Huffy Post
Channel 5 must have expected ratings to drop after Celebrity Big
Brother. They must have expected it, as Celebrity Big Brother tends to
attract a higher amount of viewers than the regular series. Whether or
not they expected a drop of nearly 50% compared to the last series on
Channel 4 is a different matter. According to Barb overnight figures,
the first five episodes pulled in an average of just 1.7 million viewers, with the first eviction watched by 1.83 million. Indications are that even 1.7 million is proving difficult to maintain, as on Thursday only 1.16 million tuned in to see the highlights. A record low was reached on Saturday, when a mere 900,000 viewers showed an interest.
With some eight weeks of Big Brother still to come, it will be
interesting to see if Channel 5 can get their audience back to above the
1 million mark, or if even more people will switch off.
Whilst such ratings are still pretty decent for the channel, and they
may actually be content with them, it is clear to Big Brother viewers
that all is not well.
Why are dedicated fans abandoning their beloved
show?
Why are people who have watched the show from series one now
moving on?
And what can be done to win them back?
For Linda, it's simple. "Two words are all that's needed - live
feed!" She says that she has been a stalwart fan for years, but she will
not watch without the feed.
Bradley is still watching but feels that there is room for
improvement. He agrees with Linda on the live feed issue.
"Whilst I see
their thinking, the people who watch the live feed are the hardcore fans
who will watch it no matter what. We are down to the core now. Their
thinking is that by providing live feed it makes it harder to hide
things and won't get more people watching. They are wrong in the sense
that those people are the people who spread the word to the ones who
won't watch live feed, who don't know what's going on so won't bother to
watch the highlights show. If a BB fan tells them, "You've got to see
it tonight, there was a massive argument last night," then others will
tune in and become more involved."
Bradley also thinks that the producers should go back to basics. "BB
has felt the need to constantly change, whereas apart from the tasks
people enjoy the same things that encouraged them to watch in the first
place.
The nominations process keeps changing. Go back to the way it
was. None of the "surprise" things work; they don't encourage people to
tune in, there's no need. Let's go back to nominations on Monday, the
announcement on Tuesday, and eviction on Friday. One of the most
important parts of the show has constantly been altered and people miss
it. In the last few series they didn't even show some housemates
actually nominating. With this in mind, the extra nomination programme,
when we would see more of the nominations, would be helpful if it
returned."
He prefers Big Brother to keep it real. "At present they do
everything to create arguments, so much so that none of the arguments
are real and are a nightly thing, therefore no one cares. In the first
few series when an argument occurred it mattered, because it was real,
organic and in some cases, as with Nasty Nick, brewing for weeks. Now
they won't let them sleep during the day or allow anything to stimulate
them. Give them the opportunity to sleep for an hour or two, or even
allow reading material for an hour a day. This will help produce more
energy and more excitement. At present they aren't allowed anything but
just to sit and wait for a task. They do it to create tension, but in
the end it produces boredom and silly arguments. Arguments will come
naturally if you allow them to."
Sarah says she used to be an avid viewer. "I loved the
sociological/psychological aspect of the show. When I say that, I mean
it in terms of group dynamics and being shut away from the outside
world, not as a substitute for the care in the community/"OMG I wanna be
famous" culture. As a social scientist it was fabulous to see how
people formed groups and dealt with isolation. I loved Nasty Nick,
because Nick showed some fascinating human traits and instincts to win.
It was all about how people get on. I love people watching and this
really is the ultimate people watching show. Live footage was brilliant
when I was revising for exams - Big Brother has more or less covered my
entire career as a student.
"Sadly the show seems to have gone along with the moral decline in
this country. It's now about mad people who want to be famous and have
the morals and attitudes of alley cats rather than group dynamics. It
also celebrates this "I wanna be a star" culture; you never get
academics on BB do you? We aren't all boring, but we do have standards.
Now it's like care in the community titillation. Let's put a load of
unstable people in a house for several months, lock the door and see
what happens - carnage! Horrendous, it gives off completely the wrong
image to the kids who are the target audience.
"I suppose the major question is why do the producers/makers feel the
programme has to be this way now? That's something I'd love to know.
"Let's go back to the more psychological/sociological experiment
format. I think the concept has gone from seeing how people react to
different situations, to really pushing them to extremes purely for TV
entertainment. It's like a human zoo. The problem is, I suppose this
could be a reflection of a bad change in society in general, so Big
Brother is a symptom. Have tasks, and games, and challenges that test
people's endurance etcetera, rather than make them look stupid. I find
it really worrying, always have when people leave and are booed by
people they have never met."
Bradley agrees with Sarah about the booing. "Eviction night booing.
It's revolting and does nothing to improve occasional viewers' feelings
on the show. Totally unnecessary and should be banned. Eviction nights
used to be special, now they are ruined by nastiness to evicted
housemates who often find it terrifying. If so called hardcore fans boo
these people, why should others bother to watch? Ban it and tell people
there that if they do boo, they will be kicked out and banned in the
future."
Sarah has a final point to make: "Have a wider range of people on the
show, from different walks of life. The twists that have seen people go
into houses in different countries have been fascinating! The age range
this year is 18-30, and they all have a very similar demographic."
Whilst the views expressed here are those of just three Big Brother
viewers, their sentiments appear to be reflected around the forums. Will
they be listened to? Channel 5 and Endemol decide.
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