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5 Feb 2014, 09:28 (Ref:3364351) | #176 | |
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You've touched on the second major problem F1 has... and that's it's failure to attract the younger viewer. Kids today are just not interested in F1 the way their predecessors were. Of course it's failure to embrace on-line and increasingly closed nature are only exacerbating that problem.
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5 Feb 2014, 09:40 (Ref:3364357) | #177 | ||
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No. It's simply not worth it. And I am an ex-racer with more than a passing interest.
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5 Feb 2014, 10:26 (Ref:3364364) | #178 | |
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Interestingly I was talking to people at work earlier about F1. I'm 43, two of them are in their mid 30s and one is in his early 20s.
I am, in their words, an "F1 nut". One of the guys in his 30s has a passing interest because his father-in-law is like me; the other has no interest at all, saying "it's really boring", and the guy in his early 20s said "I've watched a few races but they're really dull and now I can't afford it anyway". Both of the people who think it's boring will happily watch the BTCC, though, because "more stuff happens". Not exactly scientific, but it does support some of the conjecture in this thread. I love F1, personally, but I'm afraid it does seem to be disappearing up its own behind. |
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5 Feb 2014, 10:51 (Ref:3364373) | #179 | |
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I agree with the point that F1 has over valued itself in recent years and may have confused the willing demand, with what they feel the sport is worth. Sure it has always been a luxury sport for the rich and famous to enjoy, however they underestimate the price fans will put on it and with prices to watch so high, its clear most fans don't feel a bit of F1 is worth nearly double the average households monthly gas bill.
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5 Feb 2014, 11:05 (Ref:3364378) | #180 | ||
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One big issue is copying.
Bernie thinks people who watch F1 on telly and go to races are the same. He also must think they are as passionate and therefore stupid as premier league football fans! Football is a different passion, you buy into it, its your team, you will pay over the odds to watch games. Its totally irrational really. F1 isn't like that, you are a casual fan, you get no access, you can't aspire to be a driver, you can't aspire to anything, you can look and marvel, but all of it is exclusive. Some people might want to buy into that but a lot won't. You can't sell F1 like football because the fanbase simply isn't THAT passionate enough to pay for it. Think about it, if you are say a Norwich fan, you are in the Prem league yes, but do you get many games on telly? No, but I bet a lot of them have SKY, they might watch cricket a bit too, but football is their sport, that is the only justificaiton for paying for SKY, if you don't like football it simply isn't worth it. And it will be the same on BT Sport, all you will be paying for is football. Rugby, GP, anything else is easily covered by subs, football costs billions to buy and Bernie thinks F1 should too. he is hopelessly misguided if he thinks that. Greed is pathetic, and it is entering every single facet of your worlds from health, to local authorities to energy supply. They are essentials, F1 and pay tv isnt and I hope it rots to the core very soon. But the only way it will is if no-one buys it. Same as why evening telly is so utterly garbage, if people didn't bloody watch celebrity this or fake tan that they wouldnt show it, we are our own worst enemies sadly. |
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5 Feb 2014, 12:31 (Ref:3364405) | #181 | |||
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Now the NFL is a great example of a sport behind a pay wall and year on year more people line up to pay to watch it. Each week we get two nationally televised games but of you want it in HD it effectively is also behind a pay wall. However chunder raises a good point in that team sports generate greater passion and support from its fans. In F1 only one team has ever generated that level of fanatic support so it's a harder sell. I don't know if that make the SKYs of the world greedy for delivering to us something we want nor do I think they over value it. I have an nfl and nba league pass subscription on top of my cable...some people like me choose to pay which as you say is my fault not theirs. Also team sports have more games so there is real value in paying for it. 16 games a week for 17 weeks and then playoffs. F1 is barely giving you 2 hours of racing every fortnight or half the year. For me this still comes down to offering value and F1 doesn't. If it was free then it becomes a function of is it even worth your time to watch it because it still will not offer any tangible value other than to the most devoted imo. |
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5 Feb 2014, 13:09 (Ref:3364421) | #182 | |||
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Anyway, for three decades NFL games had been soley shown on Sky but Channel 4 over here, who introduced the NFL to the UK in the '80s, to much acclaim and popularity, managed to secure the latenight Sunday slot for the 2011 regular season. Since then the popularity of the game has increased again over here and this year C4 not only showed the 2013 regular season games but post season games and also the Super Bowl. In the case of the NFL being televised over hear, the pay-wall hasn't worked. The NFL is more popular here than it ever was on Sky and it's still considered a minority sport but it's growing. Just goes to show how pay to view can actually do a sport more harm than good. That's enough about the NFL/Super Bowl; glad the Squawks beat the Donkeys. Last edited by bjohnsonsmith; 5 Feb 2014 at 13:19. |
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5 Feb 2014, 13:25 (Ref:3364429) | #183 | |||
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Anyways I'm confused, in the UK are the HD channels also free (or included in your licence)? |
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5 Feb 2014, 13:36 (Ref:3364430) | #184 | |||
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The Sky HD channels have to be payed for. I haven't looked into BT Sport as I don't intend to subscribe but I'm sure it will be the same as Sky for HD viewers. Otherwise the commercial channels are finaced by advertising and the BBC by the licence fee. Bear in mind though, whatever channel or broadcaster you are watching, you have to pay your licence fee to the BBC, even if you never watch the BBC. |
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5 Feb 2014, 13:42 (Ref:3364432) | #185 | |
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They are wrong. It was the failure of the rest of the field to compete with him that is the problem. If they got their act together the so called dominance would disappear and everyone could stop their moaning and groaning.
