Hot Sheet: The Bear breaks into digital demand top three

Hazbin Hotel continued its dominance of the demand charts in Canada.

Hulu’s The Bear has clawed back up the digital originals demand chart in Canada.

The Emmy-winning series was 21.75 times more in demand than the average TV series in Canada for the week of Feb. 11 to 17, according to Parrot Analytics. The series, available to stream on Disney+ in Canada, moved up to No. 3 from No. 5 in the previous week.

Prime Video’s animated series Hazbin Hotel, meanwhile, continued its dominance, taking the top spot on both the digital originals and overall TV charts with an average of 64.72 demand points.

Crave’s Letterkenny (27.71) held onto its second spot on the digital list. Paramount+’s Halo was the new entry on chart at No. 4, with an average of 21.21 demand points, while Disney+’s The Mandalorian (17.8) fell from No. 6 to No. 10, after a dip of more than three demand points.

On the overall TV chart, PAW Patrol (35.3) kept its second spot, while HBO’s The Last of Us returned to the list at No. 3 with an average of 33.9 demand points.

Comedy Central’s The Daily Show (27.67) and NBC’s The Voice (US) (25.67) also re-entered the chart at No. 9 and No. 10, respectively.

Top 10 Digital Originals: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel  (Prime Video): 64.72
2. Letterkenny (Crave): 27.71
3. The Bear (Hulu): 21.75
4. Halo (Paramount+): 21.21
5. Our Flag Means Death (Max): 20.85
6. For All Mankind (Apple TV+): 19.32
7. Ted Lasso (Apple TV+): 18.86
8. Stranger Things (Netflix): 18.82
9. Invincible (Prime Video): 17.86
10. The Mandalorian (Disney+): 17.8

Top 10 Overall TV Shows: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel: 64.72
2. PAW Patrol: 35.3
3. The Last Of Us: 33.9
4. Sesame Street: 30.81
5. Jujutsu Kaisen: 29.59
6. The Late Show With Stephen Colbert: 28.66
7. Last Week Tonight With John Oliver: 28.47
8. Letterkenny: 27.71
9. The Daily Show: 27.67
10. The Voice (US): 25.67

Parrot Analytics calculates its Top 10 lists using Demand Expressions, which are shown by using a metric that demonstrates how much more in-demand the top series are than the average TV show (linear, pay TV, SVOD and AVOD) in Canada. For example, a difference of 1x represents the market average and 10x means a series is 10 times more in demand than the average TV show in this market.

Photo by Chuck Hodes/Disney