Los Angeles Times

A landmark for History

‘Hatfields & Mccoys’ miniseries brings big ratings to the channel and sets the stage for more scripted shows.

- By T.L. Stanley

“Hatfields & McCoys,” the record-breaking miniseries that aired on the History channel earlier this week, came out guns blazing in more ways than one.

Its Memorial Day debut drew 13.9 million viewers, a new high for an entertainm­ent show on ad-supported cable TV. In addition to averaging 13.8 million viewers across its three-night run, the miniseries’ numbers actually increased on its final night to 14.3 million viewers, nearly unheard of for a multi-episode program in recent years.

“We felt like if we had two really kick-ass nights, a third would work because people would want to see how it ended,” said Nancy Dubuc, History’s president and general manager. “That’s how it grew.”

The program, a decadeslon­g passion project for executive producer Leslie Greif, starred Kevin Costner as Devil Anse Hatfield and Bill Paxton as Randall McCoy, patriarchs of the brutal Appalachia­n families that started battling just after the Civil War.

The story covers the origins of the legendary feud, which are still hazy to this day, and the bloody fallout that included kidnapping­s, fire bombings and murders. It was History’s first foray into scripted programmin­g after an aborted attempt with the controvers­ial miniseries “The Kennedys.”

Media watchers, often using the term “perfect storm,” attributed the success to a potent combinatio­n of star quality, good timing, strong production values, right network and muscular marketing.

“It looked like a feature film, and everything about it screamed ‘event program-

ming,’ ” said Gary Lico, chief executive of CableU.tv, a cable network research firm. “There hasn’t been anything like this anywhere on TV for a while.”

Dubuc, a close-to-thevest executive who’s not known for showboatin­g, acknowledg­ed popping some Champagne at the cable channel’s headquarte­rs this week as the extent of the ratings triumph sank in.

“Hatfields & McCoys” was groundbrea­king for History for a number of reasons. It put the channel’s stamp on scripted programmin­g, laying the foundation for the next show, “The Vikings,” and proved that a beginning-of-summer holiday weekend can bring crowds.

It also drew in significan­tly more women and younger, advertiser-coveted 18-to-49-year-old viewers than the channel norm. The series averaged 13.8 million viewers over its three-night run, with 6 million adults 25 to 54 years old and 4.9 million 18-49-year-olds, according to Nielsen.

The gender split of the audience was another milestone: 55% male, 45% female. History’s crowd is usually closer to 70% men, Dubuc said. The channel’s heavy slate of reality programmin­g, which includes shows such as “Pawn Stars,” “Swamp People” and “Ice Road Truckers,” typically appeals more to men.

Though the miniseries was aimed at History’s core male fans, its family themes resonated with women.

“It’s a gruesome story, and it’s easy on the surface to judge it as a violent western,” Dubuc said. “But it has these very emotional threads about love and protection of family, losing your children, which are very relatable.”

Demographi­c breakdowns have yet to come in for regions of the country, but some TV analysts think it may have scored as well in big cities as in the South or the heartland, which tend to be drawn more toward convention­al storytelli­ng like westerns.

“It doesn’t matter where you live or what ethnic background you’re from,” said Shari Anne Brill, a TV research analyst. “We all have crazy kinfolk.”

Even the timing of the miniseries, which some people in the industry questioned, turned out to be spot on. History executives never doubted that the holiday weekend was a good platform, having premiered the hit docudrama “Gettysburg” the year prior.

Viewing levels are traditiona­lly strong on that night, Dubuc said, and networks air mostly repeats after May sweeps. Major sporting events, such as the Indianapol­is 500, are finished by Monday night, and competitio­n for male viewers, at least in original programmin­g, is weak, she said.

The run-up to Memorial Day, however, is rife with opportunit­y to promote an event movie to men through Stanley Cup playoffs, NBA games and other nationally televised sports. History did just that, after having spent nearly six months on its own air teasing the miniseries for its core viewers.

The marketing campaign used stark, gritty images of Costner and Paxton with the tagline, “Never forgive. Never forget.” It included stunts like wrapping New York City subway cars and sponsoring the HBO Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Miguel Cotto pay-perview fight. TV ads used a memorable vintage-sounding song from roots rock band the Silent Comedy.

“Marketing has become so important because of the fragmented TV audience,” said David Scardino, an entertainm­ent specialist at Santa Monica ad agency RPA. “These promotions said you’d be rewarded if you watched, and then the show made good on that.”

Since success begets imitators, “Hatfields & McCoys” may mean a further rush into westerns, a genre that’s already started to have a renaissanc­e, and the mostly abandoned miniseries format.

As for “Hatfields & McCoys,” Dubuc said it’s too early to tell if the History channel will revisit the relatives from Kentucky and West Virginia. She’s disincline­d, saying she “doesn’t want to be my own worst enemy” by milking the hit.

Meantime, there’s a quick turnaround on the DVD, which is set to launch July 31.

 ?? Kevin Lynch
History ?? KEVIN COSTNER stars as Devil Anse Hatfield in “Hatfields & McCoys,” a hit for the History channel.
Kevin Lynch History KEVIN COSTNER stars as Devil Anse Hatfield in “Hatfields & McCoys,” a hit for the History channel.
 ?? Chris Large
History ?? “HATFIELDS & MCCOYS,” starring Kevin Costner, averaged 13.8 million viewers across its three-night run on History. Next for the channel: “The Vikings.”
Chris Large History “HATFIELDS & MCCOYS,” starring Kevin Costner, averaged 13.8 million viewers across its three-night run on History. Next for the channel: “The Vikings.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States