
The ratings for the third season of ‘The Voice U.K.’ on the BBC continue to trend ahead of last year, even though the second episode Saturday night drew a smaller audience than the season opener.
The BBC, which has been looking to bolster the singing competition’s performance with the addition of Kylie Minogue to the panel of coaches, drew an average of 7.1 million viewers, down from 8.4 million a week earlier. But that was still 700,000 viewers above the second episode of season two.
In comparison, the second episode of the first season of “The Voice U.K.” had drawn an average audience of 8.9 million people.
‘The Voice U.K.’ Third Season Opener Pulls Strong Ratings
“The Voice U.K.” on Saturday once again drew a bigger audience than ITV celebrity diving show “Splash!,” which reached an average audience of just below 4 million people. The BBC singing competition was the night’s top-rated show in the U.K.
The singing competition’s January launch this year helps it avoid competition from ITV ratings hit “Britain’s Got Talent” with Simon Cowell, which has managed to hold off “The Voice U.K.” after losing some ratings showdowns early in the BBC show’s first season. The first two seasons of “The Voice U.K.” began around Easter.
“The Voice U.K.” had a strong start to its first season, but the ratings dropped after the blind audition rounds with the format’s popular spinning chairs.
Kaiser Chiefs’ Ricky Wilson Named Fourth Coach of ‘The Voice U.K.’
The other new member of the coaching team this year is Kaiser Chiefs singer Ricky Wilson. Minogue and Wilson replaced Jessie J and Danny O’Donoghue on the judging panel. Tom Jones and will.i.am continue in their coaching roles.
“The Voice” format was developed by Dutch producer John De Mol’s Talpa Media and is produced for the BBC by Wall to Wall Media. Wall to Wall is part of Warner Bros.-controlled TV production and distribution firm Shed Media Group.
- This article originally appeared in THR.com.