Jump to content

ARTICLE: Daytime Broadcast Ratings For The Week of September 16-20, 2024


Errol

Recommended Posts

  • Webmaster
The View, General Hospital, GH, GH ABC, ABC, ABC Daytime, #TheView, #GH, #GeneralHospital

Closing out the 2023-2024 broadcast television season, ABC’s “The View” (2.393 million; 1.7 HH rating) was once again the standout performer among Total Viewers during the week of September 16-20, 2024.

Not only did “The View” attract its largest overall audience since the week of July 22-26, 2024, but it was also the show’s best performance during the third week into a television season since the third week into Season 24 (week of September 21-25, 2020).

“The View” was up +118,000 viewers over its week ago performance, and up +133,000 viewers over its performance during the comparable week last year. Further, the daytime talk show was up +226,000 viewers over its performance during the same week in 2022, and up +8,000 viewers over its performance during the same week in 2021.

Among the key sales demographics, “The View” was virtually on par with its performance one week earlier among Women 18-49 (0.18 rating vs. 0.19 rating) while flat week-to-week among Women 25-54 (0.28 rating). That said, compared to the same week last year, the talk show was down the most among all daytime broadcast shows among both demographics.

General Hospital

Despite the carriage dispute no longer impacting DIRECTV subscribers when it came to accessing the ABC Owned Television Stations, “General Hospital” (1.818 million; 1.2 HH rating) saw week-to-week declines across the board.

For the week, “General Hospital” was down -14,000 viewers compared to its performance one week earlier (week of September 9-13, 2024) among Total Viewers, down -0.03 among Women 18-49 (0.19 rating vs. 0.22 rating) and down -0.02 among Women 25-54 (0.32 rating vs 0.34 rating). The show’s year-to-year declines were even steeper, down -198,000 viewers compared to the same week last year (1.818 million vs. 2.016 million), the most for any daytime broadcast show, down -0.07 among Women 18-49 (0.19 rating vs. 0.26 rating) and down -0.11 among Women 25-54 (0.32 rating vs. 0.43 rating).

“General Hospital” has now averaged less than two million viewers for the 23rd consecutive week and the 29th time overall out of the now concluded broadcast television season (2023-2024). Although the streak officially began during the week of April 15-19, 2024, the first time the ABC soap averaged less than two million viewers during the 2023-2024 television season was during the week of October 9-13, 2023. That was followed by a four-week streak that ran from the week of November 27-December 1, 2023 through the week of December 18-22, 2023.

Note: “General Hospital” averaged less than two million viewers on a few occasions in the past, primarily during the early stages following the show’s return to originals in the fall of 2020, and again over a five-week period before the start of the 2023-2024 season, starting the week of August 14-18, 2023 through the week of September 11-15, 2023. For at least two of those weeks, there was a carriage dispute between Disney and Charter Communications (including Spectrum).

The Bold and the Beautiful / The Young and the Restless

Opposite its daytime soap opera competition, “The Bold and the Beautiful” (2.579 million; 1.7 HH rating) ranked a solid number one for the fifth time in six weeks (including ties) among Women 18-49, tying “The Young and the Restless” (2.881 million; 1.9 HH rating) for the week, each with a 0.25 rating in the key sales demographic. That said, both soaps were down -0.02 compared to their week ago performance among Women 18-49 (0.25 rating vs. 0.27 rating).

Among Women 25-54, the CBS soaps were up +0.02 over their performance one week earlier with “The Bold and the Beautiful” averaging a 0.43 rating this week vs. 0.41 rating last week while “The Young and the Restless” averaged a 0.46 rating this week vs. 0.44 rating last week.

Among Total Viewers, “The Young and the Restless” once again averaged less than three million viewers, this time marking its 10th consecutive week below that number. Overall, the soap has averaged less than three million viewers 13 times during the 2023-2024 broadcast television season.

