Last Thursday, there was a Big 10 college football matchup on Fox, and an all-star country music concert on ABC. Guess who won.
Nor to me, although I don't share your view that all concerts are " 'made for TV' pieces of junk." Fox promoted the game heavily, and it had the built-in advantage of being the only network sports telecast on Thursday night, a heavy night for television viewing. Add in the fact that the red-state, red-neck opponents of the "wokeness" of other sports (MLB, NBA, NFL) generally give NCAA football the same pass they give NASCAR and you have all the ingredients for big numbers.No surprise to me. Live sports (and not those 'made for TV' pieces of junk) are the only things left worthwhile.
My 'junk' comment was directed at the sports genre and not musical concerts.Nor to me, although I don't share your view that all concerts are " 'made for TV' pieces of junk." Fox promoted the game heavily, and it had the built-in advantage of being the only network sports telecast on Thursday night, a heavy night for television viewing. Add in the fact that the red-state, red-neck opponents of the "wokeness" of other sports (MLB, NBA, NFL) generally give NCAA football the same pass they give NASCAR and you have all the ingredients for big numbers.
Couldn't ABC had done better with the CMA concert if it had put it on a normal Thursday night? Although country music's appeal has long expanded far beyond the South and rural Midwest, it is still strong in those areas, which also are the strongest areas for college football.
Couldn't ABC had done better with the CMA concert if it had put it on a normal Thursday night?