, 11 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Overnight ratings for The Satan Pit, the season's ninth new Doctor Who episode of Doctor Who, are in: the episode was watched by 5.5 million viewers with a 35.6% audience share. Though the ratings are down from last week's series low (5.94 million), the audience share is still high and the show is relatively strong given the rest of the day's numbers: on this summer Saturday, Doctor Who was third overall on the Top 30 Programs by Audience on all UK networks, behind "World Cup Match of the Day Live" and "Casualty", and second overall for today by audience share totals, behind the World Cup program (which had enormous share/ratings numbers for UK programming).

Also tonight: the ninth episode of Doctor Who Confidential on BBC Three scored 445,200 viewers, with a 3.6% audience share (number two for the day's non-terrestrial channels). More details later. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon,' Andy Parish)




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

Australia New Season Promos

Thursday, 8 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

ABC TV Australia has begun screening adverts for the forthcoming debut of series two there. Using the tag, "Do you fancy a Christmas in July?", with clips from "The Christmas Invasion" shows, the 30-second promo doesn't identify the specific date the series is premiering on, only noting that the show is "returning soon". However, as we already reported it will be broadcast starting 8 July on ABC. The ABC website also has preview information. (Thanks to Murray Harper, William Binnie, Adam Kirk and Niall Doran)




FILTER: - Series 2/28 - Australia

Idiot's Lantern Figures, Plus More Ratings News

Wednesday, 7 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Final viewing figures are in from the BARB for The Idiot's Lantern, the seventh episode of the new season, broadcast on 27 May: 6.76 million viewers are said to have tuned into the broadcast, including time-shifted viewers. The episode was seventh highest on the list of total television shows (adjusted for multiple episodes, behind episodes of "Coronation Street," "EastEnders," "New Tricks," "Emmerdale" and "Heartbeat" and the special "Full Length and Fabulous: The Beckham World Cup Party") and eighteenth on the list of the week's total broadcasts. However, the episode only scored a bit less than 2% of a smaller viewing audience than the corresponding episode the previous season, "The Doctor Dances".

Some other BARB final ratings figures are now available. The original broadcast of Doctor Who Confidential on the same night as "The Idiot's Lantern" scored, according to the BARB, 453,000 viewers; the Sunday night repeat of Doctor Who on BBC3 (28 May) had 642,000 viewers, placing it #14 in the list of the top twenty non-terrestrial broadcasts for the week. Also, the repeat of the prior episode, The Age of Steel the night before the next, Friday 26 May, had a total of 394,000 viewers.

Meanwhile, for this past weekend's broadcasts, the Sunday night repeat of The Impossible Planet, the eighth episode of the season, on BBC3 was watched by 662,000 viewers (3.8% audience share) and "Doctor Who Confidential Cut Down," the reduced repeat version, had 421,000 viewers (2.1% share). Doctor Who was the most watched programme on BBC3 on Sunday. Additionally, the night before the broadcast of "The Impossible Planet," Friday night's (2 June) repeat of "The Idiot's Lantern," was watched by 407,500 viewers (2.6% share) while the repeat of "Confidential" originally broadcast with that episode was watched by 212,800 viewers (8.3% share). These figures are overnights reported by Viewingfigures (as opposed to BARB final ratings, which will be available next week.)

Finally, another piece of news regarding "The Impossible Planet": Preliminary figures indicate that it achieved an AI (audience appreciation index) figure of 85, while the AI figure for the broadcast of "Doctor Who Confidential" the same night had an AI figure of 83. (Thanks to 'Shaun Lyon,' Andy Parish)




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 2/28

US Ratings Report: "Bad Wolf"

Wednesday, 7 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon

Ratings for the twelfth episode of the first season of the new series, Bad Wolf, on US television on the Sci Fi Channel, have come in: the telecast dropped a bit to a 1.02 household rating with an average of 1.3 million viewers, down from the previous broadcast ("Boom Town") two weeks before and the smallest average audience to date for a Doctor Who original this season. The show was on a week-long hiatus, with viewers possibly tuning out after the lack of a broadcast the week before. Season-to-date, Sci Fi reports that Doctor Who is currently averaging a 1.27 household rating and an average audience of 1.5 million viewers for the season. The season finale airs this Friday, June 9.




