For a more extensive picture, the Wrestlenomics Patreon page normally tracks how a given show did in various demographics in relation to the median of the prior four weeks’ numbers. Since this was just the third episode of “Collision,” the comparison this time out was to the median of the first two episodes. By that metric, the news was, obviously, not good. There were substantial drops across all demographics, with the biggest, percentage-wise, coming in at 88 percent in men aged 18 to 34, followed most closely by adults aged 18 to 34 at 71 percent. In that age group, going against the usual demographic breakdowns for wrestling shows, “Collision” had more than two and a half times as many female viewers (28,000) as it did male viewers (11,000). All of the movement by demographic was down at least 20 percent, with the vast majority of the demographics being tracked dropping from the median by more than 30%.
In more positive news, going by the quarter-hour ratings reported on the Wrestlenomics Patreon page, the audience for “Collision” stayed fairly consistent throughout the show, with no large swings from quarter to quarter. All quarter-to-quarter gains and losses, both overall and in the key demo, were right at 10% or less, coming within Nielsen’s stated margin of error for its TV ratings.

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