Gogglebox continues to rise on slow Thursday
Gogglebox continued to grow its audience and secure a win in all the demographics in a slow night for TV last night winning , as no show managed to crack a million metro viewers.
The Ten show, which the network confirmed would return next year, managed 643,000 viewers to win its 8.30pm timeslot. It was also the most time-shifted show last week managing an extra 100,000 taking its total to 733,000.
Nine’s The Verdict slumped to 419,000 at 8.30pm, despite a special episode debating last week’s Paris attacks.
Nine did manage the most-watched non-news show last night with RBT at 7.30pm getting 770,000 viewers, and a repeat at 8pm managing 709,000, according to OzTam’s overnight metro ratings.
Do Googlebox insist that their social commentators sit in exactly the same seats?
I’m still waiting for the Mumbrella post that describe the decline and fall of FTA TV in Australia
Hi Duncan,
We did a big piece on declining audience and some of the challenges around measurement a few weeks ago. See link here: https://staging.mumbrella.com.au/you-wouldnt-buy-a-different-tv-set-for-each-network-so-why-arent-they-collaborating-on-streaming-327213
Cheers
Nic – Mumbrella
I was surprised to read this week the Goggleboxers don’t get paid (well…besides their TV snacks!).
I’m guessing something like The Bachelor must pay a fee as the contestants are away from home and their jobs.
Something like Family Feud wouldn’t pay as its a game of skill / potential rewards etc.
Does anybody have more info how this works?
But I guess if people are willing to do Gogglebox to get famous, then that’s absolutely their choice.
Hi SACD,
I have it from good authority that Goggleboxers do get paid – a fee I’m not at liberty to disclose – but frankly, they’re not paid well, IMHO.
Your point about getting famous (or at least enjoying the spotlight) I would suggest is the reason why many of them are happy to accept what they get paid.
Crack open the champagne !!!!!
I remember when this only happened when shows cracked the million mark, which USED to happen regularly when we had a smaller population.