Note: “The Bold and the Beautiful” opened Season 38 on Monday, September 16, 2024.

The Talk / GMA3: What You Need to Know / NBC News Daily

Already off to a lackluster start last week, the 15th and final season of “The Talk” (1.177 million; 0.8 HH rating) is turning into a dud for CBS. Not only did the show drop week-to-week among Total Viewers, down -54,000 viewers, but the show also managed to drop among Women 18-49, down -0.02 (0.15 ratings vs. 0.17 rating). Interestingly, “The Talk” did see week-to-week increases among Women 25-54, up +0.02 (0.26 rating vs. 0.24 rating).

Compared to the second week of Season 14 (week of October 16-20, 2023), “The Talk” is down -112,000 viewers and down -0.03 among Women 18-49 (0.15 rating vs. 0.18 rating). The show was flat with its year ago performance among Women 25-54 (0.26 rating).

Overall, “The Talk” is attracting some of its lowest ratings ever for first-run episodes despite topping “GMA3: What You Need to Know” (1.300 million; 0.9 HH rating) among Women 18-49 (0.15 rating vs. 0.14 rating), and topping both “GMA3” and “NBC News Daily” (1.123 million; 0.7 HH rating) among Women 25-54 (0.26 rating vs. 0.22 rating).

Wrap-Up

What follows is a breakdown of how daytime broadcast performed during the week of September 16-20, 2024 in Women 18-49, Women 25-54, Households and Total Viewers, including their performance during the comparable week last year.

A closer look at how the daytime soaps performed, including their daily performance breakdown in the demos, will be posted shortly.

Note: Only figures available to Soap Opera Network at press time are published below. The full ratings report, including individual show rankings, will return following the official start of the 2024-2025 broadcast television season (week of September 23-27, 2024).

Week of September 16-20, 2024 Rankers

Women 18-49 Rating

Show / NetworkThis WeekLast Week2023
The Price is Right 2 (CBS) – R0.410.380.40
The Price is Right 1 (CBS) – R0.380.340.38
TODAY 3rd Hour (NBC)0.270.260.32
The Bold and the Beautiful (CBS)0.250.270.29
The Young and the Restless (CBS)0.250.270.32
TODAY with Hoda & Jenna (NBC)0.220.190.25
General Hospital (ABC)0.190.220.26
The View (ABC)0.180.190.27
The Talk (CBS)0.150.17N/A*
NBC News Daily (NBC)0.150.150.15
GMA3: What You Need to Know (ABC)0.140.140.17
Source: Nielsen (Live+Same Day) – September 16-20, 2024

Women 25-54 Rating

Show / NetworkThis WeekLast Week2023
The Price is Right 2 (CBS) – R0.590.530.61
The Price is Right 1 (CBS) – R0.570.490.55
The Young and the Restless (CBS)0.460.440.54
The Bold and the Beautiful (CBS)0.430.410.46
TODAY 3rd Hour (NBC)0.390.370.51
General Hospital (ABC)0.320.340.43
TODAY with Hoda & Jenna (NBC)0.300.290.39
The View (ABC)0.280.280.40
The Talk (CBS)0.260.24N/A*
GMA3: What You Need to Know (ABC)0.220.230.29
NBC News Daily (NBC)0.220.220.25
Source: Nielsen (Live+Same Day) – September 16-20, 2024

Households

Show / NetworkThis WeekLast Week2023
The Young and the Restless (CBS)1.92.02.1
The Bold and the Beautiful (CBS)1.71.81.8
The View (ABC)1.71.61.5
General Hospital (ABC)1.21.21.3
GMA3: What You Need to Know (ABC)0.90.80.9
The Talk (CBS)0.80.8N/A*
NBC News Daily (NBC)0.70.80.8
Source: Nielsen (Live+Same Day) – September 16-20, 2024

Total Viewers (In Millions)

