Brett Ferino
04-22-2003, 02:26 PM
LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) - A 90-minute documentary on the British "Who Wants to be a Millionaire" cheating scandal earned England's largest television ratings for a reality-based program since the funeral of Princess Diana in 1997.
According to London's Guardian newspaper, the Monday night (April 21) special "Millionaire: a Major Fraud," averaged 15.1 million viewers, peaking with 16.7 million. As a point of comparison, February's wildly popular Martin Brashir interview with Michael Jackson averaged 14.1 million viewers. The numbers for the "Tonight with Trevor McDonald" special represent 55.9% of the available television audience.
The documentary focused on disgraced "Millionaire" winner Major Charles Ingram and his coughing conspirator Tecwen Whittock, offering the British public their first glimpse of the notorious episode, and the 19 audible coughs which led Ingram to victory. A subsequent airing of the full formerly-shelved "Millionaire" episode was watched by 1.6 million viewers on ITV2.
Tuesday morning on BBC1's "Breakfast," Ingram protested, "I did not notice or hear any coughing on the night. The clips that were played last night were wholly unrepresentative of the environment that I was sitting within."
According to London's Guardian newspaper, the Monday night (April 21) special "Millionaire: a Major Fraud," averaged 15.1 million viewers, peaking with 16.7 million. As a point of comparison, February's wildly popular Martin Brashir interview with Michael Jackson averaged 14.1 million viewers. The numbers for the "Tonight with Trevor McDonald" special represent 55.9% of the available television audience.
The documentary focused on disgraced "Millionaire" winner Major Charles Ingram and his coughing conspirator Tecwen Whittock, offering the British public their first glimpse of the notorious episode, and the 19 audible coughs which led Ingram to victory. A subsequent airing of the full formerly-shelved "Millionaire" episode was watched by 1.6 million viewers on ITV2.
Tuesday morning on BBC1's "Breakfast," Ingram protested, "I did not notice or hear any coughing on the night. The clips that were played last night were wholly unrepresentative of the environment that I was sitting within."