TV ratings: ‘Sleepy Hollow’ finale ticks up; ‘Bachelor’ is flat
Monday night’s season finale of Fox’s “Sleepy Hollow†rose a bit in the ratings as NBC’s “Hollywood Game Night†returned with a jump and “The Bachelor†held steady.
According to preliminary numbers from Nielsen, the quirky Ichabod Crane drama on Fox drew an average of 6.9 million viewers during its two-hour first season closer and scored a rating of 2.4 among key 18-49-year-olds. The finale rose 6% from last week in total viewers and 5% in the advertiser-desired young-adults demographic.
Those averages gave the Fox network a Monday night win in the demo against its broadcast competition on ABC, CBS and NBC, though ABC had more viewers overall.
FULL COVERAGE: Winter TV preview
ABC’s new episode of “The Bachelor,†coming after its star Juan Pablo made inflammatory remarks about gays in an interview, drew 7.8 million viewers and garnered a 2.3 rating in the demo, flat with last week. The drama “Castle†averaged 8.9 million and rose 5% to a 2.0 in the demo. Average viewership for the network was 8.17 million.
CBS’ “How I Met Your Mother†received the highest 18-49 rating of any broadcast series Monday night, flat with last week at a 3.0, while “2 Broke Girls†was also flat, at a 2.7. “Mike & Molly†and “Mom†fell double digits week-to-week, and the new Josh Holloway-starring thriller “Intelligence†fell a bit to a 1.1.
“Hollywood Game Night†returned for a second season with host Jane Lynch anchoring back-to-back episodes. The first hour, starting at 8 p.m., notched a 1.3 in the demo, significantly higher than the most recent episode, but down slightly compared with its summer series premiere. The second hour scored a 1.5 in the demo, its best number ever.
Following “Game Night,†the James Spader FBI drama “The Blacklist†drew a 2.3 in the demo, down 8% week-to-week to beat its closest time-slot competition, “Castle,†though “Castle†had more viewers overall.
ALSO:
Netflix makes gains in U.S. while HBO, Showtime decline
Viewership rises for NFL conference championship games
TV ratings: ‘Following’ season debut up sharply with football’s help
Twitter: @rfaughnder
More to Read
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
Get the Envelope newsletter for exclusive awards season coverage, behind-the-scenes stories from the Envelope podcast and columnist Glenn Whipp’s must-read analysis.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.