Hot Sheet: Emily In Paris lands on digital demand chart

Part one of the show's fourth season premiered on Aug. 15.

Netflix’s Emily in Paris debuted at No. 5 on the digital originals chart following its season four premiere on Aug. 15.

The romantic-comedy series was 28.6 times more in demand than the average TV show in Canada during the week of Aug. 19 to 25, according to Parrot Analytics.

At the top of the digital originals chart is Prime Video’s Hazbin Hotel at No. 1 with a demand average of 42.4. Following the animated-musical comedy is Disney+’s The Acolyte, landing at No. 2 with a demand average of 38.9.

HBO’s House of the Dragon, which saw a significant drop in demand the previous week following its season finale in early August, fell to No. 5 on the overall TV originals chart. The Game of Thrones prequel series was 39.6 times more popular than the average series in Canada. Notably, its predecessor held its spot at No. 2 on the chart.

Top 10 Digital Originals: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel (Prime Video): 42.4
2. The Acolyte (Disney+): 38.9
3. The Boys (Prime Video): 33.8
4. The Umbrella Academy (Netflix): 33.5
5. Emily in Paris (Netflix): 28.6
6. Only Murders in This Building (Hulu): 27.5
7. One Piece (Netflix): 26.5
8. Love Island U.S. (Peacock): 25.2
9. Letterkenny (Crave): 23.8
10. The Bear (Hulu): 23.5

Top 10 Overall TV Originals: Canada

1. Hazbin Hotel: 42.4
2. Game of Thrones: 42.4
3. The Daily Show: 40.8
4. Saturday Night Live: 40.4
5. House of the Dragon: 39.6
6. The Acolyte: 38.9
7. America’s Got Talent: 37.5
8. The Boys: 33.8
9. The Umbrella Academy: 33.5
10. Sesame Street: 33

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 Netflix