View Full Version : The 18-49 Demographic Failure of "Harry's Law"


James28
06-10-2026, 04:56 PM
Harry's Law was a legal comedy-drama series on NBC created by David E. Kelley and starring Kathy Bates as Harriet (Harry) Korn, a cranky former patent lawyer who is forced to make a fresh start after being fired from her blue-chip law firm and assembles a new group of associates to form a unique law firm at a run-down shoe store. in Cincinnati, Ohio. Notably, Harry's Law was the first series created by David E. Kelley that was not co-produced with 20th Century Fox Television—instead, it was co-produced by Warner Bros. Television.

Despite having the highest overall-viewership figures of any scripted series on NBC at that time, Harry's Law somehow just couldn't translate to being a potential long-runner for NBC. Its 18-49 demographic ratings were terrible; It's best such ratings being a 2.2 during season one and a 1.3 during season two. For those who can't understand the secret of getting a good rating in the desirable, advertiser-friendly demographic rather than just total viewers, this is simply frustrating. The best viewership of Harry's Law's season one was during January 2011 (its debut month), two of its three episodes that month got above 11 million, and the best viewership of its season two was 9.88 with a 1.3 demo rating, achieved on November 30, 2011.

In the following two broadcast seasons after the cancellation of Harry's Law, NBC ended up getting good replacements in Chicago Fire and The Blacklist, the latter of which actually beat Harry's Law's second-season viewer average during its first season (10.79 million vs. 7.79 million). The demo average for The Blacklist's first season was a 2.9 – which is actually over twice the 1.1 average of Harry's Law's second season.

Is the Harry's Law situation worth looking back on in 2026, especially since no current scripted series on American broadcast television is getting above a 0.5 in the 18-49 demographic right now?