Buzz around Prime Video’s Hazbin Hotel is continuing to rise in Canada following its season one finale.
The series was 57.47 times more in demand than the average TV series in Canada for the week of Jan. 29 to Feb. 4, according to Parrot Analytics. The animated series topped both the digital originals and overall TV demand charts, with the season one finale streaming on Feb. 1.
On the digital chart, Crave’s Letterkenny (28.35) moved back up to No. 2, taking the spot from Prime Video’s Reacher (25.64), which dropped down to No. 4. Max’s Our Flag Means Death (25.96) completed the top three.
Netflix’s Stranger Things (21.55), meanwhile, moved from the eighth spot to No. 5 with a slight increase in demand from the previous week, and Hulu’s The Bear (21.45) dropped one spot to No. 7.
On the overall TV chart, Max’s Sesame Street saw a nearly 10-point increase in demand to move to No. 2 from No. 6, and Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants (31.07) climbed to the fourth spot from No. 7.
Top 10 Digital Originals: Canada
1. Hazbin Hotel (Prime Video): 57.47
2. Letterkenny (Crave): 28.35
3. Our Flag Means Death (Max): 25.96
4. Reacher (Prime Video): 25.64
5. Stranger Things (Netflix): 21.55
6. Titans (Max): 21.54
7. The Bear (Hulu): 21.45
8. For All Mankind (Apple TV+): 20.48
9. The Mandalorian (Disney+): 19.39
10. Ted Lasso (Apple TV+): 18.79
Top 10 Overall TV Shows: Canada
1. Hazbin Hotel: 57.47
2. Sesame Street: 39.43
3. PAW Patrol: 33.84
4. SpongeBob SquarePants: 31.07
5. Jujutsu Kaisen: 30.8
6. Saturday Night Live: 30.79
7. Letterkenny: 28.35
8. The Late Show With Stephen Colbert: 27.59
9. RuPaul’s Drag Race: 26.17
10. Our Flag Means Death: 25.96
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 Prime Video