Blackout Restriction Questions For NFL Games

joshjr

Member
Original poster
Sep 16, 2008
9
1
Oklahoma
Looking further into the blackout restrictions I was curious why I have never been blacked out from a game and am also curious to see some others results. Here are the 5 closest stadiums to me from my address using mapquest.

1. Kansas City Chiefs - 186 Miles away/Never blacked out
2. St. Louis Rams - 313 miles away/Never blacked out
3. Dallas Cowboys - 344 miles away/Never blacked out
4. Tennessee Titans - 528 miles away/Never blacked out
5. Houston Texans - 575 miles away/Never blacked out

Someone had said in another post that the restriction was within 75 miles of the stadium but Im not really sure thats true. According to D*'s NFL blackout policy it to me reads that if you can get the signal of the local affiliate airing that game in that area. To me that means if in Miami, OK I can get the signal from the CBS affiliate in KC then it would be blocked. How close are you to the stadiums and how frequent are you blacked out from those games?
 
Why would you be blacked out of any of those games? You're not in the local markets of any of those teams.
 
I am in the Joplin/Pittsburg DMA. They show exclusive Rams and Chiefs. Im curious how far away others are that have issues with blackouts.
 
The blackout applies to any non-sold out game on any station receivable within 75 miles of the stadium under normal conditions. In most places that means the local station in the town the team is in. That simple.
 
In the old days, they took the grade B contour map of each affiliates' signal. Any county that is covered, even partially, is marked. If any part of any marked county is within 75 air miles of the non-soldout stadium, then that affiliate is blacked out. I don't think that the process has changed since the switch to digital.

This can lead to bizarre situations.

A few years ago, CBS had two games in a particular time slot. One was Indianapolis/New England, and the other was Houston at Oakland. Three CBS affiliates in the entire country showed Houston at Oakland. They were in Houston (primary Texans market), Beaumont, and Bryan (the Texans' two secondary markets).

Now, Bryan is part of the Waco/Temple/Bryan DMA. Waco and Bryan are about 90 miles apart, so the idea of them being in the same DMA is absurd, but they are. DirecTV and Dish customers with locals get both KWTX (which was showing Indy/NE) and KBTX. In fact, NFL Sunday Ticket blackouts here are based on what's showing in Waco. I have friends with Sunday Ticket who get their Bryan locals over the air. DirecTV blacked out the Indy/NE game for them. They couldn't get KWTX OTA, so they were screwed.

KWTX and KBTX are "sister stations." They have the same ownership. The local cable company reached an agreement with KWTX to carry them for one day so they could show the Indy/NE game. The NFL blocked it. How the NFL can prevent a cable company for airing a CBS affiliate in its own DMA I don't know, but they did it.

Now our Fox affiliate is a low-power repeater of Waco's Fox affiliate. This means that they will show the Cowboys over the Texans. A lot of the time, they will show a random NFC East contest over the Texans. I am subject to blackouts and exclusivity for the Texans on CBS, but my Fox affiliate sometimes doesn't even bother to show them.

Luckily for me, I couldn't care less about the Cowboys or Texans.
 
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