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Hi ag,
//Morning Hypo, thanks for BA! (I feel a bit of a fraud as it wasn't my original text to claim!) //
Oh? Was it meant to be a link to a webpage?
I don't know anything about Sky at Night's ratings nor see any reason why they should dip at all, after the loss of Patrick Moore. The viewer interest is in the subject, not the characterful delivery. Or I hope it wasn't :o)
It was regularly ping ponged to unpredictable days of the week and easy to miss, even before it was punted to an after-midnight slot. Now it's on BBC4, where other 'highbrow' material (subtext: low ratings) lurks.
Astronomy is of casual interest to many people but the in-depth side to it appeals to a much smaller group - mainly hobbyists, I'd imagine. Professionals hardly need to learn more of their subject and will be immersed in astronomy news (the "things to see this month" segment) as part of their work.
The BBC's remit is to generate good ratings for BBC1, which is why the show got moved to such a poor slot. At the same time, it has to provide the kind of content which is educational but unlikely to find favour on a commercial-funded channel so, as a public service, they can't axe it completely.