HoneyBadger
I love short track racing (Taylor's Version)
Apple TV+ is the frontrunner to take over F1 coverage in the US.
Ehh, depends on how much different stuff you watch. I've never had cable in my name and even gave up on the streaming service I was using, YouTube TV, a while back since I just wasn't watching it.I don’t see and always failed to see how going this way would be cheaper than having cable. You literally are coming to the point where each thing you have to watch you have to pay for a different streaming service? To me it’s no different than having a cable package.
Maybe in the US, but F1 has 750 million fans globally. It won't lose all of ESPN's 1.5 million viewers. Those it does lose probably won't keep anyone awake at night, as long as the checks clear.This will be fatal to F1’s explosive growth.
The US is their primary target right now.Maybe in the US, but F1 has 750 million fans globally. It won't lose all of ESPN's 1.5 million viewers. Those it does lose probably won't keep anyone awake at night, as long as the checks clear.
At the rate Apple is reportedly going to pay, I wouldn’t be surprised if they got exclusivity and won’t allow F1 TV to be streamed live in the States. But who knows.A friend got me https://www.formula1.com/ as a gift. I can watch any race all the way back to 1970 any time I please, plus it is loaded with shows and articles you won't see anywhere else. I was losing interest in F1 until I got this, but now I'm more engaged than ever. If you click the link you'll see what's there, but you won't be able to access much of it unless you sign up. I think it's like $89, which seems like a lot until you actually start using it, and then it's priceless.
F1’s bubble was destined to burst.At the rate Apple is reportedly going to pay, I wouldn’t be surprised if they got exclusivity and won’t allow F1 TV to be streamed live in the States. But who knows.
There were only two ways left to better monetize F1’s TV rights in America, and that was via in-race commercials or a paywall. It’s hard not to see this marking the end of F1’s audience growth here. We’ll see if it’s worth it.
Then they may be going about it the wrong way.The US is their primary target right now.
They want five races in the states.
It's lasted longer than I thought it would.F1’s bubble was destined to burst.
Maybe F1 also thinks it's peaked. Take the money and run.I don't get why F1 would take the bag of money at the expense of continued broader exposure.
Viewership has continued to grow almost each race this year despite not having a particularly compelling championship battle, while Ford and GM are both set to enter the sport next year. It would seem pretty short-sighted to think there isn’t room for more growth, but it wouldn’t be the first nor the last time a racing series has done something like that.Maybe F1 also thinks it's peaked. Take the money and run.