NBC had a lot riding on the comeback of its twin hits from the fall â" âThe Voiceâ and âRevolutionâ â" with âThe Voice,â in particular, taking a big chance by coming back for a second arc in the same season (no singing competition had done that before) and with a new lineup of judges.
But âThe Voiceâ soared back to the top on Monday, with a 4.7 rating among the target audience of viewers between the age of 18 and 49 and 13.4 million viewers. And âRevolutionâ was a winner at 10 p.m., averaging a 2.7 rating in the 18-49 group with about 7.2 million viewers.
Mondayâs edition of âThe Voiceâ actually beat the showâs performance from last fall, when its premiere averaged a 4.2 rating with about 12 million viewers.
The show, however, is down from where it was last winter when it followed the Super Bowl. And executives at Fox hurried to note the show did not come close to matching the 6 rating and 17.9 million viewers that its singing powerhouse âAmerican Idolâ attracted for its premiere this season.
But NBC, which has stumbled badly in the ratings since âThe Voiceâ and N.F.L. football left the air, has reason to feel extremely pleased about the initial results for âThe Voice.â
The competition on Mondays is the toughest in network television, with strong shows on other networks: CBSâs comedy lineup, ABCâs âDancing with the Stars,â and Foxâs âBonesâ and âThe Following.â âThe Voiceâ beat all of them handily from 8 to 10 p.m., and it grew impressively in every half hour, from a 4.0 rating to a 4.5 to a 4.9 to a 5.2.
The numbers for âRevolutionâ were down sharply from the fall premiere of the postapocalyptic drama, which averaged a 4.1 rating and about 10 million viewers. It was closer to what the show was scoring when it left the air in November, though still down from a 2.9.
NBC notes that âRevolutionâ has been among the most successful shows in television in adding audience when delayed viewing is counted, but one alarming note is that the show fell off sharply at the half-hour mark, from a 2.9 rating to a 2.4. That is often a sign that viewers donât find the episode compelling and it might be especially unexpected in the highly promoted return of a serialized drama after a hiatus set up by a cliffhanger.
But for the moment, given its recent travails, Monday night was cause for enormous relief for NBC, if not quite celebration.