Why? What possible relevance can the numbers have to anyone without a financial stake in the show?
They tell you whether the show is succeeding? How many more seasons it is likely to get? Whether it's time to start a letter-writing campaign to save it? Or whether it's "broken through" and become a hit you can casually joke about at parties without falling flat? I remember almost to the day when
Doctor Who broke through to that extent in America, it was marvelous fun while it lasted, and I'm glad I was paying attention to things like BBC America ratings and streaming service figures.
But we're in a topic that is literally about Les Moonves's statements in the quarterly earning's call about how the
Discovery is doing at holding an audience and generating revenue. If you don't want to discuss the topic of the thread or see the value of it, of course, that's fine. You do you. You don't have to read topics you don't like.
It's all about who's "right" and who's "wrong" obviously.
Viewership figures are no reflection the quality of any show. They are a tool for forecasting its future. If I wanted to prove somebody "wrong" about the quality of
Discovery, I'd be in the season review thread bashing the leaden monologues that pockmarked this season or the way Burnham betrayed and belittled herself in the final kiss-and-make-up scene with Tyler. And you'd come right back at me by pointing out that "The Last Outpost" was also a garbage fire, which is true.
De gustibus non est disputandum.
Plenty of shows are great and have lousy financials (
Star Trek and
Star Trek: Enterprise each come to mind). Plenty of shows are lousy and have great financials. (The undisputed king of American scripted television is Chuck Lorre, because life is unfair.) Financial success and quality often have nothing to do with one another. But, after watching my beloved
Enterprise wither and die because of the way it wilted in the ratings (with no small amount of help from Les Moonves, who strangled the show in its crib), I learned to pay close attention to ratings on
every show I watch, good or bad, because I want to know how many more seasons there are going to
be almost as much as I want to know what happens in them. (I also learned to distrust Les Moonves.)
By traditional measures,
Discovery appears to have lousy financials. But Les Moonves does not seem to be treating this show by traditional measures. Given all the uncertainty about both
Discovery's goals and its outcomes, figuring that stuff out is going to remain a rich topic of discussion for as long as
Discovery remains on the air. If you aren't interested in that, you, too, are free to leave the threads about it.