Tuesday, 06 January 2009
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"A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall"

*Ran and The Recapist FNL recaps will return in the new year. Until then, we hope you'll enjoy Trace's FNL recaps.
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"Underdogs"

The team prepares for tough opponents; the Taylors make a decision about the McCoys; Tyra writes her college essay with help from Landry; Matt frets over telling his grandma about his plan for college; and Lyla moves out of Tim's house.
 
01-07-09 (DirecTV)

Note: All 13 episodes of Friday Night Lights Season 3 will re-air starting January 16th on NBC!
Echoes Of Hope
 
Helping LA's youth to help themselves.
Ho-hum return for 'Friday Night Lights'
Written by Carol   
NBC moved its critically acclaimed drama “Friday Night Lights” to Friday night for the show’s second season, hoping the symmetry between the name and its logical new location would help build an audience on a less-competitive night, a year after the show struggled on Tuesday and Wednesday.

While “Lights” did manage to finish second in its very weak timeslot for its season two premiere, its numbers weren’t all that promising.

“Lights” averaged a 2.1 in adults 18-49 at 9 p.m. Friday, according to final Nielsen numbers, just behind CBS’s critically derided new vampire drama “Moonlight” in that demo while drawing 6.5 million total viewers. That made it NBC’s least-watched program of the night.

The timeslot competition included two reruns, ABC’s “Private Practice” and Fox’s “K-Ville,” as well as CW’s “Smackdown,” which does well in the younger 18-34 demographic.

But the lighter competition didn’t boost “Lights’” average. The show was slightly off from last year’s season average of 2.2 and was down 22 percent from last year’s premiere, which averaged a 2.7.

Perhaps some “Lights” fans didn’t know the show had moved, or maybe it was actually hurt by Friday night’s generally low viewership levels. Whatever the reason, NBC will probably want to see stronger results to keep the show on the air.

“Lights” could still see a kick-up in viewership when digital video recorder ratings are released in a few weeks. The percentage of DVR households in Nielsen’s sample has more than doubled since this time last year, and media people expect seven-day-playback ratings to influence networks’ decisions on what to keep on the air.

Meanwhile, “Moonlight” saw a sharp decline from its opener, dipping 19 percent from a 2.7 last week to a 2.2. Media people were surprised the show, whose pilot was reshot shortly after May’s upfront, had debuted so strongly.

CBS still managed to take the night easily, even with a weaker “Moonlight.” The network averaged a 2.5 18-49 rating and 8 share, with NBC second at 2.1/7, ABC third with 1.8/6 and Fox and the CW tied for fourth at 1.4/5. Univision’s ratings weren’t available at press time.

CBS led every hour, with “Ghost Whisperer” first at 8 p.m. at 2.5, followed by NBC’s “Deal or No Deal” at 2.1, Fox’s “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader” at 1.5, ABC’s “Pushing Daisies” rerun at 1.4, and the first hour of “Smackdown” on the CW at 1.3.

At 9 p.m., CBS led with “Moonlight” at 2.2, followed by "Lights'" 2.1. ABC’s “Private” rerun was second at 1.7, followed by the CW’s conclusion of “Smackdown” at 1.5 and Fox’s “K-Ville” rerun at 1.2.

At 10 p.m., CBS’s “Numb3rs” placed first with a 2.8, with ABC’s “20/20” second at 2.3 and NBC’s “Las Vegas” at 2.2, down 8 percent from last week’s 2.4 for its two-hour premiere.

Among households, CBS led easily at 5.8/11, followed by NBC at 4.9/9, ABC at 3.8/7, Fox at 2.7/5 and the CW at 2.5/5.
 
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