Yuletide TV schedules remain culturally significant



Image of a remote control resting on a sofa with a backdrop of a Christmas tree with presents under it.

Dr Joanne Knowles, Senior Lecturer in Media, Culture and Communication, School of Humanities and Social Science, comments on why the Christmas TV schedule is still so eagerly anticipated, even in the age of on-demand viewing.

We might think that in an age of on-demand, instantly available viewing, TV scheduling doesn’t matter anymore. But the announcement of this year’s Christmas television schedule still excites viewer anticipation and much media comment. Christmas viewing, it seems, is something the viewing public are invested in, and which evokes feelings of nostalgia and affection.

For broadcasters, too, it’s a chance to demonstrate their values and show how well they represent the public they serve. The well-publicised Christmas Day “ratings battle” has for years been seen as a snapshot of who currently prevails in the public’s affections. Is it the BBC, surviving still as Britain’s major public service broadcaster, or ITV, once regarded as the populist rival who gave the people what they really wanted? In either case, issues of scheduling and new viewing habits can have an effect on ratings.

TV networks who’ve tried experimenting and put aside the conventions of scheduling haven’t fared well. When Fox decided in 2004 to test out the assumption that the summer is only fit for repeats and low-quality shows by commissioning five new shows for the season, they found their audience share dropped 18% in the Nielsen ratings from the previous summer’s performance. It’s been noted too that summer reruns can also do better than the original screenings of the same material. This reinforces the notion that broadcasters’ top quality material is best saved for the traditionally more prestigious autumn and winter seasons.

As I’ve found in my research, broadcasters tend to stick to tried and tested assumptions about seasonal scheduling, even in recent years. They save their “best” shows for autumn and winter, consigning less privileged series to the graveyard of the summer slot. And while it is seen as prestigious to be included in the Christmas schedule, some dates are sought after, with others quite the reverse: ITV was regarded as having “buried” one of its postponed dramas, Mister Eleven, by consigning it to the two Friday evenings before Christmas in 2009 when many people were expected to be on seasonal nights out and at work parties.

The BBC shores up its status as a national institution by providing us with the familiar territory of the Queen’s speech, and returns to former glories by reviving Top of the Pops as a one-off yearly event. While Christmas special episodes of well-loved shows have been long established, a more recent development is the revival of series that have ended their regular run of production to be produced and broadcast solely as Christmas specials. Fondly-regarded series like Only Fools and Horses and The Royle Family have continued to make strictly seasonal appearances in this way. Sherlock's first series was screened in the summer, but since has found a distinctive position as a Christmas and New Year television event. 

This year’s Christmas Day highlights will include the programme now regarded as a contemporary national treasure, The Great British Bake Off, for a final time before the show makes its highly-publicised and controversial move to Channel 4, as well as established BBC1 hits such as Call The Midwife. Both these shows can be seen as capturing nostalgia for a historical sense of Britishness which allows the BBC to restate its claim as the nation’s broadcaster.

But the BBC is also careful to attend to audience preferences as well as to the critical reception of its Christmas offerings. The success of the sitcom Mrs Brown’s Boys, universally panned by critics, but with many loyal fans, shows this: it was the best-selling box set of 2013, showing its ability to attract consumers who expect to view it repeatedly and at the time of their choice as well as when transmitted. Mrs Brown’s Boys has been particularly successful as a Christmas viewing event: it was the most-watched programme on Christmas Day in both 2013 and 2014.

Last year’s ratings winner was ITV’s Downton Abbey, profiting from the relatively new practice of including “timeshifted” viewers who watched the programme up to one week after its Christmas Day transmission.

Some shows benefit more than others from this. Doctor Who which has itself become a modern staple of Christmas viewing after its revival in 2005, gained just under 2 million viewers in 2015 when timeshifting was taken into account, whereas Downton Abbey garnered 4 million more viewers. It could be said that this actually marks a kind of victory for Doctor Who in being a programme that viewers prefer to sit down and watch in real time on Christmas Day, rather than recording it for later.

But when even the refined in-laws of the BBC’s The Royle Family, in their 2008 Christmas special, confess as they sit down to dinner to have “Sky Plussed the Queen”, we can probably expect that even the apparently hallowed Christmas viewing schedule will become less significant in the future.

The full article appeared on The Conversation.



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