Show / NetworkThis WeekLast Week2023
The Young and the Restless (CBS)2,8812,9893,064
The Bold and the Beautiful (CBS)2,5792,6892,667
The View (ABC)2,3932,2752,260
General Hospital (ABC)1,8181,8322,016
The Talk (CBS)1,1771,231N/A*
GMA3: What You Need to Know (ABC)1,3001,2271,424
NBC News Daily (NBC)1,1231,1581,075
Source: Nielsen (Live+Same Day) – September 16-20, 2024

The numbers above are calculated using Live+Same Day viewing and DVR playback, defined as 3:00 a.m.-3:00 a.m., and are courtesy of Nielsen. Household ratings are the percentage of TV homes in the U.S. tuned into television, each representing 1,250,000 homes as of the 2023-2024 television season.

Beginning August 31, 2020, national ratings include Out of Home (OOH) viewing. Previously, ratings did not include OOH viewing. Averages are based on regular telecasts.

LEGEND
R = RepeatS = SpecialP = Premiere
NR = Not Rated / Not RankedN/A = Not Available* denotes further information

Summary (Preemptions/Schedule Changes)*

  • “The Talk” aired for just 19 minutes on Monday, September 16, Nielsen reported.

    The show launched Season 15 during the week of September 9-13, 2024. Since late June, the show aired amended repeats which were not reported by Nielsen and did not factor into the show’s weekly or Season 14 average. Speaking of Season 14, that season did not launch until the week of October 9-13, 2023 due to the dual Hollywood strikes.

There were no further preemptions or schedule changes reported by Nielsen for the week of September 16-20, 2024.



Note: The post Daytime Broadcast Ratings For The Week of September 16-20, 2024 appeared first on the Soap Opera Network website.

Read More

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 15
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

  • Members

The big winner is The View.

A rerun of TPIR is the only program to go up in the 18-49 demo. That's bad!

Lucky s return on GH has been a complete utter failure!!

The Boring and The Beautiful dropped in almost all categories.

@Errol Thanks for posting the ratings!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

One thing I found interesting was that ABC made sure to highlight High Potential’s performance in the top 15 on Hulu this week. GH maintains a spot there regularly but I’ve yet to see a presser from them hyping that up. I wish we could get the official numbers and I wonder if the show would make the streamer charts if more episodes were made available longer than 2 weeks.

Please register in order to view this content

 

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

    • That would've been a good pick! She was great on B&B and like you said, she's already in Atlanta.
    • Please register in order to view this content

