Hot Sheet: Last Week Tonight With John Oliver demand surges

Hazbin Hotel returned to the top of the overall TV demand chart.

HBO’s Last Week Tonight With John Oliver broke into the top three titles on the overall TV demand chart in Canada towards the end of April.

The show was 38.85 times more in demand than the average TV series in Canada for the week of April 22 to 28, according to Parrot Analytics. Last Week Tonight With John Oliver re-entered the chart at No. 3 after being absent from the TV list since mid-March.

Prime Video’s Hazbin Hotel (58.78) returned to the top spot on the TV chart after being dethroned briefly by NBC’s Saturday Night Live (47.58), which moved down to No. 2.

Also moving up on the chart was Prime Video’s Invincible (36.66), which jumped from No. 6 to No. 4, while ABC Kids’ Bluey (35.60) climbed from No. 10 to No. 8.

On the digital original chart, it once again a Prime Video sweep of the top three, with Hazbin Hotel, Invincible and Fallout (35.79) taking first, second and third spots, respectively.

FX’s Shogun, meanwhile, moved up from No. 10 to No. 8, with an average of 24.39 demand points.

Top 10 Digital Originals: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel (Prime Video): 58.78
2. Invincible (Prime Video): 36.66
3. Fallout  (Prime Video): 35.79
4. Bridgerton (Netflix): 29.95
5. Letterkenny (Crave): 26.19
6. X-Men ’97 (Disney+): 25.18
7. Stranger Things (Netflix): 24.68
8. Shogun (FX): 24.39
9. Reacher (Prime Video): 21.61
10. Star Trek: Discovery (Paramount+): 21.39

Top 10 Overall TV Shows: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel: 58.78
2. Saturday Night Live: 47.58
3. Last Week Tonight With John Oliver: 38.85
4. Invincible: 36.66
5. WWE Monday Night Raw: 35.84
6. Fallout: 35.79
7. Game of Thrones: 35.78
8. Bluey: 35.60
9. RuPaul’s Drag Race: 34.34
10. The Daily Show: 33.74

Editor’s note: Due to a data processing issue with Parrot Analytics, the weekly Hot Sheet is being published with back-dated numbers for an indefinite period.

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.

Image courtesy of Bell Media