The highly-touted
"family" TV movie, Secrets of
the Mountain, captured the number one spot in its time slot
with over 7.4 million viewers on Friday April 16. A nationwide
"Vote With Your Remote"
grass roots campaign helped Secrets
trump Ghost Whisperer (4.4 million viewers), and is now
driving robust Secrets DVD sales, demonstrating the huge
audience appeal for quality family entertainment.
"A clear message has
been sent," said Secrets executive producer, Ben Simon.
"American families want more high-quality programming that they can
enjoy together. We've heard their voice, and more great family
movies are on the way."
Secrets of the Mountain
is the first in a series of movies that the world's biggest
retailer, Walmart, and the world's largest consumer products
maker, Procter & Gamble (P&G), have partnered to produce.
Secrets'' TV success has
carried over to Walmart stores where
the
Secrets DVD is being offered
for a limited time at just $12, bundled with a CD
soundtrack produced by Randy Jackson and featuring
American IdolŪ winner Jordin Sparks, top 5 finisher
Brooke White and many others.
Television audiences eager for
high-quality family movies launched a
"Vote With Your Remote"
campaign to get families to watch Secrets, causing the movie
to become one of Google's most-searched terms on the day of its TV
premiere.
The "Vote with your
Remote" program gives viewers a vehicle to voice their support for
family entertainment and keeps them up-to-date on upcoming
family-oriented movies and TV shows.
The next movie from the
Walmart/P&G collaboration entitled
The Jensen Project is set to broadcast July 16 on NBC.
For years, advertisers
have been asking for better, broad-reaching family programs. In
1998, more than 40 marketers, including P&G and Walmart, formed the
Alliance for Family Entertainment to push for more family-friendly
shows. The Alliance has played a significant role in bringing 20
primetime programs to air, including hits The Gilmore Girls,
Chuck, and Everybody Hates Chris, among others.
Research conducted by
the Association of National Advertisers showed that ads were less
effective when they appeared on shows containing sex, violence or
drug abuse, and that only 23% of American parents are satisfied with
the amount of family programming.
"The success of
Secrets of the Mountain confirmed what our research has shown,"
says Simon. "Parents will support movies like this - so long as we
make them available."