RiverDog wrote:I didn't realize until recently that nearly all of the Thursday Night Football games will be televised live exclusively on Amazon Prime. The only exceptions are the season opener, to be televised on NBC, the Thanksgiving Day games, and in local markets of the participating teams. I am an Amazon Prime member, so it won't affect me personally.
https://www.si.com/nfl/2021/05/03/thurs ... %20package.
My best friend is 83 years old and I like to tease him by saying that on Y2K, he failed to step through the time portal and enter the 21st century as he is generally adverse to such innovations like smart phones and social media. I once tried to talk him into getting a Fire Stick or Roku so he could watch stuff streaming over the internet instead of recording stuff on. There is a direct relationship between a person's age and their acceptance/compatibility with new technology. Plus he hates Amazon.
In any event, I'm wondering how the general public will react once they find out that they can't watch TNF over the traditional stations, ie Fox, NBC, NFL Network, et al.
RiverDog wrote:Of course, it's a business. It has been for a long, long time. But I wouldn't get my briefs in a wad over it. We're only talking about 17 out of 272 regular season games, about 6% of the schedule.
I don't think that this is a lot different from when MNF went to ESPN 10-15 years ago. At the time, not everyone had ESPN. We had a work group at the plant that collected some money for an over-the-air TV so that they could watch MNF on their breaks. They didn't realize that it was no longer on ABC until the first game of the season when they tuned in and got the local news.
People will do what they did back when MNF left network television. They'll either go to a friend's house, to the neighborhood bar, or sign up for Amazon Prime.
RiverDog wrote:Of course, it's a business. It has been for a long, long time. But I wouldn't get my briefs in a wad over it. We're only talking about 17 out of 272 regular season games, about 6% of the schedule.
I don't think that this is a lot different from when MNF went to ESPN 10-15 years ago. At the time, not everyone had ESPN. We had a work group at the plant that collected some money for an over-the-air TV so that they could watch MNF on their breaks. They didn't realize that it was no longer on ABC until the first game of the season when they tuned in and got the local news.
People will do what they did back when MNF left network television. They'll either go to a friend's house, to the neighborhood bar, or sign up for Amazon Prime.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You gonna host some Thursday night football parties?
NorthHawk wrote:Pisses me off.
Now paying more for streaming than I ever did for cable or satellite.
Hawk Sista wrote:It’s sad that so many fans won’t be able to watch. I can’t (ok, I can…but I don’t want to) keep up w/ every platform. I was pissed when games moved to cable 100 years ago for the same reason. The NFL is a greedy as bizz. I wish I could quit!
NorthHawk wrote:The real danger for the NFL is if other streamers like Apple or Disney decide to also get involved and isolate more fans who don't want to pay for their package just
for NFL. Sunday Ticket will probably be the next to go to streaming I would think if it hasn't already.
NorthHawk wrote:With streaming can you switch back and forth between games like you can with
the tv remote? Or do you have to stop play and start a new stream?
If you can’t flip around the different games, it lessens the experience of Sunday Ticket as you will be continually
stopping and starting streams which can mean missing plays.
That’s what I liked about Sunday Ticket- if a game dragged on or there were a few games that could be interesting
I could jump around within a second between games.
RiverDog wrote:I couldn't tell you. My Charter Spectrum runs via an app connected to the internet and I have all the functions available that I would in any other mode, ie pause, rewind, etc, but whether that's the same as what Amazon and Apple offer, I don't know.
If Apple offers Sunday Ticket at a reasonable cost, I might sign up for it. The Hawks are libel to be so shi!ty that I might want more options on games where they're getting blown out.
c_hawkbob wrote:I'll be watching the first half on my Kindle Fire at work, the second half at home on Amazon Prime. I actually kinda like it for weekday games.
RiverDog wrote:If you haven't heard by now, you aren't a football fan. The only way to watch tonight's Chargers-Chiefs game live is over Amazon Prime.
I saw the other day that internet streaming has surpassed both cable and satellite as the most popular mode to watch live television. The first game I saw live streamed was one of the London games, streamed over Yahoo, and it was horrible. The technology has improved by leaps and bounds. Except for a 15-30 second time delay, I can't tell any difference in the quality of the broadcast.
Thursday Night Football is only the beginning. The league will award a new contract for their Sunday Ticket package now owned by DirectTV. It will undoubtedly go to a streaming service, either ESPN+, Apple TV, or Amazon Prime.
