05-11-2017, 08:20 PM
(05-11-2017, 06:05 PM)Circe27 Wrote:13 is "Trial by Fire" where the biest fight is.(05-11-2017, 02:32 PM)MarylikesGrimm Wrote:(05-11-2017, 01:46 PM)Circe27 Wrote: There are a number of factors on why the show was just cancelled, it's not just Nadalind. This was a supernatural show on Friday night on NBC that had a late series premieres which gave ample time for viewers to find other shows to watch and get invested in before this one started, oddly timed breaks, poorly promoted, and the ratings started to fluctuate early on season 4 before Nadalind.
Season 5 is Nadalind. IMO Adalind staying at Bud's so she is not homeless is not Nadadlind.
(05-11-2017, 01:58 PM)Circe27 Wrote:I compared Season 4 (1st to 2nd half)-1 to 12 / 13- 22 both the demo values and viewers dropped.(05-11-2017, 01:48 PM)Loona Wrote: Sure, but it was the time when Juliette changed and Adalind get pregnant with the grimm baby ;-)The first time the rating dropped in season 4 was episode 2. Before Juliette changed and Adalind knew she was pregnant. It dropped every other episode it seems.
13 is "Trial by Fire" where the biest fight is.
Grimm
Season 4
Show 1-12 13-22
demo viewers(mil)
1.25 4.9628
1.03 4.6205
I agree Nadalind didn't happen until season 5, I was saying the season 4 drop couldn't be blamed on Nadalind. Episode 4.2 was like a 1.1 from a 1.4 premiere. I think the premier was the highest one that season.
In season 4, shows from 1 to 12, one lowest demo value is 1.1 and the highest demo value is 1.4. While the shows 13-22 demo values range is low of 0.9 to the high of 1.1. All the demo values of the first half is higher or equal to all the values of the second half. This is the only season with a clear during season drop in demo but this can only suggest something that happen that cause more young people to stop viewing. The season averages for demo go down even when viewership goes up. The demo only goes down after season 2.
Mary: The whole industry has rating declines due to younger people dropping out of tv.
http://adage.com/article/media/returning...op/300786/
By Anthony Crupi. Published on October 06, 2015.
While time-shifting likely accounts for a big chunk of the overall ratings declines -- not to mention the cannibalistic scourge that is Netflix et al -- the likelihood of the networks' capturing more than a pittance of the concomitant lost advertising impressions remains low. As much as the Big Four have become far more proactive in steering viewers to the more ad-friendly VOD environments, commercial deliveries will continue to suffer so long as DVR remains the dominant time-shifting vehicle. (We'll have a much better sense of where the guaranteed ratings stand next week, once Nielsen has completed processing the season's first batch of C3 data. Stay tuned.)
One final trend worth mentioning has to do with TV usage among the younger demos. A year ago, young women began disappearing from broadcast's radar, and while the numbers for week one weren't exactly encouraging, there appears to have been some improvement since the season began. For example, while PUT (people using TV) levels among women 18-to-34 were down 10% in week one, the declines moderated to minus-5% in week two. Likewise, after usage among women 18-to-24 was down 13% during the first week of the season, that improved to minus-6% a week ago.
Unfortunately, the younger male viewers didn't seem to get the memo. Whereas PUT levels for men 18-to-34 were down 15% in week one, they weren't much better the following week (-13%). The same applied to usage among men 18-24, which dropped 19% during premiere week and remained in the doldrums (-18%) last week.
By Anthony Crupi. Published on October 06, 2015.
Women characters do not have to be having sex with the lead to be important to the story.