Hamilton County reached out to the NFL for permission to stream the Super Bowl into Paul Brown Stadium for a city watch party. Party poopers that they are, the NFL gave us the thumbs down. I'm sure it has to do with overall ratings. Ifyou get tens of thousands of people together to watch on one screen that is tens of thousands of individual screens not boosting the ratings.
To be fair, the NFL is charging millions of dollars for 30 second ads. Can't keep charging that if there aren't tens of thousands of people not watching in a stadium.
(02-02-2022, 07:13 PM)pally Wrote: Hamilton County reached out to the NFL for permission to stream the Super Bowl into Paul Brown Stadium for a city watch party. Party poopers that they are, the NFL gave us the thumbs down. I'm sure it has to do with overall ratings. Ifyou get tens of thousands of people together to watch on one screen that is tens of thousands of individual screens not boosting the ratings.
I liked the idea at first. But it does pull bodies away from the local bars and restaurants. I'm sure they could use the business a little more than the stadium
You know I think its silly the NFL is not giving permission but I would much rather be at a Super Bowl party than at the cold stadium in a small chair, or a bar even.
Remember buying tickets and doing a similar thing to watch the Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Hitman Thomas Hearns fight and it was just an average experience even though it was a great fight.
The water tastes funny when you're far from your home,
yet it's only the thirsty that hunger to roam. Roam the Jungle !
Hamilton County built the stadium with tax payer dollars and we hardly use it. I would be interested in a gathering at the stadium to watch the Super Bowl. Guess it won't happen though.
(02-02-2022, 10:42 PM)guyofthetiger Wrote: Hamilton County built the stadium with tax payer dollars and we hardly use it. I would be interested in a gathering at the stadium to watch the Super Bowl. Guess it won't happen though.
They can still charge a nominal fee to enter the stadium so the NFL can get its $$$ and be happy and the org. thru the concession stands.
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I realize it's about ratings and the number of people watching, but that would still people watching the ads, just not at home, so couldn't they count that towards the number of viewers?
Actually, wouldn't they prefer to know exactly how many people are seeing the commercials in the stadium because, otherwise, there's so many parties that they'd have no idea how many people are actually crammed around a single TV?
If people had to buy the game, I might get it, but, otherwise, I don't get it because the commercials would be purchased beforehand, so who cares how many TVs see them?
I guess maybe for future year projections, but, again, couldn't they factor in the number of people seeing it from the stadium?
It doesn't make any sense.
Maybe beer companies that sponsor the NFL are mad because less people will buy beers at the stadium when they cost $8 a beer?
(02-03-2022, 05:47 AM)Adamantium Wrote: Can't they show it if it's free?
This is what confuses me. I realize the NFL owns the broadcast rights to the game, but this game is not on NFL network or shown only regionally where people would need Sunday Ticket to see it. It is being broadcast over network NBC airwaves anyone can get with an antenna. I don't see the 10 or 20 thousand people max I think would show up to watch it would make any difference in Nielson ratings. Bars that have to pay to show Sunday ticket will not have to pay to broadcast this game, just put on NBC. It makes no sense really, other than as I've said before, the NFL hates the Brown family.