Forum - View topicNEWS: DBZ: Kai, Akame ga KILL! Topped Saturday U.S. Cable Ratings
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yuna49
Posts: 3804 |
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First, these ratings are based on "metered" households, ones where Nielsen has obtained permission to install a box that monitors what is being watched. The modern boxes can measure delayed viewing on DVRs as well. Read the details in the articles Ushio posted for details. The "diaries" that rizuchan describes are only used in "sweep" periods (February, May, July, and November) so that smaller markets where meters are not cost-effective can be measured.
Nielsen works very hard to secure a representative sample of households, especially when it comes to meters. With millions of dollars turning on a single rating point, their methods are subject to review and criticism from the networks and the advertising agencies every day. Also we are talking about a Saturday in August when overall viewership is low, and everything is in reruns. |
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rshackleford
Posts: 5 Location: Fushimimomoyama |
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fwiw, Neilson said to me 2 weeks ago that the 18-35(or 49) demographic isn't as in demand with marketers anymore, hence less meters for households in that demo. They said they're focusing on older, it "matters more", to advertisers. Not sure how that affects the overall ratings picture though.
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Aura Ichadora
Posts: 2302 Location: In front of my computer |
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theNightster
Posts: 1328 |
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looks like Adult swim's contract with Sentai is ironically here to stay(I say ironically because people speculated the reason for a lack of Sentai filmworks shows on toonami was because of how Eva and Milk chan didn't do well on AS back in the ADV films days)
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doubleO7
Posts: 1072 |
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And yet, 850K at 2:30 in the morning is still quite high. So sure, it's not as popular as Naruto, and it tends to go back-and-forth with AOT, but clearly tons of people still watch it. When Toonami first returned, the front half of the block was struggling to pull those kinds of ratings. The fact that the new baseline for people to complain about a show doing poorly is now the 700k-900k range is kind of amazing actually and just shows how far they've come over the past 3 years. |
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enurtsol
Posts: 14886 |
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It is flawed and outdated, but it's the best that can be done right now. At one point, they tried to put it in every cable/satellite box and TV, but people cited privacy concerns so it's NIMBY.
http://circanews.com/news/nielsen-measures-online-streaming
Netflix already showed they can succeed with online-only "TV" shows. |
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Greed1914
Posts: 4620 |
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That actually makes a lot of sense considering the trend of how people are viewing shows now. Younger people are ditching cable in favor of just streaming what they want, so targeting your TV ads towards them is increasingly likely to miss the mark. Some of the appeal of the 18-35 demo also came from going after people who were making money but not necessarily weighed down by obligations like family or student loans. Nowadays though, that 18-35 group simply doesn't have that much disposable income and it is the older crowd that can actually afford to buy things on a whim. |
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enurtsol
Posts: 14886 |
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With so many channels on TV, you'd only get 10+ million if you're a bona fide hit like Breaking Bad or Walking Dead. |
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Hameyadea
Posts: 3679 |
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I know that in some countries TV ratings are measured via a special, DVR-like device that notes which programme the TV was tuned to, for how long it was tuned, and for how long the TV was on. A quick explanation on Nielsen's Digital Meter (from 2003, so of course the methods mentioned are mostly obsolete, but the general idea still stands). |
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FlyGuySempai
Posts: 243 |
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Can't you just say congrats and move on, instead of questioning everything? |
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FlyGuySempai
Posts: 243 |
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One Piece almost never beats Naruto, lol what are you talking about? And AOt has run twice and is still getting respectable ratings. |
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Dessa
Posts: 4438 |
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There's a huge difference in people watching the whole episode, or just a part of it. Watching the whole episode bodes well, it means that they at least liked what they saw enough to finish the episode, which in turn makes it more likely for them to watch the second. If they only watched a portion of it, it didn't interest them enough to even finish the episode, which means the ratings for the second episode will drop off significantly. I want AgK (and Parasyte, and other Sentai shows) to do well, which is why I asked for more info. |
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emory
Posts: 615 |
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Technically everyone counts. Just not in the way you're expecting. A rating is an average minute statistic. Every minute, Nielsen's meters collect who is watching the program, adds them up afterwards, and divides by the length of the show in minutes. In other words, an average of 1,822,000 people were watching Akame ga Kill! during any given minute it was on. Of course, that is not the total number of unique individuals that tuned in to the program at any time while it was on. Networks can receive that information privately, along with stats like minute-by-minute breakdowns, who's watching during the commercials, who sticks around the longest, and so on. Those stats aren't published publicly. |
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leafy sea dragon
Posts: 7163 Location: Another Kingdom |
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You still have most people in North America who think that anime is a kids' thing. On top of that, there isn't a lot of advertising done on other channels or outside of television for Toonami (such as billboards, bus ads, movie theater trailers, etc.), so I'd bet most people flipping through their provider's guides would see names like "Akame ga Kill!" and "Michiko and Hatchin" and have no interest because they're unfamiliar names. Obviously, this goes for streaming services too. Brand name familiarity can go a long way.
I actually watched Akame ga Kill! at 9:30 PM on Saturday night. I live on the west coast but get the eastern Cartoon Network, so everything shows three hours early.
That's because of two major factors: The elderly are about equally likely to watch any available channel on television at any given time of the day regardless of how late or early it is (this is why you see commercials for AARP recruitment, Life Alert, arthritis medication, and life insurance on pretty much every program), and the elderly, many of whom are retired with money to burn, are more likely to buy things. I remember studying demographics and psychographics in college and this being one of the things that surprised me enough for it to stand out, that the elderly will watch pretty much anything. They will pay attention to what's on too, even if they don't always understand it all.
Yeah, that makes me think of how home shopping channels and telemarketers are currently aimed at old people because many will actually buy these items on impulse, sometimes multiple ones, which they'll give to other people. One time, I was given an ox figurine from one such old person, with the surface made of real ox leather and the horns made from real ox horns. It smelled terrible. |
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jrockfreak
Posts: 125 |
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I dont even start watching toonami until DBZ goes off but I did really enjoy Akame ga Kill and love Michiko & Hatchin
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