Posts Tagged ‘Entertainment’
Analyzing Wednesday night on the fall sked
Most networks like to limit their fall launches to about five new shows, but ABC is tossing out the rule book — rolling out a quirky quintet on Wednesday alone.
A guide to Labor Day marathons and specials
Posted Sep 4th 2009 6:10PM by Bob Sassone Filed under: Programming , Reality-Free Ah, Labor Day.
3rd Promo for Criminal Minds 5X01
The way they cut that it looks like the bad guy shoots the gun, but it’s got blanks in it, and Hotch responds about playing games.
‘Wipeout’ leads ABC to Wednesday victory
Wipeout led ABC to a Wednesday night victory, according to the latest viewing figures.
NBC Leads Midweek Troops
Third overall was ABC, followed by Fox and The CW. Steep erosion for The CW is a reflection of the two-hour season-premiere of America’s Next Top Model airing on the year-ago evening.
Primetime Ratings: ‘Glee’ Pilot Replay Sings Into Second
The viewer total, 4.1 million, was fourth in the hour. The pilot originally aired in late May and scored a 4.3/11 with 10.7 million viewers at the time; the numbers certainly buoyed by having the final American Idol performance show of the season as its lead-in. Elsewhere, ABC’s Wipeout led the charge Wednesday night with a 2.6/9 and 7.6 million …
‘America’s Got Talent’ brings NBC most viewers Wednesday
NBC had the most viewers Wednesday night, but Disney-owned ABC had the most young adults.
Primetime Ratings: a Glee’ Pilot Replay Sings Into Second
A repeat of the pilot of Fox’s highly-promoted fall cornerstone Glee earned a 1.8/5 rating in the 9 p.m. hour, just hanging on to a second-place finish in the time slot.
‘Wipeout,’ ‘Talent’ top primetime ratings
One week away from the debut of fall programming on the night, ABC’s “Wipeout” and NBC’s “America’s Got Talent” were the top draws in key demos on Wednesday.
Fall 2009: The Wednesday Night Lineup
Bravo ABC! Wednesday night on the Alphabet network features four brand spankin’ new sitcoms starring some old faves, and a new drama that appears to be every chick show rolled into one, called Eastwick .