    • Oooo. I like the current actress, but that's a pretty great choice.
    • And you would be correct re: Damian. I've said the same. And Bonus...he had a story with twists. So I for one got annoyed, but cautious when the Dumas twist happened because it immediately felt like the best current story going on on the canvas was about to be hijack. And...looks like I was right.     
    • 1976 continues... Carrie finds the diamond drop in Arlene’s dresser and confronts her with it. Arlene insists she’s done nothing to be ashamed of and storms out. Carrie becomes so overwrought that she collapses. Tom rushes her to the hospital, where her doctors decide they can’t wait even the few days until her scheduled surgery and begin the operation immediately. The surgical resection proceeds without incident, and Carrie comes through beautifully, to Arlene’s relief and gratitude. Arlene tells Ian she has considered selling the pendant to pay Carrie’s bills but feels she must return it to him. She is so relieved that her mother is finally out of danger, she tells Ray, who is again pressing her for the return of the bail loan, that if he or the hospitals want to put her in jail for bad debts, that’s. fine with her. But Ian solves one of her problems by paying Carrie’s medical bill in full. Arlene is amazed to hear this and assures Carrie that she had no idea he planned to do this. She promises Carrie she’ll tell Ian they consider it a loan and will repay him as soon as they can. Ray, learning about Ian’s actions, accosts Arlene, telling her that if she’s not already sleeping with Ian, she soon. will be, Because men like him always expect to be paid.~ Felicia tries painting at home, but the light is very bad there, and she recalls how well she worked in her studio. With Lynn and Di’s urging, Felicia rents another studio. Ironically, Eddie, realizing that Felicia can’t paint at home, has been looking for a studio for her, and happened to be inspecting this very studio, only to learn that Mrs. Lamont had already rented it. Felicia explains to Di that she is afraid to tell Charles about the studio, as he instantly assumes that when she’s not with him she’s with Eddie. At Di’s suggestion, Felicia arranges a dinner party with the Sterlings, in the hope that telling Charles in the presence of others will allow it to be discussed calmly. But Charles voices his fury anyway, saying that it sounds like a perfect love nest.. The Sterlings point out that he is not being deserted—he has his nurse, and Felicia will always be home to prepare dinner. But Charles isn’t mollified. , Charles decides his suspicions are correct when Eddie delivers a letter from Lisa to Felicia and Charles realizes he knows about the studio. He refuses to believe that Felicia didn’t tell Eddie, and rides her mercilessly. Finally Felicia realizes she can’t stand any more of this mental agony and packs, saying she needs time to think and so does he. Charles immediately calls at Eddie’s for her and is surprised that she’s not there. But his call worries Eddie, who goes to her studio to see if she’s there. He finds her about to drive to Maine, to her Aunt Mavis’s home. Felicia is touched by Eddie’s suggestion that he accompany her for her safety, but assures him she’ll be fine. Charles, meanwhile, has fallen from his wheelchair while reaching for the phone and hit his head. Bruce finds him unconscious with a gash across his head and has him rushed to the hospital, where emergency surgery is performed to relieve the cranial pressure. Charles  survives the surgery but remains in a coma. Felicia arrives at Aunt Mavis’s to find that her aunt has just left for a vacation in Rome. There is a knock at the door, and Felicia is amazed to find Eddie there; he followed her car to assure her safety. She invites him in for something to eat, and since it’s very late, he spends the night in the spare bedroom. Felicia and Eddie spend the next several days walking in the woods and the evenings in front of the fire, developing a deep emotional closeness. Felicia finally tells him of her early father fixation and admits that she’s still a virgin, unable to have a physical relationship with a man. To her relief, he understands and sympathizes, and she agrees to try to make love with him. The attempt fails, and Felicia is embarrassed,but Eddie manages to make her see that sex is only one facet of his love for her, and when they try again later she is delighted to find that she can give herself to him with feeling and happiness. She decides she must return to Rosehill and ask Charles for a divorce. Cal and Rick honeymoon in St. Thomas, the Virgin Islands, but Cal is a bit dismayed when Rick takes time off to discuss business with a restaurant owner. She feels he shouldn’t have any thoughts of business on their honeymoon. Ray Slater tells Meg she stands to lose her investment in Beaver Ridge, since she has frozen Rick’s assets and he owns the controlling