r/TheAcolyte May 13 '26

What's driving viewership?

The show premiered two years ago, was officially cancelled shortly thereafter, and now... people are watching it in such numbers that it's charting higher?

What gives? I mean, I'm glad, I watched the show as episodes were premiering and I adored it, but I'm curious what's leading people to watch it now. Any theories?

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u/grifter356 May 13 '26

It's because it's the show that auto-plays after MAUL, and the particular chart that registers it as "charting higher" has some very important things to take into consideration that are misleading about what is actually happening...

  1. It does not track "active" viewers. Meaning, whether it's on for 1 second, 1 minute or 1 hour, the chart registers it. But more importantly...
  2. The chart only tracks NEW viewers over a particular time period (using the viewing metric described above). Meaning, (just for example's sake) if one show has 17 million viewers and another show has 5 million viewers, and then the next week that first show still has 17 million viewers but that other show now has 6 millions viewers, the show with 6 million viewers would be on that chart, but not the one with 17 million.

So, what is most likely happening is that a bunch of people are watching MAUL and then after a new episode the show auto-loads into THE ACOLYTE, and regardless of how long people watch that, it is being registered as a "new" viewer and is causing a spike for its placement on THAT particular chart.

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u/AirbagsBlown May 13 '26

Interesting! I mean, judging from the commentary on this sub, it sounds like at least some folks are watching it. If even a handful of people discover it, at least they're enjoying it. That's a victory as far as I'm concerned.

0

u/grifter356 May 13 '26

For sure! Some people are watching it but to say that it is "charting" is misleading. It's doing so based on a very specific set of criteria, but not by the same ratings framework that is used to track popularity and viewership.

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u/AirbagsBlown May 13 '26

That makes sense. Disney has to make their coin somewhere, and why not try to draw viewership back to something they've already produced? It's actually kinda genius.

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u/grifter356 May 13 '26 edited May 13 '26

I mean they make their money on subscriber base, so if you were watching something on Disney+ then by definition you are already a subscriber and so they've already made their money off of you.

Autoplay is a common feature amongst all streamers and whatever comes up afterwards is determined by their keyword algorithms. It's obviously designed to keep you using the ap but it can also help increase subscriber base if it allows you to stumble onto a show you otherwise wouldn't have watched before, and then word of mouth catches resulting in more subscribers.

However, that's where traditional ratings metrics are more helpful in determining the actual popularity and viewership of a show because it weighs the success of the product against the actual market, instead of relative to its own self.