Efisher131
750 truther
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- Aug 30, 2016
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I’m not sure if Fox knows what they’re trying to accomplish any weekWhat the hell is Fox trying to accomplish with the booth today?
I’m not sure if Fox knows what they’re trying to accomplish any weekWhat the hell is Fox trying to accomplish with the booth today?
Carl in the booth knocked it out of the park.Heard Rusty on MRN today. Really impressed me. For a guy who hasn't been in a car in a decade-plus, his comments were relevant.
It’s what Fox wants.Carl was great today. Kurt, Carl and even Tony show what a buffoon Clint has become. Now whether that’s his fault or Fox’s having him play up a character that they think we want to see is debatable, but imo he hasn’t been good this year
It’s what Fox wants.
Clint Bowyer is capable of giving great analysis.
Just watch it on YouTube.I was on vacation and the only successful recording I captured for the 600 was the edited rebroadcast. Now, I expect to have large chunks edited out to fit in the 3-hour window. I can even understand the sponsored 'Ones to Watch' and 'Cutaway Car' segments being included in the shortened show.
At least five times they went to commercial under green, and came back to a restart with little or no explanation or replay of why the yellow had been put out. No video of the lap 80 incident with Johnson and Ty Dillon. No video of the Hamlin / Elliott incident, just interviews. Apparently there was a rain delay in stage 2, but you wouldn't know it other than a comment that "The sun's back out". No video of the incident late in stage 3 (Gilliland spin?). There was no coverage of whatever triggered the restart with 39 to go, and no explanation. I will give them credit for showing the last 35 laps relatively intact.
But apparently it was important this reduced broadcast included booth time with some movie star, and reminiscing about Tony running the double. No wonder Fox misses so much in a live broadcast; they can't even get the editing right when they have the luxury of time.
I didn't know that was an option. Thanks.Just watch it on YouTube.
You mean Chase Elliott, right?having the camera focused on some poor sap without a chance of making the "cut off" while meanwhile we are missing the rest of the race.
Don't forget the playoff charts and endless graphs that will make up the bulk of their pre and post race shows.I still can't stand NBC for the simple fact that next week and every damn week after they'll manage to say "playoffs" more in a single race than FOX does the whole season. I understand it's more important as we approach the cut-off race, but for the next 2 months they're going to be hyping it up like THIS RACE is the one that CHANGES EVERYTHING when in the grand scheme we're in the middle of the season still.
I'll be honest, I get tired of the constant joking and jestering from the commentators. Either NASCAR or the TV executives think we want the commentators acting like our friends watching the race with us.
They need to watch the commentators on FloRacing, DirtVision, or any F1 race broadcast to learn how to do it properly.
You can have passionate and colorful commentary without turning the whole thing into a joke.
Also the pre & post race shows need less gimmicks and sketches and more of a grounded look at the upcoming race or a grounded follow up post race.
Let's really dig into the sport of stock car racing and get into the meat and potatoes.
We really don't need people attempting and failing at comedy to have a good race broadcast.
I would take the Fox and NBC booths over the overwhelming majority of PxP booths on streaming media.
I’d say it was unmotivated
Eh, different strokes for different folks I guess.
There's no depth to these broadcasts.
The CARS Tour broadcasts are fine, mainly because they have Jacklyn (who works her ass off) or James in the pits to compliment the booth and add depth, plus Matt Weaver's usually at those races tweeting out scanner audio - which Eric and Blake relay to viewers.
Many of these other races I watch, no depth. ESPECIALLY when they're just plugging the track PA feed into the broadcast and the announcer's having to act as a hype man and a TV commentator at the same time - which is literally an impossible balance.
NBC races are broadcast in 1080 though, while Fox was 720 (or in some cases, 480 upscaled).The biggest thing I will miss from Fox is they had a number of their races in 4K this year. NBC can only do that on Peacock. I haven't heard if they will do that. Probably not since they don't do that for Sunday Night Football.