Jump to content

ARTICLE: RATINGS: ‘Days of our Lives’ Ends Its Broadcast Television Run on a Whimper


Errol

Recommended Posts

  • Webmaster
Judi Evans, Robert Scott Wilson, Wally Kurth, Days of our Lives, DAYS, DOOL, #DAYS, #DOOL

After 57 seasons on television, “Days of our Lives” ended its broadcast television run on NBC during the week of September 5-9, 2022. Beginning Monday, September 12, the soap became a streaming only series, exclusively available to subscribers of Peacock and its premium tier. With only three soaps remaining on daytime broadcast, find out how “Days of our Lives” performed in Total Viewers, Households, Women 18-49 and Women 25-54 rating during its final broadcast television week.

Among Total Viewers, “Days of our Lives” continued to rank fourth among the daytime broadcast soaps, attracting just 1.679 million viewers and 1.1 rating in households, increasing +93,000 viewers week to week and +20,000 viewers compared to the same week last year. Compared to all of daytime broadcast, the soap ranked 10th overall among viewers and tied for 10th in Women 18-49 rating with ”TODAY with Hoda & Jenna” (1.509 million) and reruns of “The Talk” (1.229 million). The soap was also tied for seventh place in Women 25-54 rating, ahead of reruns of “The Talk” and “GMA3: What You Need to Know” (1.424 million).

In the all-important key sales demos, however, the soap tied its series low in Women 18-49 for the second consecutive week, flat with its week ago performance and down -0.1 from the year ago period. “Days of our Lives” averaged a 0.4 rating in Women 25-54, flat week to week and year to year.

Of the six daytime soaps exiting broadcast television since 2009, either by cancellation or a move to another platform, “Days of our Lives” ranks just ahead of “Passions” among Total Viewers during their respective finale weeks.

  • “One Life to Live” (2012, ABC) – 3.120 million
  • “All My Children” (2011, ABC) – 2.999 million
  • ”Guiding Light” (2009, CBS) – 2.602 million
  • ”As The World Turns” (2010, CBS) – 2.593 million
  • ”Days of our Lives” (2022, NBC) – 1.679 million
  • ”Passions” (2007, NBC) – 1.645 million
Peacock TV, Peacock TV Logo
Peacock TV LLC

Like all other daytime broadcast shows for the week, “Days of our Lives” was preempted all or in part on Thursday, September 8 (full) and Friday, September 9 (41 minutes) due to NBC News coverage on the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the ascension of King Charles III. The episodes were made available without interruption on Peacock, giving fans another reason to sign up for the streaming service which is currently selling premium subscriptions for as little as $1.99 a month or $19.99 for an annual plan through the end of September.

A complete look at how daytime broadcast performed during the week of September 5-9, 2022 will be posted shortly.



Note: The post RATINGS: ‘Days of our Lives’ Ends Its Broadcast Television Run on a Whimper appeared first on the Soap Opera Network website.

Read More

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 10
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • Members

Oh my, can I just say, Yikes! or MEOW, not sure which!! What an incredible "other shoe" to drop. WTG, @Errol! finely put, with just the right heft. But, the thing of it is, it's true & accurate. What's left to say? Well, the most important thing of all ... how did they land on their new turf?

Please register in order to view this content

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I wouldn't say Passions was a disappointment during its entire run - I think around 2002-03 or somewhere around that mark, it was one of the few soaps that managed to grow from its initial ratings on broadcast and was impressive in the younger demographic (which is how it survived almost a decade on air). It's just that as JER increasingly lost the plot, so did Passions (and by extension DAYS in his second run).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I recall NBC trumpeting that Passions was strong in the 13-17 demo and tried to claim that this cohort would keep watching as they grew into the desirable 18 + demo.

Conveniently ignoring that what you watched as a  teen doesn't necessarily translate into what you would want to watch as you grew older.

If Passions had have gone for a more serious gothic tone, it might have done better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

And, of course, PSSN did so well with 2-12 yr olds! It gave some PTB pause to try to think how they could monetize that ... which they couldn't really. Of course some PTB at that time were just sure that JER was going to bring home winners in every demo. They had to scramble to get behind what they had, not what they'd dreamt of.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Yes, absolutely. Just look at Dark Shadows - it also burnt very bright for two years or so and then it just fell. Part of it was blamed on Dan Curtis checking out to do the movie, but on the other hand, regular soap fans are ridiculously devoted and won't tune out in droves because of a bad few months (which weren't that bad tbh). The implication being here that the Dark Shadows fans who brought it to its heights were more fickle than regular soap watchers; same with the kind of audience who tuned into Passions 30 years later. 