interest. So Meg gives Cal and Rick the news, upon their return, that her wedding gift is the dropping of the lawsuit. She then offers to sell her share of the club if Rick will again take over the place. Betsy has made strides toward establishing a life for herself and her daughter by renting an apartment, making arrangements for a mother’s helper, and asking Jamie for her old job back. Jamie assures her it’s available and ‘takes her to dinner. Betsy is annoyed when Meg stops by just as she’s returning home with Jamie, and she tells Meg she won’t stand for her checking up on her. Ben has been having problems ever since his prisonmates discovered he’s in for bigamy. This “pretty boy” offense makes him a susceptible target for advances and sadistic treatment. Duke and Pearson, the chief instigators, are pleased when Ben takes punishment and threats without squealing, but they decide to continue the treatment rather than let up. On the night  they decide to teach Ben what it’s really all about, he fights both of them, but tires and is on the floor under their knife when fire breaks out. Solly, the guard, starts to release the prisoners from their cells but is overcome by smoke. Ben rescues him, then returns to rescue the remaining prisoners, including Duke. Ben is hospitalized for burns and smoke inhalation. He refuses to explain why he and Duke and Pearson were out of their cells before the fire alarm. Betsy has had a premonition of danger, and it’s realized with the news of the fire at the prison. She asksMeg to accompany her and goes directly to the prison. As his wife, Betsy has first rights of visitation, but Meg is so frantic that Betsy lets her go in first. Meg rants on at length about Ben’s folly in not letting her keep him out of prison in the first place, wasting time that Ben wants desperately to spend with Betsy. Meg finally leaves, and Betsy comes in, bringing Ben a picture of their daughter. She tells him of her recent plans. When Ben asks if she’ll visit again, she hesitates, not wanting to make any commitments. The warden tells Ben he’s putting him up for parole, and Solly thanks Ben for saving his life, offering his hope that the parole comes through. Learning of this possibility, Meg asks Bruce to intercede as mayor, and he refuses. She replies she expected that and already offered one of the prison-board members a contribution for a favorable report. Van’s horror at this is echoed by. the warden, who tells Ben that his mother’s attempt to bribe the board could cost him his parole.But the board doesn’t hold this against Ben, and his parole is granted.  
    • Through to the big final on Saturday: Norway, Albania, Sweden, Iceland, the Netherlands, Poland, San Marino, Estonia, Portugal and the Ukraine Eliminated:  Slovenia, Belgium, Azerbaijan, Croatia, Cyprus
    • GH 1976 . A transition as the show went to 45 mins and the revamp continued. From the Daytime serial Newletter  PT 1 Since 1963 General Hospital, the story of the staff of the seventh floor at General Hospital in the town of Port Charles, has endeavored to show the personal problems and emotional conflicts faced by the members of a medical team, who must at all times be ready to save lives. Dr. Steve Hardy, his staff’s source of emotional support and advice as well as their professional chief, is increasingly upset by the marital problems of Dr. Jim Hobart and his wife, Audrey, Steve was once married to Audrey and still has strong although concealed feelings for her, and he resents Hobart’s futile efforts to stop drinking and straighten out his life, as his failures are dragging Audrey down with him. Dr. Leslie Faulkner is married to business tycoon Cameron Faulkner, who recently financed a free clinic for her at General Hospital. But Leslie’s professional life has been overshadowed by the shocking discovery that her illegitimate child, born when Leslie was a college student, didn’t die at birth, as she had been told, but rather, on her domineering father’s instructions, was substituted for the stillborn child of a Mrs. Barbara Vining. Cam has helped Leslie locate the child but is definitely resentful of the intrusion of another focus for Leslie’s love into their lives.  Young med student Bobby Chandler has just married nurse Samantha Livingstone but is concealing his recent discovery that his life-insurance application was rejected because of a suspicious blood-test result. Psychiatrist Peter Taylor has reconciled his emotional upheaval at the discovery that Martha, the child of his wife, Diana, was fathered by the late Dr. Phil Brewer (by rape) and that Diana will not be able to  have another child, as a hysterectomy was necessary after Martha’s birth. Diana suffers feelings of inadequacy, believing she is beneath Peter socially, as she was a waitress before successfully completing nurses’training. Nurse Jessie Brewer, who was married to Phil years ago, has tried to show Diana that her present accomplishments have overcome her disadvantaged origins.   