FILTER: - USA - Ratings - Series 1/27

TARDIS Report: Weekend Coverage

Sunday, 4 June 2006 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
UK Ratings Update

Friday night's repeat of The Idiot's Lantern continued the 2005/2006 trend for higher BBC Three figures when the BBC One overnights have dipped, with an overnight audience of 407,500, an audience share of 2.6%, enough to top the 9pm non-terrestrial timeslot and fifth-placed in Friday's multichannel Top 10, its nearest rival on the digital channels being ITV3's Audience with Billy Connolly on 332,000. The week's total audience for The Idiot's Lantern in the overnights now stands at 7.34m, ahead of next week's release of the consolidated figures. Once timeshift figures are available, it is likely that the episode's total audience will be a little over eight million, below the series' average this year, but still leaving the show as one television's top performing programmes, even at its lowest audience level.

The rerun of the seventh Doctor Who Confidential Cut Down was watched by 212,800 (1.3% share). Doctor Who's slightly reduced audience this week is more than matched by significant ratings drops across UK television, with Friday's EastEnders for example being watched by only 7.6m, almost a million down on its same-day performance last year. In contrast, The Idiot's Lantern looks set for higher ratings than The Doctor Dances in 2005 (see OG news, 31 May).

The Impossible Planet: Saturday Press

The BBC's television homepage for Saturday was again dominated by a flash animation promoting this week's episode, which was also the BBC One site'sPick of the Day.

A ten-second trailer for The Impossible Planet made its regular Saturday-morning debut at just before 11.30. Reshown throughout the day from midday, it shows Rose and the Doctor being menaced by Ood ("We must feed"). As in the past few weeks, a slightly longer version was shown quarter-screen over the end credits of Neighbours at just before 6pm on Friday.

The Guardian was among Saturday's papers previewing the episode: "Oh, but this is fantastic - it's Alien plus The Matrix divided by The Exorcist, as the Tardis lands on a planet that shouldn't exist, orbiting a black hole. As the human crew of a space station are turned into ageless monsters, their kalimari-faced slaves are having problems with their translators, making them say worrying things like "the beast and his armies are coming." As the Doctor observes, it's all about as ominous as the phrase "this will be the best Christmas Walford has ever had."

Weekend Clips

The Evening Chronicle, Newcastle says, "How much am I loving the second series of Doctor Who (BBC ONE)? I can't even put into words how superior David Tennant's Doctor is to that grinning, gurning fool who went before him. Christopher "I'm a serious actor don't you know" Ecclestone may be gone but he's certainly not missed. The opening episode involving that stupid stretched face aside, this new series hasn't put a foot wrong. Werewolves chasing Queen Victoria, via K9's return, past the fabulous Cybermen double-bill to last week's corker which found an evil Maureen Lipman (The Wire) gobbling up people's faces from inside their TV sets in 1950s London. It's fun, funny and fast-paced ( all in all ideal Saturday-night entertainment. Although Billie Piper is starting to grate on me. I can't help but wonder if in the first series all of my negative energies were so focused on Christopher "I'm a serious actor don't you know" Ecclestone that she slipped under the radar. I think it's her strange Cockney accent that bothers me the most. Or the fact that she's gone a bit smug. You know what I mean, you've noticed it too. That said, I don't particularly want her to leave, so I won't be having words in high places, you know, like I did about a certain Christopher "I'm a serious actor don't you know" Ecclestone. Don't tell anyone though, yeah?"

The Stage said that "Since the weekend's overnight TV ratings came out, the knives have been sharpened for previous golden boy of BBC Drama, Doctor Who. As you can see from the graph (which shows overnight ratings in blue, and the official BARB figures, which factor in timeshifted video recordings, in red), the numbers viewing the nation's favourite Time Lord have dipped in the last couple of weeks, prompting The Guardian's media blog to speculate that the series may be going off the boil. ... Of course, things are rarely that easy. So many factors play into what constitutes a high-rating programme. For example, the huge jump a fortnight ago (which coincides with the return of the Cybermen) benefited from a huge follow-on audience from the FA Cup Final and acres of press coverage, including a rather splendid Radio Times cover. ITV1, which has traditionally played a strong hand on Saturday nights, that week delivered its lowest audience share ever. Contrast that with this week's episode. Instead of inheriting a football-loving audience, it competed with one, as Soccer Aid reached its climatic England v the Rest of the World conclusion, and gained a 31% share of the audience as a result — signs, maybe that Simon Shaps's strategy for the channel may be paying off at last. So, should the BBC be worried? With two Christmas specials and a full series already commissioned beyond this one, they will naturally want to ensure that they're getting the return for their investment. And, despite the quite significant downward trend suggested by the figures, there's no sign that they won't be. Saturday's programme still attracted a very healthy 32% share — a figure that may well grow once timeshifted video recordings are counted into BARB's final figures. It's unlikely that Doctor Who will ever again attain the heights of some of last year's episodes, which secured a phenomenal 45% of the viewing audience — but it's equally unlikely that it should ever be expected to. For those interested in following Doctor Who's ongoing ratings, the fans at Outpost Gallifrey are compiling more statistics than could possibly be healthy."

