By DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK (AP) - The top networks are suffering through a lackluster fall
season partly because "some of the programming just sucked," NBC's
entertainment chief said on Tuesday.

NBC's Jeff Zucker, who has already canned two high-profile new series, said
while networks question some of Nielsen Media Research's numbers this year,
TV executives need also look in the mirror.

"Our programming is not that good and the Nielsen sample is bad. End of
story," said Zucker, speaking to the International Radio & Television
Society Foundation.

During the first week of the important November sweeps period, CBS was the
only one of the six major broadcasters to draw a bigger audience than the
same week last year, Nielsen said.

That's consistent with the season as a whole. Fox, which benefited from a
thrilling baseball postseason, is the only network to see gains
season-to-date.

Zucker cited NBC's "Coupling" - already canceled - as NBC's biggest mistake
of the season. Another series the network had high hopes for, Rob Lowe's
"The Lyon's Den," has also been taken off the air.

All of the network entertainment chiefs speaking before the IRTS Tuesday
directed some anger toward Nielsen. They don't quite believe Nielsen's
numbers that say viewership is off 10 percent this season among men aged 18
to 34, a crucial group for advertisers.

Zucker said he doesn't believe it's a coincidence that Nielsen's measurement
of young male viewership has increased over the past three weeks after
network complaints became public.

Young men, who may have been distracted by DVDs and video games, began
returning to TV with the World Series, Nielsen spokesman Jack Loftus said.

Loftus noted that Nielsen received few complaints last year when the
company's sample showed an increase in viewership among young men.

"When the numbers are up, it's the programming," he said. "When the numbers
are down, it's Nielsen."

Zucker also said the networks had put on several new shows this fall that
appealed to females, like NBC's "Miss Match," CBS' "Joan of Arcadia" and
ABC's "Karen Sisco" and "Hope & Faith."

"Where's 'Chuck & Matt'?" Zucker asked. "If we just keep putting on shows
that aren't necessarily going to appeal to young men, we're making a
mistake. We're standing at the front of that line."

Susan Lyne, ABC's entertainment chief, said the lack of any new shows that
viewers were anticipating this fall may have reduced viewership in general.

CBS' victory last week was fueled partly by a strong performance by
"Survivor," which defeated "Friends" head-to-head for the first time in a
year and a half. The CBS 75th anniversary special on Sunday was seen by
18.2 million viewers.

For the week, CBS averaged 13.7 million viewers (9.0 rating, 15 share). NBC
was second with 11.3 million viewers (7.6, 12), but won handily among the
18-to-49-year-old viewers that advertisers crave.

ABC had 9.4 million viewers (6.1, 10), Fox 8 million (5.1, 8), the WB 3.9
million (2.7, 4), UPN 3.5 million (2.3, 4) and Pax TV 1 million (0.7, 1).

NBC's "Nightly News" won the evening news ratings race, averaging 10.8
million viewers (7.6 rating, 15 share). ABC's "World News Tonight" had 10.5
million (7.3, 14) and the "CBS Evening News" had 8.3 million (5.8, 11).

A ratings point represents 1,084,000 households, or 1 percent of the
nation's estimated 108.4 million TV homes. The share is the percentage of
in-use televisions tuned to a given show.

For the week of Oct. 27-Nov. 2, the top 10 shows, their networks and
viewerships: "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," CBS, 27.3 million;
"Survivor: Pearl Islands," CBS, 20.8 million; "ER," NBC, 19.9 million;
"Friends," NBC, 19.4 million; "Everybody Loves Raymond," CBS, 18.3 million;
"CBS at 75," CBS, 18.2 million; "CSI: Miami," 17 million; "The Simpsons," 
Fox, 16.2 million; "Law & Order," NBC, 16.2 million; "Will & Grace," NBC,
15.9 million.


 



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