First they get rid of softcore porn, now this:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/27/sports/hbo-boxing.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/27/sports/hbo-boxing.html
First they get rid of softcore porn, now this:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/27/sports/hbo-boxing.html
The article mentions the British promotional company Matchroom Sports. American television could learn a lot, IMO, from Barry Hearn's brilliant operation, which has raised the TV profile and public enthusiasm for not only boxing but darts and snooker in the UK. Matchroom creates events with plenty of hype and flash as well as great skill in building up the personalities of the featured performers.
Not going to get into it with LandTuna here. My life as a sports spectator (and, in the case of racing, bettor) would be much poorer without boxing and horse racing.
Having spent quite a bit of time over the past 30 years in Merry Olde England I can say from first hand perspective their audience is vastly different than America's. Programs like bird watching, darts and cricket would die on the vine over here in the Colonies due to the audience falling completely asleep.
HBO used to be able to source really good matches. They carried the Tyson-Douglas match for example. Now, the really big draws are all on PPV. It doesn't help that Boxing's audience is getting consistently smaller. It appears HBO made a logical decision to drop it. The real question is if what they replace it with will draw as much.
Last year, BBC America brought the insanity that is the World Darts Championship to American TV for the first time. If they have the rights this year and you have BBC America on your TV, I suggest you watch the schedule during the weeks around Christmas and New Year's and check it out. Fans dress in costumes, chant and sing, and some of the top players are tattooed and Mohawk-coiffed. Boring, it is not.
By the same token, the sport of boxing itself has changed, and is no longer what it was 45 years ago.
The article mentions the British promotional company Matchroom Sports. American television could learn a lot, IMO, from Barry Hearn's brilliant operation, which has raised the TV profile and public enthusiasm for not only boxing but darts and snooker in the UK. Matchroom creates events with plenty of hype and flash as well as great skill in building up the personalities of the featured performers.
Not going to get into it with LandTuna here. My life as a sports spectator (and, in the case of racing, bettor) would be much poorer without boxing and horse racing.
I have a first cousin, Lee Groves, whose career as a punch counter for HBO, Cinemax and other outlets has made him a name in the boxing game, and has taken him all over the world multiple times. He's written a huge first book, with another one coming out soon. He could not disagree more with LandTuna, but to each his or her own.
I have a first cousin, Lee Groves, whose career as a punch counter for HBO, Cinemax and other outlets has made him a name in the boxing game, and has taken him all over the world multiple times. He's written a huge first book, with another one coming out soon. He could not disagree more with LandTuna, but to each his or her own.