DIRECTV unlikely to keep NFL Sunday Ticket

Status
Please reply by conversation.
I wonder how many business subscribers directv gained by being the exclusive TNF provider in bars and restaraunts
I doubt any, they are already there because of ST.

See, I can answer your question, how about mine?
 
Based on meStevo’s posts that said 121 million watched last week’s games, that is roughly 33 million fans, so times $300 is $9.9 Billion.

Based on the ACTUAL ratings, the ratings were:

NBC SNF 22.2M
NBC TNF 19.9M
Fox late 18.5M
CBS early 17.3M
CBS late 16.6M
Fox early 12.1M

(Note that both networks only show two games in Week 1 and Week 17, and that TNF moves to Amazon after Week 1.)

There aren’t 121M people who watch the NFL. You do understand that if a person watches TNF and SNF and a game early and late, your voodoo math is counting the same person FOUR TIMES, right?

A press release that just adds up the ratings from each game is not the same as that many unique viewers, which would be the potential customers for ST.

Just as if 40 people watched a Star Trek rerun at 9 and 40 people watched a Star Trek rerun at 10, it doesn’t mean that 80 different individuals watch Star Trek and that thus there are 80 potential customers for some Star Trek related venture. Probably the same 40 people watched both shows.

So your plan is to sell 33M subscriptions to a supplemental service when, in its best time slot, 34M people watch the “free” game.?

This is just a fundamental lack of understanding of how TV ratings work, which is pretty much the first thing you need to understand to understand broadcasting.


And again, which gets ignored by you, I believe it will be closer to 10% of fans, roughly 12 million times $300, which is $3.6 Billion a year.
10 times the voodoo 121M or 10 times the actual 30M.

Actually we know the exact number. 2M.
available to 85% of the population,
Which is 15% less than can get it now.

You do understand the term “self-selection” right?

The ratings are published every Tuesday. I recommend you learn the basics of how TV ratings work.
 
Based on the ACTUAL ratings, the ratings were:

NBC SNF 22.2M
NBC TNF 19.9M
Fox late 18.5M
CBS early 17.3M
CBS late 16.6M
Fox early 12.1M

(Note that both networks only show two games in Week 1 and Week 17, and that TNF moves to Amazon after Week 1.)

There aren’t 121M people who watch the NFL. You do understand that if a person watches TNF and SNF and a game early and late, your voodoo math is counting the same person FOUR TIMES, right?
As usual, you do not posts links.

Now you have Fox early 12.1M, I assume that is for one game who knows where, what about the other 3 Fox Games at 1pm-

  • 49ers at Bears (1 p.m. ET)
  • Eagles at Lions (1 p.m. ET)
  • Saints at Falcons (1 p.m. ET)
  • Jaguars at Commanders (1 p.m. ET)
Then the 1pm CBS games, you only posted one game-

  • Steelers at Bengals (1 p.m. ET)
  • Patriots at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET)
  • Ravens at Jets (1 p.m. ET)
  • Browns at Panthers (1 p.m. ET)
  • Colts at Texans (1 p.m. ET)
Then the 4pm Games-
Fox-
  • Packers at Vikings (4:25 p.m. ET)
  • Giants at Titans (4:25 p.m. ET)
CBS-

  • Chiefs at Cardinals (4:25 p.m. ET)
  • Raiders at Chargers (4:25 p.m. ET)
The ratings are published every Tuesday. I recommend you learn the basics of how TV ratings work.
Post a link then instead of trying to hide it.

This what I found-

NFL TV ratings in 2022 – Week 1​

  • FOX’s “Game of the Week” – 18.55 million avg. viewers and 9.2 rating – Green Bay Packers vs Minnesota Vikings
  • CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
  • CBS’ afternoon game – 16.62 million avg. viewers and 8.3 rating –Kansas City Chiefs vs Arizona Cardinals
So, if the 1pm Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals had 17.39 million watching it, what about the other 4 games at the same time-

Patriots at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET)
Ravens at Jets (1 p.m. ET)
Browns at Panthers (1 p.m. ET)
Colts at Texans (1 p.m. ET)

Do not the viewers of these games count towards the total?

 
As usual, you do not posts links.

Now you have Fox early 12.1M, I assume that is for one game who knows where, what about the other 3 Fox Games at 1pm-

  • 49ers at Bears (1 p.m. ET)
  • Eagles at Lions (1 p.m. ET)
  • Saints at Falcons (1 p.m. ET)
  • Jaguars at Commanders (1 p.m. ET)
Then the 1pm CBS games, you only posted one game-

  • Steelers at Bengals (1 p.m. ET)
  • Patriots at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET)
  • Ravens at Jets (1 p.m. ET)
  • Browns at Panthers (1 p.m. ET)
  • Colts at Texans (1 p.m. ET)
Then the 4pm Games-
Fox-
  • Packers at Vikings (4:25 p.m. ET)
  • Giants at Titans (4:25 p.m. ET)
CBS-

  • Chiefs at Cardinals (4:25 p.m. ET)
  • Raiders at Chargers (4:25 p.m. ET)

Post a link then instead of trying to hide it.

