NFL won't ever had to worry about not getting the bag anytime soon.
sidenote: I wish someone would listen to my Trappin With The Stars concept show
Go on?
NFL won't ever had to worry about not getting the bag anytime soon.
sidenote: I wish someone would listen to my Trappin With The Stars concept show
Go on?
Have random stars just pop up in the most drug infested spots in America to see who can move the most work before the cops show up
Winner gets to donate 1 million to the charity of their choice at the end of the season as the winner.
I got more details written down in my notepad, but I'd want the following for season 1
Betty White
Samuel Jackson
Dr Fauci
Gladys Knight
Pink
Corey Feldman
Rickey Smiley
Albert Belle
Michael Irvin
Newt Gingrich
Fine is cool but why not be great?
DWTS probably more profitable for ABC than the NFL.18 of the top 20 TV shows of the year are NFL
DWTS will not stop ABC from showing MNF
You got bench players in the NBA making $10 plus million and that's not great. NFL players don't even make $1 million unless they're starters.
So I hate this weird corporate of sports talk that we have in this forum. It’s bizarre and i don’t know why anyone cares. Saying that:
DWTS probably more profitable for ABC than the NFL.
Explain why you enjoy talking about the Walt Disney Company's profits?It's fun to talk about
It's fun to discuss the behind the scenes/Financials of the products you consume sometimes
Have random stars just pop up in the most drug infested spots in America to see who can move the most work before the cops show up
Winner gets to donate 1 million to the charity of their choice at the end of the season as the winner.
I got more details written down in my notepad, but I'd want the following for season 1
Betty White
Samuel Jackson
Dr Fauci
Gladys Knight
Pink
Corey Feldman
Rickey Smiley
Albert Belle
Michael Irvin
Newt Gingrich
So I hate this weird corporate of sports talk that we have in this forum. It’s bizarre and i don’t know why anyone cares. Saying that:
.
Maybe when it first started but going by ad buys during the show, DWTS is at its lowest since it began ($91K)So I hate this weird corporate of sports talk that we have in this forum. It’s bizarre and i don’t know why anyone cares. Saying that:
DWTS probably more profitable for ABC than the NFL.
NBC’s Sunday Night Football commanded the highest ad rates, at $617.920, up 4.7% from last year. The other networks also showed strong price gains for their NFL game inventory, with Fox up 13.6%, CBS up 7.4% and ESPN registering a 6% hike.
Explain why you enjoy talking about the Walt Disney Company's profits?
You are missing my point.Maybe when it first started but going by ad buys during the show, DWTS is at its lowest since it began ($91K)
Dancing with the Stars: ad price 2020 | Statista
compared to NFL Sunday Night Football on NBC ($600K) and ESPN MNF ($285K) per ad during the broadcast
NFL Game Ad Revenue Grew 10%, Says SMI | Broadcasting+Cable
Advertisers Flock to N.F.L. Broadcasts as a ‘Safe Haven’
Ad spending has slumped in the pandemic, in part over uncertainty about how sports seasons would proceed. With an on-time start, football is poised to capture “a greater share of a smaller pie.”
Advertisers Flock to N.F.L. Broadcasts as a ‘Safe Haven’
So you are having fun doing this?There's nothing wrong in talking about the companies that deliver the products you use.
We talk about Apples sales figures becuase a lotta people have iPhone and Apples sales and success dictate how their iPhones will be like. It's interesting to catch trends as well.
Its also fun to discuss winners and losers devoid of the context.
It's the same reason why we can discuss and make memes about presidents even though they are war criminals.
When you divorce context from something you can have a casual conversation about it.
You are missing my point.
It doesn't cost anywhere near as much to produce Dancing With the Stars as it does for an NFL game.
So you are having fun doing this?
A billion-dollar battle for “Sunday Night Football” is emerging between incumbent NBC and Disney/ABC/ESPN as the NFL moves toward agreements on its new TV deals that could be completed by the end of the year, The Post has learned.
It has been known for a long time that Disney/ABC/ESPN would be very aggressive for more NFL, the most valuable programming in television. As far back as early 2019, there was buzz about ABC wanting a Super Bowl.
However, according to sources, it is more than that as the pitch Disney is making to the NFL is that it currently pays the most so it deserves the best prime-time regular-season schedule.
On top of that, according to officials familiar with the negotiations, Disney/ABC/ESPN wants to acquire two separate NFL packages.
At the moment, ESPN spends $2 billion per year for an inferior Monday Night schedule and no Super Bowls, while NBC writes a check for a mere $950 million for Sunday Night, which includes flexible scheduling that allows the NFL to shift better games into prime time, as well as a spot in the Super Bowl rotation.
NBC also has two playoff games per year compared to ESPN’s one. (NBC added another playoff game this year with the expanded format.) ABC currently has no regular package, but occasionally simulcasts ESPN’s productions.
ESPN’s extra cost does allow it to have almost wall-to-wall highlights on its network daily, which is something NBC, Fox and CBS don’t have. ESPN broadcasts the draft and the Pro Bowl.
If Disney were able to swipe “Sunday Night Football” from NBC, it would likely place it on ABC. In such a scenario, NBC would still be in play for Monday or Thursday night action. Both Disney and NBC could try for Fox and CBS’ Sunday afternoon packages.
Those could be safest with the NFL able to extract top dollar from Fox and CBS, while not messing with success of the setup of producing multiple games. Both networks currently pay more than a billion, but not near what ESPN pays.
Disney and NBC still can’t entirely be ruled out just yet for Sunday afternoons, but it seems less likely at the moment.
ESPN’s current “Monday Night Football” deal concludes after next season, while NBC, CBS and Fox’s NFL TV contracts will be completed following the 2022-23 Super Bowl.
The NFL likes NBC’s Sunday presentation featuring Al Michaels and Cris Collinsworth. NBC has a succession plan that would put Mike Tirico in place of Michaels and, further down the road, the already-signed Drew Brees possibly checking in for Collinsworth.
ESPN has struggled to create a marquee booth with this year’s team being made up of Steve Levy, Louis Riddikk and Brian Griese.
This is why ESPN had prepared a $14 million-per-year offer for Tony Romo, but was outbid by CBS, who went to $17.5 million per. An official with knowledge of the NFL’s thinking, though, said ultimately the broadcast crews will not be a large factor in the league’s TV decision.
Meanwhile, the two digital players that seem most likely to jump into the negotiations are Amazon and Apple. Amazon is already the digital home for Thursday nights, while Apple could try to help its Apple+ product. Both have extraordinarily deep pockets, though neither is expected to receive a marquee standalone package and may just be in line for digital rights.