1. The Water Cooler Is Alive and Well
Emmy-winning dramaThe Handmaid's Tale is one of 2017's breakout hits, and our data reveals that it is the perfect example of appointment viewing in the on-demand space. New episodes were released every Wednesday and viewers turned up in droves -- on average, 66% of viewing to each new episode occurred within the first three days of availability, and each week that percentage increased as new viewers came into the funnel.
The Handmaid's finale drove a massive spike, but in the days following the views continued to roll in as new people started the series. Hulu's instant, complete and unlimited availability sustains the life of the show.
Additionally, those who started The Handmaid's Tale after the release of the season finale binged it in the true sense of the word, watching nearly three episodes on average per viewing session. About 60% of these new viewers finished all ten episodes in one week. And a highly-addicted 30% completed the season in just three days.
2. "Catching Up" Is Just Watching
The notion of "catching up" on a series -- binging prior seasons in order to be current with newly released episodes or seasons -- is beginning to fade, particularly in an environment where shows are available in perpetuity. What we've discovered is that viewers who exhibit a particular viewer behavior tend to retain that habit in subsequent seasons. In others words, if you watch weekly in one season, you're more likely to do that for the next. Similarly, if you binge a season, you're apt to do that again. There are certainly viewers that switch between these modes, or watch in some hybrid fashion, but they are in the minority. Take a look at Fox's Empire: Among those who watched the latest season as new episodes were released, three out of four had done that for the prior season.
3. Moods Influence TV Selections
When we at Hulu Insights were little, we used to watch a lot of scary movies that we rented on VHS tapes. But since we didn't want to go directly to bed with a brain primed for nightmares, we would turn on the TV in hopes of finding something to cleanse our palettes.
As it turns out, we're not alone, but we no longer have to hope -- we can choose! Hulu viewers pick specific content for mood-management conditions. Six of the top ten shows that viewers select immediately after concluding an intense episode of The Handmaid's Tale are comedies -- shows like Family Guy, CasualandBrooklyn Nine-Nine.