This what I found-

NFL TV ratings in 2022 – Week 1​

  • FOX’s “Game of the Week” – 18.55 million avg. viewers and 9.2 rating – Green Bay Packers vs Minnesota Vikings
  • CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
  • CBS’ afternoon game – 16.62 million avg. viewers and 8.3 rating –Kansas City Chiefs vs Arizona Cardinals
So, if the 1pm Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals had 17.39 million watching it, what about the other 4 games at the same time-

Patriots at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET)
Ravens at Jets (1 p.m. ET)
Browns at Panthers (1 p.m. ET)
Colts at Texans (1 p.m. ET)

Do not the viewers of these games count towards the total?

7 people watched the Jets Game I was one
 
  • Love
Reactions: Juan
NFL TV ratings in 2022 – Week 1
  • FOX’s “Game of the Week” – 18.55 million avg. viewers and 9.2 rating – Green Bay Packers vs Minnesota Vikings
  • CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
I think the terminology being used is quite easy to get mixed up. I believe the "avg. viewers" means average from start to finish. Not average per game. Because otherwise, if that were the case, MNF would be a huge number, easily 50+ Million.
 
7 people watched the Jets Game I was one
The only thing I hated about going to college in NYC* (well... well... uptown). Jets or Giants. Be like going to a restaurant and having to choose between possum stuffed with rats or Cheese Nips.
 
FOX’s “Game of the Week” – 18.55 million avg. viewers and 9.2 rating – Green Bay Packers vs Minnesota Vikings
  • CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
  • CBS’ afternoon game – 16.62 million avg. viewers and 8.3 rating –Kansas City Chiefs vs Arizona Cardinals
So, if the 1pm Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals had 17.39 million watching it, what about the other 4 games at the same time-

Patriots at Dolphins (1 p.m. ET)
Ravens at Jets (1 p.m. ET)
Browns at Panthers (1 p.m. ET)
Colts at Texans (1 p.m. ET)

Do not the viewers of these games count towards the total?



The numbers listed for the "early game" and "afternoon game" are TOTALS, not averages. You don't really think that each of those games only shown to a fraction of the country has almost as many viewers as a national broadcast "game of the week", do you?
 
The numbers listed for the "early game" and "afternoon game" are TOTALS, not averages. You don't really think that each of those games only shown to a fraction of the country has almost as many viewers as a national broadcast "game of the week", do you?
Never said that, but the number of how many watched those games is not zero, should be added to the total to give a accurate picture of how many NFL fans.
 
All viewers are in those numbers
Yes, for the one game at that timeframe, ignored all the other games happening at the same time on the same Network (Local Games basically).

While the ratings will not be as high as a nationwide game, they should still be counted towards the total.

what Sam posted-

CBS early 17.3M

Which was the Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals game

what I posted-

CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
 
Yes, for the one game at that timeframe, ignored all the other games happening at the same time on the same Network (Local Games basically).

While the ratings will not be as high as a nationwide game, they should still be counted towards the total.

what Sam posted-

CBS early 17.3M

Which was the Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals game

what I posted-

CBS’ early game – 17.39 million avg. viewers and 8.7 rating – Pittsburgh Steelers vs Cincinnati Bengals
You don't get it
The time frame is the game
 
  • Like
Reactions: SamCdbs
You don't get it
The time frame is the game
And there were 4 other games on CBS, all with different ratings then the one mention.

For example, the Patriots at Dolphins, I assume it was on in Miami, New England and maybe elsewhere, how many millions did it get?
 
And there were 4 other games on CBS, all with different ratings then the one mention.

For example, the Patriots at Dolphins, I assume it was on in Miami, New England and maybe elsewhere, how many millions did it get?
No
 
And there were 4 other games on CBS, all with different ratings then the one mention.

For example, the Patriots at Dolphins, I assume it was on in Miami, New England and maybe elsewhere, how many millions did it get?
Let's look at it a different way. There are something like 106 million households in the US. The ratings is the percent of people watching TV at the time, a percent of the percent. In order for that 121 million number to be accurate, I believe more households had to watch football than households exist in the US. It is double dipping.

National 5.6% of 50 share, means 53 million households were watching TV at that time and then about 2.5 million households were watching whatever.

PATRIOTS V DOLPHINS

The Patriots tv market (Boston) is about 2.5 million. The Miami-New England game did a 23.9 rating on a 62 share. If my math is right, that means in the Boston area... 2.5M * .62 * .239 = 370k households watched the game. Multiply that by 2 for simplicity for Miami and that is less than 1 million households.
 
Let's look at it a different way. There are something like 106 million households in the US. The ratings is the percent of people watching TV at the time, a percent of the percent. In order for that 121 million number to be accurate, I believe more households had to watch football than households exist in the US. It is double dipping.
There are 128.11Million Households as of Jun 2022

And the average size of each is 2.53 people in 2021

It was actually at 3.33 in 1960, been going down since.


 
There are 128.11Million Households as of Jun 2022

And the average size of each is 2.53 people in 2021

It was actually at 3.33 in 1960, been going down since.


Thanks for the additional info. How does this change the math though? This would mean it is possible to say 2.5 million people watched the Patriots-Miami game.
 
Status
Please reply by conversation.