BBC News reported that "Actress Maureen Lipman, the latest alien on Doctor Who, has praised the sci-fi series as giving hope for family drama on television. Lipman played The Wire in last weekend's episode. She told the Hay Festival: "I think Billie Piper and David Tennant are wonderful and the writing is so good, it gives me hope that these writers are writing for families." Lipman derided much modern TV, including celebrity-style shows. The actress explained her recent part in Dr Who had been that of an alien, feeding off the minds of people watching the Queen's coronation in 1953. "My children seemed to think that was quite normal," she said. "It was very difficult, I didn't see a soul, I was trapped in a TV set in a Alexandra Palace, with a director and producer, it was like doing a Joyce Grenfell sketch. I had to imagine what was being said to me."

The Daily Star on Thursday said that "Doctor Who producer Russell T Davies has labelled the show's latest monster the scariest so far. Davies reckons audiences will be shaking with fear after seeing the Ood, a tentacled alien with evil red eyes. The creature will appear for the first time in Saturday's episode, called The Impossible Planet. ... Davies told the Radio Times: "I loved inventing the Slitheen and Raxacori cofalla-patorius and then I thought, 'Why don't I just call something the Ood?' They're the most brilliantly made monster in the world. I love them." And delighted Davies, 43, added they look like "they're permanently throwing up. It's really disgusting." The monster was created by prosthetics expert Neill Gorton. He added: "There's always a brief description in the script. For this story it was 'bald albino things with tentacles like a sea anemone rather than a mouth'."

Of Friday night's airing of "Bad Wolf", the US TV Guide magazine had this to say: "In the annals of Doctor Who, was there ever a more unsettling sight than the masses of Daleks who surrounded Rose and shrieked "Exterminate!"? And was there ever a cooler response than the Doctor's: "I'm going to save Rose Tyler, I'm going to save the Earth, and then---just to finish up---I'm going to wipe every last stinking Dalek off the face of the Earth!!!" He doesn't have a clue as to how he's going to do this BUT it does scare the Daleks to death. It's the most entertaining thing Satellite Five has had on for, well, 100 years. That was when the Doctor and Rose last visited. They didn't intend to visit again, but they---and Jack---were abducted from the TARDIS by transmat beams that deposited them in various game/reality shows. You think there's a glut of them now? In the year 200,100 there are 60 versions of Big Brother alone. While the Doctor finds himself a housemate ("I don't believe this") Rose lands on The Weakest Link, unaware that she has to win to survive. Jack winds up with robot versions of What Not To Wear's Trinny and Susannah, who frown on his "Oklahoma Farm Boy" look. How did this happen? Where is the history that the Doctor supposedly set right the last time he was on Satellite Five. Where is the Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire? Lynda, his Big Brother housemate, informs him that when the Satellite Five news reports were shut down, the planet's economy and government collapsed as a result. "100 years of hell," was Lynda's terse summation. Oops. Someone had to fill the void. Guess who showed up? Those little pepper shaker bastards. ... However, nothing was more moving than Rose's apparent death. The Doctor's facial expression as he fingered the dust spoke more than volumes---it spoke tomes. We knew she couldn't be dead, but you had to wonder how the show was going to explain her reemergence. Turns out the beam that zapped the poor folks who lost in the game shows was really just a transmat beam. Rose was transmatted to the Daleks who plotted to use her as a hostage to prevent the Doctor from meddling with their master plan. Nice idea, wrong guy to mess with. Again, when the Doctor laid down the gauntlet I wanted to get up and cheer. It was like Henry V's speech at Agincourt. Now as for the Bad Wolf references, I already know what it refers to so I won't spoil it. But I will say that it totally went right under my snout until the Welsh episode two weeks ago. Kudos to those who picked up on it earlier. For now, I must say that Friday night can't come soon enough...a) because I could use another weekend and b) because I have to see how the Doctor deals with those MASSES of Daleks. If there was ever a time he could do with a hand from his other selves, this is it!"

Also... TV Squad reviewed "Bad Wolf" from Friday night's US transmission; and the Belfast Telegraph joins the cavalcade of reports predicting ratings gloom.




FILTER: - Russell T Davies - Ratings - Series 2/28 - Press - Radio Times