throng

dr chris smallThe Logies Red Carpet was an amazing experience. I interviewed many favourites but here is my best of the night! More will follow – but Dr Chris is the best! Especially in a Tux!

I have always admired the brilliant vet , Dr Chris Brown from Bondi Vet. His compassion, kindness and his sincerity is to be admired.The highlight of my night was meeting him. When I first introduced myself as “Alicia from Throng”, he replied with “I know Throng! I follow you on twitter” WOW! Not only looks and brains but great taste in blogs, he was the nicest guy of the night. Continue reading »

logiebLogies recap and results follow. Well done to Nine, who as a network have taken the most awards in this years’ Logies. Throng’s recap follows, while Alicia’s Red Carpet stories will follow soon.

Continue reading »

throng v tvtThis site is called THRONG – Most of you know that! Some of you out there think it’s a TV Tonight forum – guess what it’s NOT! I do this for free and try to give the best I can – this should be respected. I know many of you appreciate what I do – but it’s getting ridiculous how much TV Tonight is mentioned. I respect David Knox and his site, he is a veteran in this industry – but Throng is a different site. Each has it’s qualities and negatives. Continue reading »

Everyone at Throng wishes you all the happiest of New Years and a FABULOUS and HAPPY 2013. Next year we will continue our recaps, but hope to have more exclusives, especially with Ten who helped us out so much this year. We will be aiming to do more set visits and live updating from shows and bringing you more and better.

I am sadder than anyone – I promise you, that Courtney is leaving. If you want Courtney to at least do Big Brother – please leave a comment. She has a full plate this year – but who rocks BB better than her?  Continue reading »


After nearly three years, Throng’s Andrew B Blog will be breaking into two.

For over a year, my wife Alicia has written many posts for the Andrew B blog, under the name Andrew B. She currently posts most of the news stories including US News, anything to do with Foxtel, daily TV ratings, US ratings, and numerous recaps including the very popular YTT and MKR episode recaps while I focus more on programming, amendments and the industry side of things.

The Andrew B blog will remain, headed by myself – Andrew, while those stories Alicia writes and publishes will now appear under the blog Alicia B.

Alicia and I have different writing styles – no doubt some of you must have thought Andrew B had a split personality! The move to separate into two blogs will allow greater flexibility to express opinion and interact with readers without confusing readers as to whose writing they are reading or who exactly they are communicating with.

We can be contacted directly by email: andrewb@throng.com.au for Andrew B or alicia@throng.com.au for Alicia B. As always, feel free to leave comments and feedback on stories.

Links:
Andew B Blog
Alicia B Blog

Aaron Ryan has officially decided the future of his site TV Central.

Now posted on the website www.tvcentral.com.au is this:

TV Central is Offline.

Written by Aaron Ryan

TvCentral is offline… for good!

TvCentral will not be returning in the short or medium term at all. An agonising decision to fold the site after the recent data loss was not made easy. For readers that have followed me over the years, they will know how passionate I am about television. The real dream for me is programming, scheduling and formats and not so much being a blogger or journalist. TvCentral and other ventures I have been involved with are ways to express my dream, not live them. So now it is time to invest in my future and apply for programming positions around Australia and see how I go.

Who knows what the future will bring. I have opportunities to write perhaps a weekly blog somewhere and will let you know via here. This page will be up until the end of April. Please feel free to send me email and comments through the contact card on this website.

We wish you all the best, Aaron. Hey – if you end up in Nine programming – can you make sure that they resume sending out amendments to us all? Thanks!

Perth based televsion blog site TV Central is off the air, after their web host VentralIP caused all data of the site to be lost during a migration to a new server.

According to TV Tonight, site owner Aaron Ryan who says he puts all of his spare time into the site (we know what that is like!) will be taking legal action against VentralIP.

It is not clear when the problem will be solved, or when the site will be live again.

Message to all – be sure to back up your data. Regularly.

Throng has been down today as some of you may well know. Due to no fault of our own, there was an outage at our data centre.

We apologise for any inconvenience and will be posting like mad to make up for it!

Thank you for your patience and understanding – hopefully all is now fixed.

Cheers, Throng Australia!

Today marks my second anniversary writing for Throng Australia.

It all started two years ago, on May 6, 2009 with a post about frustrating TV scheduling discussing how time on free to air TV are never what they really are, and how EPGs that are not up to date to the minute means that shows can start up to 15 minutes late or sometimes, early as well. As recently as last Wednesday, the premiere of BIG on Nine was advertised as a 9.30 start, but ended up starting at 9.44. While the EPG for Nine was correct with a 9.44 start, it is still a far cry from the advertised time of 9.30pm.

The free to air TV landscape has changed considerably in the last two years. So much so, our networks are still getting used to it, understanding the new demands the multi channel environment place on them.

In May 2009, ONE HD was just six weeks old, after having launched in March that year as the first free to air full time sports channel and taking away Ten’s high definition channel. Nine’s first multi channel GO! was nothing more than a speculative rumour of a channel that was believed to be called GO!99, while nothing – not even a whisper was coming out of Seven about its multi channel plans.

Both Seven and Nine at the time were broadcasting HD break aways for around 6 hours a day, with break away programming for a few hours in the middle of the day, and more late night. HD break away programming gave viewers more options, but rarely offered any significant programming.

Overall, there were then 8 full time free to air digital channels, including SBS News as one of them. SBS News became SBS TWO in June 2009. Add to those 8 free to air channels another two for 7HD and 9HD, and there were 10 channels at times. Yet Freeview promotions advertised 15 free to air channels!

In May 2009, a little cooking show called Masterchef was airing on Ten six nights a week including 7.30pm Sunday and 7pm Monday to Friday. The idea was just starting to catch on, with an average of 1.2 million watching each night. Last year, at the same time 1.6-1.7 million. This year Masterchef is almost at 2010 levels – but the difference being, this year, it is the first week – the top 50 week.

Meanwhile, in May 2009, Nine were having problems with their Tuesday night programming, with shares around 6% below that of Seven and Ten. Talkin’ ‘Bout Your Generation was reaching over 1.6 million (nowadays, it‘s usually half that), NCIS 1.5 million. Seven’s Tuesday night included All Saints, still drawing over 1.1 million viewers. Nine’s Tuesday night was filled with Two and a Half Men, 20 To 1 and Underbelly repeats – none of which were doing anywhere near the business of programming on Seven and Ten.

Scroll forward two years and we do indeed have 15 free to air channels – the number effectively doubling that of 2009. 16 if you include community TV – which also has gone digital over the last 12 months. While the extra channels give viewers plenty of choices, they have redefined the level of ratings that determine what constitutes a show being a success or not.

At the same time as having these extra free to air channels, the amount of HD content has dropped to its lowest level in years. Free to air, prior to 2009, was a prime source for HD content. Now, with Foxtel launching over 30 channels in the past two years, most of them in HD, Pay TV has taken over as being the major broadcast source for HD TV – for those who can afford it.

In 2009, anything less than a million in prime time was effectively a flop. Now, figures below a million in prime time on main channels are a regular occurrence. Networks often have to accept prime time figures of 600,000 – 800,000 for some shows. This all just makes any show that surges past the million and over the 1.5 million mark all that more successful – which brings us back to Masterchef – even with 15 channels of choice, the phenomenon is still stronger than ever, and if the first week’s figures are anything to go by, then we are set for another record breaking year for the show.

And, again, Nine are faced with difficulties on Tuesday night, despite airing two of their high profile shows – AFP and Sea Patrol. The combination of Masterchef and NCIS on Ten and Australia’s Got Talent and Winners & Losers on Seven all that more stronger than Nine’s offerings.

So far 2011 has been a one sided ratings race with Seven winning every single week of the ratings year as well as the two Easter non-ratings weeks. With strong programming on its main channel, and two digital channels with well defined programming and objectives, nothing seems to be able to stop the network this year.

Ten, in reaction to low ratings are relaunching ONE HD as more of a general entertainment channel during prime time. The channel will still offer sports, but also mostly young male oriented programming in the evenings perhaps aimed to capture some of the market 7mate have taken. The new ONE, Masterchef on Ten, and ongoing and growing success of ELEVEN will see Ten a lot more competitive over coming months. As it stands, in the first week of Masterchef have ranked second, behind Seven and ahead of Nine for a number of nights of the week, as well as first on Monday night when the finale of The Biggest Loser aired.

Nine, on the other hand, are dogged with constant programming changes, digital channels that seem to have no real direction and shows that simply cannot pull an audience. The combination of unstable programming, last minute scheduling decisions, a lack of time to promote anything new on the channel and a fairly large degree of viewer dissatisfaction with the network are placing Nine in a precarious position for 2011.

Looking forward, and 2011 will almost certainly be another year that is won by Seven. Seven has The Amazing Race Australia premiering soon, Packed to the Rafters to return later in the year and a number of new titles set to premiere over coming months. Ten and Nine will fight it out for second, but it all depends on what Ten does post-Masterchef.

Nine does have Underbelly Razor later this year, but interest on the franchise is dwindling – so it will be interesting to see how it goes. Then there is The Block to air at 7pm weeknights – a gamble, which may or may not breathe life into Nine’s early evening.

After Masterchef, Ten have The Renovators which is set to be the next big reality competition series, described as being the Block on steroids. The network also has new Aussie series Inside Out, essentially a remake of hit series from the late 70’s and 80’s Prisoner.

In the meantime, here at Throng we will continue to keep you up to date, bringing you the latest TV news, ratings information, programming summaries, up to the minute programming amendments and much, much more.

Now for another year.

This time next year, in 2012, Masterchef will be back for its fourth year, while Seven will be in control of the free to air AFL broadcast rights, for at least four games a week. Still no word if any games will end up on Ten, or even Nine. At the same time, all Nine AFL games each week will be able to be seen live on Fox Sports.

As for free to air, TV channels, unless there is a drastic change in the way the networks are allowed to arrange their digital channels, we won’t see any new channels in the next 12 months, unless, of course, there is a miracle at SBS and SBS THREE materialises!

 

Throng Australia has been enjoying some phenomenal growth this year with record month after record month.  Our year on year growth has been exceptional but this month has just reached a pretty monumental milestone.

Moments ago we served our millionth page for the month!

Thanks goes out to the Throng team for all their hard work and dedication.  

We’re pretty excited about some things that we’re working on to take things to the next level so stay tuned for more details.