'Walking Dead' Mid-Season Premiere Is the Lowest-Rated Ever
by EG
This week's mid-season premiere of The Walking Dead was the least-watched ever for the series among younger viewers, continuing a downward ratings trend that has been consistent through this season. That's particularly troubling since the episode was well-publicized as the final appearance of one of the series' original characters. If that event couldn't draw viewers back to TWD, can anything end its slump?
Via Deadline.
There were a number of goodbyes uttered on Sunday night as the XXIII Winter Games came to an end and so did the life of Carl Grimes on The Walking Dead. However, unlike the near lows of NBC’s Closing Ceremony out of PyeongChang, the AMC zombie apocalypse series based on Robert Kirkman’s comics has some celebrating to do.
With a 3.6 rating among adults 18-49, the often-heartbreaking winter return episode of TWD’s eighth season topped the fireworks and K-Pop extravaganza of the Olympics ender by 20% in the key demo.
That is a 20% victory overall against the 8 – 10:31 PM ET tape delayed Closing Ceremony and it’s a 20% victory over the Olympics in the 9 – 10:30 PM ET slot where the TWD winter return went head-to-head with the NBC broadcast.
Adding to those sweet smell of victory is the fact that this is the second time in a row that the Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira led TWD has taken the gold over the Closing Ceremony of a Winter Olympics. Back in late February 2014, the Season 4 winter return of Dead also buried the Closing Ceremony of the Sochi Games.
In a season that not only has seen the loss of the Chandler Riggs portrayed core character but ratings as well, the still blockbuster TWD additionally snagged an uptick of 8% in the 18-49s over its “How It’s Gotta Be” winter finale of December 10 last year.
Overall, the February 25 “Honor” episode of TWD delivered 8.3 million viewers with 4.7 million in the 18-49 demo and 5.2 million in the 25-54 demo. For comparison, the XXIII Winter Games Closing Ceremony pulled in 14.8 million viewers on NBC overall.
Having said that, the ninth episode of Dead’s eighth season was down 37% from the Season 7 winter return of February 12, 2017, which was up against the Grammys. That’s a hard drop in a Season 8 of a number of hard ratings hits and lows from once dizzy and record breaking heights for TWD.
Get the rest of the story at Deadline.
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