The survivalist competition has become the most successful full-length series in SBS’s history – and is even beating once-dominant reality shows on rival networks.
The ABC’s Friday night chat show featured conversations with famous Australians and promised viewers there would be “no better way to spend your Friday nights”.
People who complain the series is insensitive haven’t watched it,so they are unaware of the tastefulness of the treatment of the murders and how respectful it is of the grief of the families involved.
TV ratings provider OzTAM was forced to rapidly update the way it measures the pay TV and streaming company’s data.
Married at First Sight,Survivor and the rebooted Australian Idol are all going head-to-head this week,and viewers have made their alliances clear.
This year’s World Cup attracted huge ratings for SBS,raising questions about the A-League’s inability to draw big audiences.
There can be only one winner in the 2022 TV ratings battle. Unless there can be two.
TV shows don’t come much bigger. But determining which one is more popular with viewers is no mean feat.
Numbers were down for the two biggest games in Australian sport. But the picture is more complicated than that suggests.
How did a show that talks about eshays,Centrelink and a “tongue punch in the fart box” become a global hit? It might be part of a broader trend in Australian TV.
At its peak,1 in 5 Australians watched the Queen’s funeral on TV on Monday night. But finding out exactly how many people watched it around the world isn’t easy.