"American Idol" to dominate strike-hit U.S. TV
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. television's top show, "American Idol," returns to the Fox network on Tuesday, poised to stand taller than ever in the ratings as it arrives in a prime-time landscape clouded by the Hollywood writers strike.
Anticipating another blockbuster season for the TV talent competition, advertisers already have ponied up banner prices for the seventh round of "Idol," making it again the most lucrative regularly scheduled series in prime time.
Generally airing twice weekly, the show averaged over 30 million viewers per episode last season.
Months before the writers strike began, a 30-second commercial for the 2008 season of "Idol" was going for roughly $750,000, with the price jumping to at least $900,000 for the same ad sold in the "scatter market" just before the show's return, according to media buyers familiar with the deals.
Both figures are up sharply from ad rates fetched for last year's installment of the show, which features amateur singers from around the United States vying for fame and a recording contract.
But they pale in comparison to the rates commanded for a 30-second commercial on Fox's upcoming February 3 broadcast of the National Football League's Super Bowl championship, which sources put as high as $3 million per spot.
The advertising value of "American Idol," the most watched U.S. series for the past four years, has only been enhanced by the ratings declines faced by Fox's network rivals in a environment weakened by the writers strike.
Even before the Writers Guild of America launched its walkout against film and TV studios on November 5, prime-time ratings for the major networks across the board were down about 10 percent from the same period in 2006.
"If you have a show that you know is going to deliver like 'American Idol,' that's going to jack the prices up," said Brad Adgate, research director at New York-based Horizon Media.
SURE-FIRE RATINGS
The strike, now in its 11th week with no settlement in sight, has halted production on prime-time dramas and sitcoms. Except for a handful of series the networks were holding back for a mid-season launch this winter, the supply of fresh episodes for most scripted shows is about to run dry.
As a result, broadcasters are starting to fill schedules with a heavy dose of reruns, as well as reality TV and game shows -- programs immune from the writers strike and cheaper to produce but generally less popular with viewers.
That makes a sure-fire ratings winner like "American Idol" all the more attractive to advertisers, and amplifies its importance as a promotional platform for other Fox shows.
It also helps explain why News Corp Chief Operating Peter Chernin has been so upbeat in recent public comments about the impacts of the strike on Fox.
Fox scored another ratings success on Sunday with the launch of its sci-fi action drama, "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles," adapted from the blockbuster film series that starred Arnold Schwarzenegger. Continued...




