The years 2015 to 2019 were the subject of the last episode of the time travel program “Back to” on the RTL broadcaster later on Tuesday evening. But the format moderated by Sasha and Laura Wontorra did not ignite this time either. The almost one and a half hour production did not exceed 6.3 percent market share in the target group. A total of 0.59 million people watched the images – fewer than ever before. After eight episodes have been broadcast, the format is not recommended for a sequel of any kind anyway; on average, they generated less than seven percent of the market share in the classic target group.
At 8:15 p.m., RTL was a little better off. “Prince William turns 40” achieved a market share of 10.4 percent and thus secured prime time victory in the advertising relevant segment. 2.03 million people watched. That was a little less than a “ZDFzeit” program about Paul McCartney, which ran on ZDF between 8:15 p.m. and 9 p.m. This came to 2.14 million viewers. This resulted in a total market share of 9.4 percent, but things did not go well for the younger generation at 4.9 percent.
Sat.1 can be satisfied: The episode “Spies, Part 1”, which ran in Germany under the episode title “Das Phantom”, brought the production the best market share in the target group to date with 8.1 percent. 1.22 million people aged three and over watched the one-hour broadcast on average. Two repeats of the “Navy CIS” original also did pretty well afterwards; the reach remained quite constant at 1.12 and 1.16 million from the age of three and among 14 to 49 year olds the old editions gave a solid picture with 6.9 and 8.2 percent.
ProSieben was also solid on Tuesday evening. The “Big Countdown” filled large parts of the prime time and achieved an 8.2 percent market share in the target group. The average viewing participation was 0.69 million. During the day, too, ProSIeben was in demand in many places; especially of course during the “The Big Bang Theory” broadcast, which reached up to 13 percent and also during “taff” (13.9%). At noon, however, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” had a hard time: Five episodes shown from 11:30 a.m. missed the station average, some significantly: The target group market shares fluctuated between 5.4 and 3.7 percent.
Source for all data in this article: AGF Videoforschung in cooperation with GfK ; videoSCOPE 1.4, market standard: TV
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