And if you don't have access to cable, satellite, or an over the air signal, don't forget to check out the network's apps. A couple years ago, our local NBC affiliate had a contractor cut a line that took their TV station down on Sunday morning, so there was no way to get SNF that evening, either on our Spectrum feed or my OTA antenna. However, my internet connection was unaffected, so I was able to watch the game live via the NBC Sports app.
I'm heading out of town next week in our motor home. The area we're staying at on Monday night is primitive, with just one OTA channel available and no direct internet connection. But we will have cell phone service, so I should be able to watch both MNF games live via a streaming service like Fubo TV, which has a free one-week trial.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I do everything on the internet. I don't even have cable television and have no interest in going back to it. Paying for tons of channels I don't watch has no appeal to me.
trents wrote:Well, this thread reminded me of something I've noticed in watching Mariner's games. Friday night Mariner's games are televised only via Apple TV+. This is per a deal with MLB, not the Mariners' franchise per se. The subscription to Apple TV+ is not terribly expensive and you get a "free 7 day trial". A number of other Mariner games are available only via YouTube, which (for now) is free. The trend is obvious: fewer and fewer Mariner games are being broadcast over Root TV (all free) and more and more of them are becoming available only on streaming services. MLB has figured out that they can make more money through subscription contracts than they can through paid by advertising cable channels. You will see this model get more and more traction in the big three or four major spectator sports. We will get nickle and dimed to death by paid subscriptions to content streaming companies in order to watch sports.
NorthHawk wrote:The real danger for the NFL is if other streamers like Apple or Disney decide to also get involved and isolate more fans who don't want to pay for their package just
for NFL. Sunday Ticket will probably be the next to go to streaming I would think if it hasn't already.
NorthHawk wrote:The real danger for the NFL is if other streamers like Apple or Disney decide to also get involved and isolate more fans who don't want to pay for their package just
for NFL. Sunday Ticket will probably be the next to go to streaming I would think if it hasn't already.
trents wrote:Agreed! My wife and I have the Xfinity triple play package where land line, cable TV and Internet are bundled which gives a discount. The cable TV component, historically, at least, gets me all sports I want to watch. But lately, the sports leagues have started to pull out more and more sport programming from cable services and make it available only through streaming providers. I think this may be a response to the "cable cutting" trend. Cable TV revenue has been falling for several years because so many people have ditched cable and get all of their content from the Internet. The problem is there is still a lot of content (not just sports) offered on cable that is not offered on the Internet. Eventually, when a robust enough infrastructure is in place, it will all be streaming but in the meantime there is this awkward transition where a lot of people have to pay for both cable and multiple streaming services in order to get everything they want.
NorthHawk wrote:So let me get this straight. You are going on a trip in your motorhome but will spend 6 hours on Monday watching TV.
Isn't there something wrong with this picture?![]()
NorthHawk wrote:The real problems I think will happen in the future when it's all on streaming only.
To set the scenario for instance, let's say Hulu has the current FOX pgk and Netflix has the current CBS package.
It's near the end of the season and the Vikings are playing the Packers and the Bucs are playing the Rams on HULU, while on Netflix the Bills are playing the Steelers and the Titans are playing the Bengals.
In all 4 games the matchups are between teams with very similar records and you want to be able to jump between games quickly as the games develop. Recording them all isn't the same because
you will know who wins. How do you jump between the 4 games on two different streaming services without missing a lot of the action? Currently it's just a jump key on my remote, but if I have to
sign in and sign out it will mean a big loss of enjoyment and frustration.
Secondly, do you have to log in/log out of your streaming service every time you want to see/do something else? I didn't have to last Thursday when I was watching Chiefs-Chargers on Prime Video, at least not on my tablet
Secondly, do you have to log in/log out of your streaming service every time you want to see/do something else? I didn't have to last Thursday when I was watching Chiefs-Chargers on Prime Video, at least not on my tablet
NorthHawk wrote:Not log in, but I have to stop the stream on one, then start the other and select the program I want to see.
On the Cable side, I can jump, but I was thinking more in terms of having only internet access and no Cable
provider in the middle.
So on my TV, I have to go back to the menu and select the service (Netflix/Hulu, or whatever) then go to continue
program. It then acquires the stream.
The end result is instead of jumping quickly it’s a minute or so of lost viewing each time and would become frustrating
relative to using the Cable TV box with the football or sports package . A less enjoyable viewing experience.
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