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5 Feb 2014, 14:06 (Ref:3364436) | #186 | ||
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5 Feb 2014, 14:14 (Ref:3364438) | #187 | ||
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I think more accurately, it was the failure of the rest of the teams to compete with Red Bull that is the problem.
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5 Feb 2014, 14:16 (Ref:3364439) | #188 | ||
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5 Feb 2014, 14:28 (Ref:3364443) | #189 | ||
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My son's 16.5 and has no interest in motorsport at all. He likes playing Rugby or American Football. When it comes to gaming he'd rather charge round the streets of Los Santos than play a racing sim.
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5 Feb 2014, 14:35 (Ref:3364445) | #190 | ||
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You've hit the money there. I'm only 20 and at uni, the only jobs available to me are for a few hours a week at minimum wage. I'd love to have sky for all the extra motorsports on offer, but the most I can afford is £4 a month for Eurosport, and that's just for rallying. I'd gladly pay for F1, but £40 is just far too much for me to justify it. It's already taken me enough time working to get enough to go to Silverstone
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5 Feb 2014, 14:52 (Ref:3364449) | #191 | ||
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5 Feb 2014, 22:18 (Ref:3364625) | #192 | ||
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Yes. That was Bernie's reasoning in offloading the responsibility for the double points disaster... He had to do to give Ferrari a chance to catch up to Red Bulls performance...
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5 Feb 2014, 22:37 (Ref:3364634) | #193 | ||
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P.S. Does anyone really watch celebrity this or fake tan that? I really don't believe the supposed viewership figures! Just cheap to make drivel that occupies hours and meets content requirements! |
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6 Feb 2014, 08:25 (Ref:3364718) | #194 | ||
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They can blame the downturn on Vettel all they like but its a case of simple mathematics. If you restrict the audience by putting the sport behind a pay wall, don't be surprised if less people watch. The Vettel-effect may have played its part, but we can't ignore a factor that has played an even bigger role in the sports decline. |
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6 Feb 2014, 09:46 (Ref:3364741) | #195 | ||
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Back in the early 70's when i first went to a British GP and caught the bug, there was bu*ger all F1 on TV apart from maybe the British GP and Monaco, and yet the sport was MASSIVELY popular. I guess the world is a different place now, people have a right here / right now or not atall attitude. I think the only reason we are debating this is because the BBC don't want to continue to line bernies pocket alone, and they are happy with 9 races a year. ( What i'd have given to watch 9 live races a year in the seventies !!!!! ) The fact is, in the UK we have been spoilt now for many years, in a lot of other countries they have NEVER had it free. Instead of making Sky the scapegoat, maybe Bernies Greed and the BBC wanting shot of it are more to blame.
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6 Feb 2014, 10:41 (Ref:3364750) | #196 | ||
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Today, F1 is just one of a myriad of things vying for our attention across a plethora of different media. It doesn't have the tribal attraction [addiction ?] of football club support and is seen as boring and irrelevant by much of the younger generation. I'm quite sure that none of this is news to Bernie. Everybody knows that shoving F1 behind a pay wall will significantly reduce the audience size and eventually lead to its demise [at least as we know it]. It's not the direction you'd pursue if you were developing the long term interests of the sport. But it will certainly help to line your pockets for the next 4 to 5 years... which fits in with the kind of 'long term vision' of an 83 year old ! |
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6 Feb 2014, 10:59 (Ref:3364753) | #197 | ||
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We may have been spoilt with free coverage, but why are the powers that be now whining that they've lost 50 million viewers? If they feel us Brits and other Europeans should now start paying for it, we have the choice not to pay for it. Simple as that. If we are not entitled to moan that we've lost the coverage, why should they moan that nobody is willing to pay for it? Its a double edged sword. The fan lose the coverage at no real life changing financial loss and the sport loses revenue because we don't watch. I think in the long run its not the viewers that are going to lose out and the move to pay TV will be the sports downfall. They can't say we didn't warn them lol. |
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6 Feb 2014, 13:24 (Ref:3364806) | #198 | ||
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That's so frickin uncool man! |
6 Feb 2014, 14:07 (Ref:3364817) | #199 | ||
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TV Coverage
I think I can trump you all...I've been following F1 since 1957 and can only recall Silverstone and Monaco being shown on fuzzy 428 lines of Black & White!
I LOVE my SKY F1 !!!! FP1,2,3 & Qualy and 'Ted's Notebook' after the race really bring the whole paddock atmos flooding to my Couch Grandstand! All for a Tenner a month too! I just wish it was around when my son was in F1...now he's in LMP (WEC Sports cars) I tear my hair out at how poor the commentators and coverage is in comparison! Grrrrrrr! |
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6 Feb 2014, 14:28 (Ref:3364826) | #200 | |
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