Dr. Leslie Faulkner, driven by the recent knowledge that her baby daughter was taken from her at birth, has learned that thirteen-year-old Laura Vining is that child. When Laura’s mother expresses concern at the attention and gifts that a total stranger is showering upon her daughter, Laura points out that Leslie is not really a stranger—the news magazines are always carrying articles about international business magnate Cameron Faulkner and his doctor wife. Barbara is even more upset when she realizes that Cameron Faulkner is having his employees check on them. Cam himself is upset by Leslie’s preoccupation with the girl, and warns Leslie that many lives could be irreparably harmed if Laura finds out she’s illegitimate. Leslie retains an attorney, Curtis Baxter, whose reputation doesn’t stress ethics. He advises her to sue for custody if a personal appeal to the Vinings to relinquish the child doesn’t produce results. Barbara’s fears are more than realized when she returns Leslie’s extravagant Christmas gift to Laura—an electric typewriter—and Leslie, pressed by Barbara to explain her interest in Laura, reveals that she just recently learned that her own father bribed her nurse to switch her newborn daughter for Barbara’s stillborn child, to “protect” his unwed daughter. At home, Barbara tells her husband, Jason, that she didn’t see their baby until the day after she was born, as the delivery was long and difficult, and she now remembers that Nurse Roach was somewhat reluctant to hand her the child. But the biggest fear they  face is that Laura might somehow learn that her parents weren’t married when she was born, as Jason was on military service in the Pacific. Baxter serves the Vinings with a writ of habeas corpus, requiring them to have Laura in court on the specified day. Cam assures them he will make sure there is no painful press coverage and that all efforts are taken to prevent Laura from being emotionally upset. The Vinings then find that they must submit to blood tests to determine whose blood groupings match Laura’s. In court, Leslie again painfully explains the circumstances of her birth and the recent revelations by a dying Nurse Roach which led to her search for Laura. The Vinings are horrified to learn that the blood tests have revealed that neither of their blood types matches Laura’s. Medically this means that Jason can’t be Laura’s father—but Barbara could still be her mother. But Barbara has assured Jason that he is the only man she has ever been intimate with. Faced with this incontrovertible evidence, the Vinings realize that Leslie’s claim has basis; and since Barbara is too emotional to tell Laura what they have learned, Jason tells her. Laura is told she will have to decide whether she wants to make her home with the Vinings or with the woman she has just been told is her real mother. When Laura level headedly replies that she doesn’t know Leslie well enough to make this decision, the judge rules favorably on a one-month temporary custody order for the Faulkners and explains that Laura may decide then. Cam is upset at the way Leslie uses this month to give Laura a whirlwind introduction to the jet-set life, managing to quickly arrange a round-the-country tour with parties and social events including movie stars and other celebrities. He warns that Leslie is trying to win Laura by the material things she can give her and that she is obviously counting on Laura’s deciding to live with them.  At the end of the month Laura is still unable to come to a decision, so the temporary custody is extended for another month. But Laura is now torn between the glamor of the Faulkners’ life and her love for the Vinings, who are forbidden by the court order to contact her during the decision period. Leslie is spending so much time with Laura that her medical career is suffering, but she tells Cam it doesn’t matter, as she is planning to leave medicine to devote her full attention to her daughter. Cam warns her that she’s risking heartbreak by assuming she will get permanent custody of Laura, and again suggests she is trying to buy the girl’s love with possessions. Leslie retorts that Cam’s objections seem to stem from the selfish desire to have their life return to the glittering comfort they had when there were just the two of them to consider.  But when Laura falls ill with influenza meningitis she deliriously calls for her “real mother,” rejecting Leslie’s presence. Leslie is horrified when Barbara shows up, summoned by Cam, and demands to see her daughter. Leslie tells Dr. Steve Hardy she’s going to lose Laura and it’s Cam who is taking her away. In Laura’s best interest, Barbara and Leslie join forces to help the child’s recovery. But her doctors are puzzled when her symptomatic fever and convulsions continue after the meningitis is overcome. Leslie’s emotional condition isn’t helped when Cam insists ‘that her constant vigil over Laura is obsessive and she’s neglecting him. He makes it clear that she is going to have to choose. Needing help with these pressures, she consults psychiatrist Peter Taylor, who helps her see Cam’s side, and they make up. But Peter’s probing has made Leslie face another truth that Laura’s illness may be psychosomatic, due to the choice she must make. As Leslie faces the growing realization that she is the cause of her daughter’s illness and she may have to give her up to make her well, Cam secretly visits the judge and asks that he decide to return Laura to the Vinings in order to save Leslie from the guilt of giving up her daughter herself. :
