With The Voice over for another year,should we judge Seven’s gamble on the revamped format a resounding success or not?
The post-Olympic halo shines bright for The Voice as a change of tune delivers a ratings juggernaut for Seven.
A friendly time zone and a locked-down audience are conspiring to deliver big viewer numbers for the Olympics. But the real action is on 7plus.
She may have been booted out of the country on Tuesday,but right-wing motormouth Katie Hopkins looks set to laugh all the way to the bank back in Dear Old Blighty.
The television boss was farewelled by cameo appearances from Kerry Stokes,Larry Emdur,Alan Jones,John Hartigan,and Sonia Kruger at a service in Sydney on Friday.
Ten’s long-running cooking competition finished on Tuesday night,with a surprise winner and a disappointing number of viewers.
The Wimbledon women’s final was the third-most-watched television event of 2021.
An average national free-to-air audience of 2.7 million tuned in on Nine to watch NSW’s 50-6 demolition of Queensland,and demand for streaming also continued to grow.
“I think the industry is a bit silly to put out the smallest possible number at 9.05am the next day,” says Seven chief executive James Warburton.
An average 670,000 metropolitan viewers tuned-in to watch season 13’s debut – down from the 1.23 million who watched last year’s premiere.
The versatile Tom Riley is tackling sci-fi fantasy in The Nevers − and getting over when Robert Pattinson took his limelight.