Football
Related: About this forumYouTube paying roughly 2 billion a year for NFL Sunday Ticket.
Snip< YouTube will pay an average price of roughly $2 billion a year to secure rights to the NFL Sunday Ticket franchise, people familiar with the deal said, the latest sign that the migration of sports from traditional television to streaming is chugging ahead.
Snip< YouTube is licensing the residential rights for seven years
https://www.wsj.com/articles/youtube-cements-its-tv-shift-with-nfl-sunday-ticket-deal-11671711836
Xavier Breath
(5,259 posts)Is there really more money to be made confining this to one platform instead of making it available to all platforms and cable/satellite? I mean, I'd be interested in watching an out-of-market team I follow, but not for Youtube's $65/month plus, I imagine, another $150-$200/yr for Sunday Ticket.
sarcasmo
(23,968 posts)Auggie
(31,999 posts)More math:
The Sunday Package currently averages about 2 million subscribers that pay around $300 a season. That totals $600 million a year.
(https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/35294678/youtube-tv-emerges-front-runner-nfl-sunday-ticket)
Google breaks even in about 3 years if you count the new YouTubeTV subscriptions required to view the package (unless it's a separate entity).
Over seven years Google rakes in about $4,200,000,000.
Xavier Breath
(5,259 posts)I was low-balling them suggesting $200. Just insane numbers involved in this.
Auggie
(31,999 posts)18 weeks in the regular season. Divided into the current price of $300, Sunday Ticket would cost just under $17 a week. That's a deal if you consider what you'd pay for stadium seating. Heck, it's about the price of a movie.
BTW ...
NFL network replays most of the games in the week following, and NFL Network is currently offered as part of YouTubeTV package. So I set to record games I want to see and just wait a couple days. FF through commercials too.
Xavier Breath
(5,259 posts)was the network deal itself, not the price for the package. Having said that, a "deal" is a relative thing. So when I already have a tv package through another provider, it is not a deal for me to have to shell out for Youtube TV and then throw another $300 on top of it. YMMV.
Auggie
(31,999 posts)Google expects you to change providers.
Ive subscribed to YouTube TV for years and actually like it for live sports, MSNBC and TCM. It offers unlimited digital recording and the streaming is 99% reliable. I cancel it after football season, though.