    • 1976 Part 3 Peggy Brooks, the youngest Brooks daughter, upset over her parents’ recent marital trouble, has turned to her college teaching assistant for help with her studies, and then for emotional support. Jack Curtis is deeply attracted to her but tries to warn her not to get emotionally involved. But Peggy confesses she’s fallen in love with him, and he knows he returns her feelings. Jack, whose real name is Johnny Kryzynski, a name he feels is too difficult for professional use, is married to Joanne, a waitress at the Allegro, Leslie Elliot’s restaurant. Joanne, who is very overweight, is on another of her frequent reducing diets, hoping to regain Johnny’s love and attention. She is encouraged by Brock Reynolds, who manages the Allegro for Leslie. Sympathizing with her problem and her need for her husband’s love, Brock tells. her she must feel beautiful herself before other people can see it. One night, while discussing Joanne’s previous, fruitless attempts to diet, Jack asks her a question he’d never actually asked ‘before: Why had she gained all  that weight? Joanne painfully tells him that she found out a year after they were married that she was pregnant. When she sounded him out about children, he had made it clear they couldn’t have a child until he’d finished school, so she secretly had an abortion, which left her feeling so empty that she ate to fill the emptiness. For the first time in a long time, Jack put his arms around her and kisses her. Feeling that Johnny really cares now that he knows about the abortion, Joanne’s trying very hard'to stay on her diet. But Peggy, having lunch at the Allegro, confides in her friendly waitress that she’s in love, and the man’s name is Jack Curtis. Joanne is heartsick, not only for herself but for Peggy, who obviously has no idea that Jack is married. Knowing that Peg’s sister Chris Foster works for Legal Aid, Joanne consults Chris about a legal name change, explaining that her husband, Johnny Kryzynski, uses the name Jack Curtis professionally she may as well make it their legal name. Chris makes the connection and tells her father about it. Stuart confronts Jack, demanding to know how he could do this to his wife and to Peg, and what he is going to do about it. Jack asks for time to let Peg down easily. When Peg learns that her father has seen Jack, she furiously informs him to stay out of her relationship with Jack. Peg later apologizes for her angry words, but she and her father cross swords again over Jack, and, backed into a verbal corner, Stuart blurts out, ‘For’ God’s sake, he’s a married man!” Disbelieving, Peggy goes to Jack, who tries to explain he’s started to tell her many times but, not wanting to hurt her, kept hoping for a better time to do it. Peggy, in shock, goes to the Allegro to think this out. Seeing the pain Peggy’s suffering, Joanne goes over to her and gently tells Peg she understands the hurt she’s going through—they are both in love with the same man, because Jack Curtis is her husband. Jill, having decided she must have revenge on Kay, has liquor delivered to her daily. When this doesn’t drive Kay back to alcoholism, Jill embarks upon a campaign to'convince Kay that Phillip is still alive. Jill slips into the Chancellor house each evening, after Liz has left, and leads Kay into reliving incidents and conversations which occurred over a year ago, when Jill was Kay’s paid companion. In this way Jill shakes Kay’s acceptance of Phillip’s death and has her convinced that Phillip is only away on a business trip. But Liz and Brock discover Jill’s grisly charade and begin to help Kay back to reality. Faced with the enormity of what she’s been doing, Jill realizes how wrong this is and decides to end the hostilities.
    • Dallas, Dynasty, Falcon Crest, and Knots Landing episodes for the week of October 24, 1983.
    • I really don't want to see some old P&G actors on the show. To me Lindstrom and McLain have brought nothing special. The show needs to find new talent, so it has it's own identity,which overall they have. Timon, Tricia, Ambyr are breakouts. Most of the others are fine .We all know the exceptions.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

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