Oh okDon't the home markets get the game OTA
This looks like a way to get around the Federal prohibition of the NFL playing games on Fridays and Saturdays during college and high school football season (roughly Labor Day Weekend thru early December). Since Peacock is an unregulated streaming service, it must be a loophole. This game couldn't air on any of the broadcast or cable networks in September, other than on Sunday or Monday.The leagues might not care but when they’re forcing fans to subscribe to 3 or 4 different streaming services to watch all games there is going to be backlash.
The saying is actually “Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered.”There is a Wall Street saying: Pigs get slaughtered.
A different loophole but not streaming/Peacock related:This looks like a way to get around the Federal prohibition of the NFL playing games on Fridays and Saturdays during college and high school football season (roughly Labor Day Weekend thru early December). Since Peacock is an unregulated streaming service, it must be a loophole. This game couldn't air on any of the broadcast or cable networks in September, other than on Sunday or Monday.
WTMJ in Milwaukee as well being a co-primary (home) market to the Green Bay Packers.The game will air on WCAU in Philly and WGBA in Green Bay. This isn’t “Peacock” to blame, it’s Comcast-NBC and the NFL sanctioning it. I don’t get how the game airing on Netflix would be any better- both are paywalls beyond the now-expected cable paywall to watch additional games.
The NFL mandates that any streaming/cable/pay tv broadcast of games be available OTA in both markets of the teams playing.The game will air on WCAU in Philly and WGBA in Green Bay. This isn’t “Peacock” to blame, it’s Comcast-NBC and the NFL sanctioning it. I don’t get how the game airing on Netflix would be any better- both are paywalls beyond the now-expected cable paywall to watch additional games.
Which is great for fans of those teams in those markets, but fans across the country have to shell out money for what have essentially become pay-per-view games like this Peacock exclusive or Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime.The NFL mandates that any streaming/cable/pay tv broadcast of games be available OTA in both markets of the teams playing.
How much do you pay a month in cable to watch sports.Which is great for fans of those teams in those markets, but fans across the country have to shell out money for what have essentially become pay-per-view games like this Peacock exclusive or Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime.
I’m an Eagles fan stuck in Los Angeles and I can tell you I will not be spending any money on Peacock tonight, but I’ll certainly be watching the game.
Personally, nothing. I’m a “family member” on my brother’s YoutubeTV account which I use for Philly sports, and if there’s anything else I want to watch, there are a plethora of less-than-legal means of watching that I have bookmarked in my browser.How much do you pay a month in cable to watch sports.
So you steal content is what your saying.Personally, nothing. I’m a “family member” on my brother’s YoutubeTV account which I use for Philly sports, and if there’s anything else I want to watch, there are a plethora of less-than-legal means of watching that I have bookmarked in my browser.
I may have, at times, clicked my way through countless pop-up ads to watch a stream of a sporting event. I was a pre-teen at the advent of Napster, and the vast majority of music on my iPod is from the like of Soulseek (or WinMX, or Napster). However, my better half pays for Spotify, and that’s what I use now, because it’s just easier than finding songs, downloading them, and adding them to my phone.So you steal content is what your saying.