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PWTorch editor Wade Keller presents a special Thursday Flagship edition of the Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast featuring a WrestleMania 36 Preview with ex-WWE Creative Team member and professional stand-up comedian Matt McCarthy.
(Search “wade keller” to subscribe in podcast app or CLICK HERE to subscribe in Apple Podcasts.)
Against the first U.S. presidential debate, Monday’s WWE Raw fell below the 1.8 mark to all-time low territory.
WWE Raw TV Ratings Tracking
September 27: WWE Raw scored a 1.75 TV rating, down 11 percent from last week’s show.
The previous standard-week, low-point for Raw was a 1.8 back in October 1996. However, there was a Christmas Week episode on December 23, 1996 that scored a 1.5 rating to set the all-time low-point.
– Raw’s three hours averaged 2.478 million viewers, down eight percent (about 206,000 viewers) from last week.
It was the least-watched show of the year, but the first hour helped the show avoid falling completely off the table.
First Hour: 2.850 million viewers, the most since Labor Day
Second Hour: 2.381 million viewers, down about 300,000 viewers from last week
Third Hour: 2.203 million viewers, down about 430,000 viewers from last week
The third hour of Raw was likely one of the least-watched hours in the history of the show. It also continued the streak of Raw’s third hour declining from the second hour for the 28th consecutive week.
– DEMOGRAPHICS: Raw fell big among the key demos, as expected. However, adults 18-49 seemed to fare reasonably well considering the competition.
Adults 18-49 was down 10 percent from last week
Males 18-34 was down 18 percent
Males 18-49 was down 14 percent
– Meanwhile, ESPN’s Monday Night Football game fell by 33 percent to only 8.0 million viewers after drawing 12.1 million viewers last week.
ESPN put on perhaps the least-marquee match-up of the season with a regionally-focused game of Atlanta at New Orleans.
MNF had more room to fall compared to Raw, but Raw’s viewership falling 8-11 percent does not seem as bad as predicted against the most-watched debate in U.S. TV history.