FCC Votes To End Its Sports Blackout Rule
from the game-time dept
Blackout rules in sports: they're really stupid. Sure, perhaps there was some semblance of logic at one time behind the theory that if the stadium seats weren't filled, a team would pull a game off of television to encourage attendance, but the point is that in the age of massive television deals that are so much more important for a team or league's revenue compared with stadium sales, such that some teams try to fake their way into televising games, finding excuses to keep games off of the money-machine that is television is just plain silly.What you may not know is that the leagues have had a federal partner in blacking out games for quite a while in the FCC. While the NFL is really the only league left that is bothering with blackout rules, they've now lost that partner as the FCC has unanimously voted to repeal its support for sports blackouts.
Today, the Federal Communications Commission voted 5-0 to repeal the sports blackout rule. Currently, the NFL will not allow broadcasters in a team’s home market to air games that have not sold out. This unfriendly practice is a matter of private contract between the league and the broadcasters, restricting what a sports fan can watch in the process. The FCC’s sports blackout rule prevented cable systems from carrying those games, as well. Although the repeal of the sports blackout rule is no guarantee that cable viewers will be able to see blacked-out games, now the NFL will have to arrange for blackouts solely through private contracting. The rule applies to any sports league, but only the NFL currently blacks-out games on local broadcast.This, believe it or not, is an important step. Not because it represents any dramatic shift in televising games in and of itself, but because it's the beginning of the lift on blackout restrictions in general. Television blackouts due to attendance are the low-hanging fruit when it comes to blackouts in general, but if this starts building momentum such that the growing masses of cable-cutters can finally get local sports games with their internet packages somewhere down the road, it's a big deal. Because, as I've argued before, the only dam holding back an overflowing river of cable-cutters is professional and college sports. Take that away and the river runs wild.
This FCC vote, by the way, comes at the behest of a petition from Public Knowledge.
The vote follows a petition Public Knowledge filed with its allies that argued the FCC should end this archaic rule as an unnecessary intervention in the marketplace on behalf of the NFL, one of the most powerful sports leagues in the world. The following statement can be attributed to John Bergmayer, Senior Staff Attorney at Public Knowledge:To be clear, local broadcasts can still be blacked out by the NFL, but that won't last much longer. Already there are rumblings from the NFL that indicate they realize that their product is far better consumed on television, and that fantasy football is pushing a larger consumption of multiple games throughout a day, rather than driving dedicated fans to a single stadium for the day. Good on the FCC for getting this right, even though they probably should have made this move a few decades ago.
“We’re pleased that our petition, the voices of sports fans and TV viewers, and the evidence has persuaded the FCC to act on the public’s behalf. Private parties should not be able to use government regulations as an excuse to limit fans’ access to their local teams."
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Filed Under: blackout, blackout rules, fcc, sports
Companies: nfl
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Blackouts return in 3,2,1...
And they will be contracting.
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The owners will of course try to stop this, but how? They can't confiscate that many devices, the backlash would be enormous. They can't keep them from entering since most of them are phones and everyone expects to bring their phones with them. They can't impose a radio blackout because everyone expects their phones to work. They can't try to allow some and not others because that's way too onerous to implement in practice. They can't try to identify and throw out everyone do it because there will be way too many and again, the backlash would be enormous.
Those streams will be far from perfect of course, for all kinds of reasons that are immediately obvious. But they'll always get better, never worse, and there will come a point when 4,000 random amateur-operated cameras trump 18 carefully-placed professionally-operated ones. And then someone will cook up software that combines the data streams from all of them in real time to generate 3D output which can be "viewed" from any chosen angle, buffered (for instant replay), and so on.
(Copyright? Meh. Let's see a team take 3,972 season ticket holders to court over copyright. I'm sure that will work out well for them.)
And that will be the beginning of the end for sports broadcasts unless they can find a way to add sufficient value to justify the cost. Clearly some operations are coasting: CBS's football telecasts are awful, featuring idiotic commentators, a lack of sideline reporters, and endless promotion of their primetime crap. Others are better: Tirico and Grudin do a pretty good job for ESPN. Those which can provide scarce commodities (literate, timely, expert analysis) will manage, those that feature prattling morons will not.
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The NBA's League Pass
League Pass is a horrible run service, something the NBA did solely to take the heat off them for their unholy alliance with cable. Very few NBA games are shown on broadcast TV, and their playoffs are all locked up by cable channels. It's a pay-per-view league, and only fans in a handful of cities get to watch the home games and playoffs without paying at least $600 a year.
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One change:
".. there will come a point when 4,000 random amateur-operated drones trump 18 carefully-placed professionally-operated ones. And then someone will cook up software that combines the data streams from all of them in real time to generate 3D output which can be "viewed" from any chosen angle, buffered (for instant replay), and so on."
I think the software already exists to do this. Getting it done as a huge open-source project would be difficult, especially the part about funding legal defenses to beat off hordes of rabid media companies and the NFL (remember the famous restriction on 'any other accounts of the game' etc).
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Re: The NBA's League Pass
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Sport blackouts = the hostage demanding ransom for their release
Sure the people who know the hostage are upset about their injury, but in the end the hostage/hostage taker is the real loser. They could have made money airing their game on local TV.
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Research is good.
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I am not a fanatic sports fan but I used to care about which team was winning and where it ranked. I would at one time watch the games on tv. However because of blackouts you weren't going to see every game. No sense in following if you can't watch your favorite team play.
Over time, that no sense in following part made more sense than trying to find somewhere that had it. So I cared less and less each year until it no longer matters. I don't watch sports anymore and find I don't miss it. I got other things I can do besides sit in front of a tv.
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Is that the rule?
IIRC this came from the Nix on era (he was a football fan?) that people complained they could not get tickets and the game was blacked out locally. The FCC was told to make a rule that if the game was sold out, the gam could not be blacked out locally.
I guess with pay-per-view and similar pay services, what constitutes "blacked out"? What does "not allowed to black out locally" mean any more? Time to get rid of the rule.
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Re: Is that the rule?
Admittedly NBA arenas range from 14,000 to 20,000 seats whereas NFL arenas range 60,000 to 100,000 seats. Thus the NFL has a tougher time in some markets to sell out.
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I am a Red Sox fan but I live in western NY, 6 hours from NYC. I am 3 hours from toronto.
Guess which games get blacked out? Any time the Red Sox PLAY the yankees, regardless if home or away, the game is a blackout on MLB.TV. I can watch ANY game they play Toronto.
YES usually only broadcasts one of the games on local TV (the friday game, but it isn't every Friday SOXvNYY game) , they might be the feature game on FOX on Saturday, but that isn't every series, and they don't always fall on the weekend. So, fuck blackouts. I don't even want to watch YES in the first place, if I can help it. THats why I paid for MLB.TV, so I could watch the NESN stream every time.
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Forget threaten, it makes no sense for massively profitable private enterprises to be tax exempt. End it immediately.
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I'm not sure they would have to do much. How many incoming high quality video streams could a 4G access point really handle simultaneously? Surely not thousands.
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Second on the FCC ruling, while I can see why teams and the NFL set a black out policy, that is what it should have been, a business policy, not a government regulation. Why should our government pass laws that harms consumers?
That is the big question.
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Thanks, that is a relief to know.
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FCC Lifts Blackout - Political Move?
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FCC blackouts
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