Dil-e-Gumshuda
Hum, once a standout winner two years back, has taken serious beating in several time slots. With exception to a handful of titles, the main skirmish for audience attention is between ARY and Geo.
Kaisa Hai Naseeban, Do Bol, Thorra Sa Haq, Hassad, Bhool, Beti, Ruswai, from ARY all clocked in rating averages between 15.7 (for MPTH) and 8.8 (for Gul-o-Gulzaar), with their lowest rated show in the year’s top 10 line-up hitting 10.5 (for Koi Chand Rakh).
Geo, meanwhile has had stellar, consecutive hits with Dil-e-Gumshuda, Kahin Deep Jalay, Bharosa Pyar Tera, Yaariyan, Mera Rab Waris, Saibaam, Makafat, Meray Mohsin, Ramz-e-Ishq, Kamzarf, Darr Khuda Say, Piya Naam Ka Diya, Mohabbat Na Karriyo, Ay Dil Tu Bataa. If one averages out the highest ratings of the top 10 of these 14 shows, the TRP comes out as 13.32. In laymen terms, that means there is a steady audience base tuning into these dramas.
At the time of going to print, Icon had yet to receive ratings data of the highest-grossing shows from Hum. Their productions Ehd-e-Wafa and Suno Chanda (Season 2), however, do occupy the third and fourth spots in Google search trends this year (MPTH has the seventh slot and Bharosa Pyaar Tera the ninth).
For those who may ask why this report is emphasising ratings, let me elaborate.
Ratings (TRP and GRPS, both calculated with different criteria), use the viewing habits of a select number of households across the country to measure who watches what, and at what time of the day. These viewing habits do not only measure the popularity of a certain programme and a network, but also provide advertisers the information they need to select shows and network to place their brands. The ratings one sees are high, low and averaged out percentages. Anything over the rating of 10 (ie. 10 percent), is considered a hit.
Definitive data from 2019 was still being calculated by MediaLogic, and will be available early next year.
Television series, despite the clichéd themes of love, betrayal and family (with some exception to hardcore, socially relevant subjects), are still a preferred, practiced-to-perfection medium for telling long-form, engaging stories. But then, it has always been that.
The main difference between films and television — and perhaps the reason why men are now preferring the latter medium — is that one forces you to forfeit a considerable sum to pay for what may be crap. Most shows, despite primarily targeting females between the ages of 15-45, are also deliberately crafting stories that may appeal to men as well.
The only price the latter forces on to you is waiting through advertisements and, even then, if the content doesn’t work, one can simply change the channel. Not so with movies. With how things have been, all audiences can do is stay away.
Published in Dawn, ICON, December 29th, 2019