 

Either way, Passions does deserve some credit for actually improving its initial ratings for a while - something that neither Sunset Beach or Port Charles managed to do.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

IMO Dark Shadows could've potentially survived in some form if Dan Curtis had been willing to modernize and merge its style with that of conventional daytime rhythms and romances of the period. He didn't do that because he was a showman and impresario first, not a showrunner. He was always chasing the next big hype in any project (his future cult classic Burnt Offerings is pretty much a more star-laden and violent retelling of Night of Dark Shadows) and it was a part of the show; investing in any real couples or characters beyond the monster set like Barnabas, Julia, Angelique, Quentin, etc. was not happening. The closest parallel to what DS could've become was and remains Edge of Night, which regularly told gothic, occasionally supernaturally-tinged mysteries and had a very unique flair and atmosphere but retained a core canvas of characters with popular couples and ongoing subplots in the present day world. There was a way to allow it to survive, but Curtis simply didn't build it for that.

OTOH, more people in the mainstream remember DS and option it for future material today than Edge of Night, so what does that tell you?

Edited by Vee
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • And the third thing, which I have no cite for, and I may look to see if one is findable, but supposedly she said that the show had too much gay content in it. And, to be fair, that could be someone making a criticism about balance & not be bigotry but when it's added to the other, that's why it bugs people.
    • Please register in order to view this content

      The greatest tv series season finale in history.   
    • Mick Savage was sooo unbearable. And more unbearable was the reaction from the female characters to him - they were acting like he is God's gift to women and sooo irresistible. To a point of unbelievable cringe. 
    • Today was a short one. Only 33 minutes.  The ‘Part One’ graphic at the beginning was pretty interesting though. I didn’t expect them to do something like that.  I like how everything was focused around John and his family and friends. Again, the acting and the dialogue was very well done and well written. And I love that they were able to incorporate Drake’s, “swing for the fences” phrase into the script. It was nice seeing everyone interact with each other, especially characters who don’t often share scenes together. It felt like every character was part of a big family or community. Plus, an outdoor funeral in June makes a lot more sense than an outdoor funeral in December.  But yeah, it’s very, very strange that Will isn’t at the funeral, especially since we know that 

      Please register in order to view this content

      I would much rather he had been there today. And, where’s Anna too? And Jack and Jennifer? What was the point of bringing them all back if they weren’t going to attend the funeral? I expected Steve to want to close down BlackPatch, though I’d rather he just retire and let Paul take it over. But I like that Kayla was there to comfort him. I wonder if he’s going to change his mind at some point.  It was nice seeing Shane again too. Now, he just needs to have more scenes with his son lol but I enjoyed seeing him comfort Marlena. I’m not really sure about his interaction with Cat though? Was it really necessary for this to happen now, at John’s funeral? They could’ve waited a little longer to introduce this story arc.  Btw, was Tate bleeding from his head in his first scene with Arianna? 
    • This is the coldest early June in my life. It's like it's January. 
    • Please register in order to view this content

       
    • Now this strikes me as funny. I have it up on my acct. The thing is I only have S2. Didn't want either 1 or 3.  Perhaps I should just list all of these that I have up.  Parodies: Dirty Sexy Money, Filthy Rich Incomplete: The Monroes, All That Glitters, Falcon Crest (have all just not all up), Once & Again S2 only Complete: Models Inc, Pasadena, Pacific Palisades, Paper Dolls, Flamingo Road  
    • This is wonderful! Thank you for posting this! I loved the first two seasons and never got to see the final season when they cancelled the DVD release. I've been hoping this popped up on streaming but no luck. Happy I'll finally get to see how it ended!
    • “Gender is who you are, and sexuality is who you want.” — C.N. Lester, “Trans Like Me: A Journey for All of Us” St. Pete bridge lit for Pride

      Please register in order to view this content

    • In case it is of interest to anyone here, I have digital copies (computer files, mp4 etc.) of all of the episodes. And, besides having the files they are all up on my usual video hosting site, acct name: shallotpeel, channel it is in: Primetime Soaps and file names like  Flamingo Road S1E15 Hurricane Flamingo Road was a primetime soap on NBC by Lorimar Productions. 2 seasons. 1980-1982. Morgan Fairchild, Barbara Rush. Developed by Rita Lakin.   
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy