Crave’s Letterkenny has broken back into the top three on the digital demand chart in Canada following the season two premiere of its spinoff Shoresy.
Letterkenny was 26.08 times more in demand than the average TV show in Canada for the week of Sept. 25 to Oct. 1, according to Parrot Analytics. Its spinoff Shoresy (Metric Media), created by Jared Keeso, made its second season premiere on Crave on Sept. 29.
There were more changes on the digital list from the previous week, with three series entering the chart. Netflix’s Sex Education (21.83) came in at No. 6, while Prime Video’s Gen V (19.7) and Disney+’s Loki (19.57) came in at No. 9 and No. 10, respectively.
The digital chart was once again topped by Disney+’s Ahsoka (42.77), and Prime Video’s The Wheel Of Time was No. 2, with an average of 27.45 demand points.
On the overall TV chart, Ahsoka was No. 1, while Cartoon Network’s Adventure Time jumped to No. 2 on the list from No. 7 in the previous week, with an average of 38.42 demand points. The series’ spinoff Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake premiered on Cartoon Network in Canada on Sept. 15. NBC’s The Voice re-entered the list at No. 6, with 26.31 demand points.
Top 10 Digital Originals: Canada
1. Ahsoka (Disney+): 42.77
2. The Wheel Of Time (Prime Video) 27.45
3. Letterkenny (Crave) 26.08
4. Only Murders In The Building (Hulu): 23.71
5. One Piece (Netflix): 23.01
6. Sex Education (Netflix): 21.83
7. Stranger Things (Netflix): 20.52
8. Good Omens (Prime Video): 20.3
9. Gen V (Prime Video): 19.7
10. Loki (Disney+): 19.57
Top 10 Overall TV Shows: Canada
1. Ahsoka: 42.77
2. Adventure Time: 38.42
3. PAW Patrol: 31.19
4. Jujutsu Kaisen: 30.42
5. The Wheel Of Time: 27.45
6. The Voice (U.S.): 26.31
7. Letterkenny: 26.08
8. Sesame Street: 24.9
9. The Big Bang Theory: 24.8
10. SpongeBob SquarePants: 24.63
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 courtesy of Bell Media