
Ratings-wise, this wasn't "Who Shot J.R.?" It was more like "What else is on TV?"...
The death of Edie Britt didn't draw much of a crowd to ABC's "Desperate Housewives."
Sunday's episode of the comic soap, where Nicollette Sheridan's
memorable character was killed off via electrocution when her car hit a
power pole, was seen by 13.9 million people on Sunday, according to Nielsen Media Research.
That's good for a Top 10 showing, but smaller than the 15.2 million original episodes have averaged this season.
So an episode in which a major character died drew fewer people than an average ep? What up with that? And a larger question - when you factor in the huge but still disappointing numbers for the ER finale, what up with "major event" scripted network television? Once upon a time, all of America would tune in to one station to see what would happen to fictional people. Are those days over?
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