A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd

Archive: Oct 16, 2006
News
CRTC preps for TV review
Briefs
Loewy, New Line back in ...
Rhombus still in business
Bush film a hot potato
Hot Sheet
Record box for Bon Cop, ...
Corner Gas cruises onto ...
AAC smash CSI celebrates ...
CSI facts & figures
Q&A with CSI: Miami's ...
CSI's Deluxe connection
Top 20 TV programs
TSN edges CBC as NHL ...
Newscasters score early ...
Online deals stalled at ...
People
Innoversity reaches out ...
That '70s crisis
Why this business is ...
Sold!
C.R.A.Z.Y. best Canuck ...
Film & Television
Frank turns to crime
CBC enters Mosque
Rhombus wrapping Silk
Briefly
Can it save CBC?
Easy... Eeaassy...
20 Years of Playback
Post Quarterly

Advertising

Featured Careers
TSN edges CBC as NHL returns
by: Oct 16, 2006 Print

Sportscasters went back to work on Oct. 4 as the National Hockey League opened its 2006/07 season with the Toronto Maple Leafs-Ottawa Senators matchup scoring a strong 1.3 million viewers on TSN.

The cable channel's main competition that night came from sister station CTV, which aired the much-anticipated return of Lost to two million viewers at 9 p.m., providing a solid lead-in for CSI: NY with 2.6 million viewers.

The next night, CBC aired a special weeknight edition of Hockey Night in Canada to 1.2 million viewers for the Leafs-Sens rematch, while 670,000 viewers stuck around for game two of the doubleheader, as the Edmonton Oilers played host to the Calgary Flames.

HNIC lost the Thursday night battle to Survivor, which drew 2.2 million viewers at 8 p.m. on Global, while over at CTV, 1.9 million tuned in for Grey's Anatomy in the same timeslot. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation followed on CTV with a week-high 3.5 million viewers.

Numbers for HNIC's first appearance in its usual Saturday night timeslot Oct. 7 slid to 1.1 million for a Leafs-Montreal Canadiens matchup. That's down from 1.7 million for HNIC's season premiere in 2005, which saw higher numbers in general after the NHL's return following the player lockout.

Meanwhile, part four of CBC's 10-hour doc series Hockey: A People's History had an average viewership of 320,000 on Oct. 8, down from 390,000 for its second episode on Sept. 24. Both figures are well below expectation.

Still with the Ceeb, new reality show Dragon's Den, in which entrepreneurs pitch ideas to five Canadian business leaders, netted a soft 219,000 viewers for its Oct. 4 debut.

But comedy staples The Rick Mercer Report and This Hour Has 22 Minutes saw solid debuts on Oct. 3, with Mercer's fourth-season premiere, featuring a guest spot by newsmaker Tie Domi, generating 713,000 viewers, helping to boost ratings for 22 Minutes, which had 727,000.

CBC is relying on its comedies to draw viewers to Chris Haddock's new crime series Intelligence, which debuted after 22 Minutes on Tuesday, Oct. 10, as Playback went to press.

Intelligence will have competition this fall from CTV's new U.S. crime drama The Nine, which premiered Oct. 10, after it was originally scheduled to air three days prior.

CBC was to roll out the 8 x 60 FLQ crisis drama October 1970 on Thursday, Oct. 12, while the two-part mini Above and Beyond, about the bold plan to ferry aircraft from Gander, NF across the North Atlantic during WWII, airs Sunday, Oct. 29.


Advertising

© 1986-2008 Brunico Communications Ltd.

® Playback is a registered trademark of Brunico Communications Ltd. Use of this website is subject to Terms of Use. View our Privacy Policy.

Close
Match:
By DATE:  TO  
In these publications: