Posted on 09/17/2002 2:50:02 PM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:40:59 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Ah well, "De gustibus non disputandem est"as some old Italian once said!
Yea, I watch that religously. It's excellent!
I saw the first season in its entirety, but I missed a few in the beginning of the second one, so I decided not to watch and wait till they repeat from the start. Its pretty good.
I'm not a fan of Arliss, Mind of the Married Man, Oz, or The Wire.
By Kimberly Potts
The killer of Christopher Moltisanti's gangster pop wasn't the only thing that got whacked Sunday night.
![]()
|
The much- (much, much...) awaited fourth season premiere of HBO's The Sopranos not only racked up the cable network's all-time best ratings for an original series, but it also mowed down all the regular networks' programming in the ratings.
After a 16-month wait between the show's May 2001 third-season finale, The Sopranos ( news - Y! TV)' return Sunday night pulled in 13.4 million viewers, according to Nielsen, almost 3 million more than tuned in for runner-up NBC's repeat of Law & Order: Criminal Intent.
In fact, The Sopranos would have ranked sixth among all shows--cable or broadcast--last week, a virtually unheard-of achievement for a cable series, especially since HBO is a pay-cable net that reaches about as third as many homes as the broadcast networks. (Nielsen keeps broadcast and cable shows separate in its ratings rundown.)
For the week, CBS took the top spot, averaging 9.6 million viewers behind its 9-11 coverage and reliable repeats like C.S.I. and Everybody Loves Raymond ( news - Y! TV). ABC, on the strength of the week's highest-rated program, Monday Night Football, finished second (9 million prime-time viewers) and NBC trailed in third with 7.9 million, followed by Fox (7.1 million), UPN (3.4 million), the WB (3.2 million) and PAX (1.5 million).
Overall cable ratings for the 51st week of the 2001-02 TV season won't be released until Thursday, while the new season officially--for Nielsen purposes--kicks off on September 24, though ABC, UPN and the WB have tried to get a jump on the competition by premiering several of their new series this week.
Meanwhile, those all-time high numbers for HBO and the mobsters mean that a whole lot of viewers are anxious to see just which one of Tony Soprano's cohorts may be sleeping with the fishes before the end of the season. Rumors have been rampant for months that a key character will be offed this season, with an Internet gambling company even laying out the odds of which character is mostly likely to join the hit list.
Will it be crazy Ralphie Cifaretto, whose new alliance with Soprano sis Janice makes them the scariest couple since, well, Richie Aprile and Janice? Or what about increasingly drug-addled loose cannon Christopher? Or Tony's wing(haired) man Paulie Walnuts, whose current jail stint has made him even less happy--and perhaps less loyal?--with his Soprano crew?
Even the show's stars claim they don't know the answer to that one, since spoiler-hatin' Sopranos creator David Chase is said to have filmed several season enders.
But one's thing's for sure: those Joisey guys aren't the only ones who should be quaking in their cement boots. HBO and the broadcast networks have officially gone to the mattresses in the Sunday night ratings war.
Here's a recap of the most-watched broadcast network shows for the week ended Sunday:
1. NFL Monday Night Football, ABC, 19.1 million viewers
2. NFL Monday Night Showcase, ABC, 17.1 million
3. Everybody Loves Raymond, CBS, 14.2 million
4. CSI, CBS, 13.9 million
5. CSI (Monday), CBS, 13.8 million
6. 9/11, CBS, 12.2 million
7. Becker, CBS, 11.9 million
8. 60 Minutes, CBS, 11.3 million
9. Dateline NBC (Tuesday), NBC, 11 million
10. ABC News Special: 9/11, ABC, 10.9 million
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.