Tom Servo
Nittany Beavers
Still a lousy number. Reruns on Discovery Channel probably get that.First take, which is awful, gets between 4-500,000 viewers. Undisputed sometimes doesn't even crack 100k.
Still a lousy number. Reruns on Discovery Channel probably get that.First take, which is awful, gets between 4-500,000 viewers. Undisputed sometimes doesn't even crack 100k.
Where I live it is part of a package that relies totally on NFLN though, unfortunately can no longer purchase by itself. Much easier to cut the cord on than ESPN which makes their ratings and performance that much more impressive.Nfl network has a standalone product offered by streaming and doesn't pay rights fees.
Nfln is more like HBO than ESPN.
For a good time, follow SI.com media reporter Richard Deitsch for his tweets about Skip Bayliss's ratings.Still a lousy number. Reruns on Discovery Channel probably get that.
They do. And they bought one of my favorite hoops websites (draft Express) so now i can't read their stuff anymore...ScottNorwood said:Technology has passed ESPN by. There are very few people that are interested in watching a channel that covers all the sports - and those of us who like a few sports can get all the content we need elsewhere.
Does espn.com still make you pay a subscription for "insider" articles? LOL
Actually this cuts the other way. ESPN's problems can largely be traced to the rights fees it pays- they shelled out a ton of money assuming they'd be able to recover it in cable subscriptions because pretty much every package included the massively expensive ESPN networks and people used to just hand over the money without thinking. The problem is they didn't see into a future of cord-cutting, and now they're stuck paying those massive fees without recovering tons of cash through pass-through on cable subscriptions. In contrast, NFL Network is losing relatively little to streaming because (1) they don't have massive right fee obligations, and (2) its customer base has always been people who sought it out and were willing to pay extra for expanded sports programming rather than basically every cable TV subscriber.GoBirds said:Where I live it is part of a package that relies totally on NFLN though, unfortunately can no longer purchase by itself. Much easier to cut the cord on than ESPN which makes their ratings and performance that much more impressive.
Agree they definitely signed some bad deals and the fees they committed to are significant, ratings was more what I meant. Even NFLN is off the 2013 high but not much.Actually this cuts the other way. ESPN's problems can largely be traced to the rights fees it pays- they shelled out a ton of money assuming they'd be able to recover it in cable subscriptions because pretty much every package included the massively expensive ESPN networks and people used to just hand over the money without thinking. The problem is they didn't see into a future of cord-cutting, and now they're stuck paying those massive fees without recovering tons of cash through pass-through on cable subscriptions. In contrast, NFL Network is losing relatively little to streaming because (1) they don't have massive right fee obligations, and (2) its customer base has always been people who sought it out and were willing to pay extra for expanded sports programming rather than basically every cable TV subscriber.
Doing some drinking last night?Capella said:I should be able to say what I want, WHEN I WANT!
[Jemele Hill says what she wants, when she wants]
NOT YOU
I will say that I've subscribed to traditional cable for two brief periods since 2012, but I've mostly been a purely internet/non-cable TV consumer for that period.Moe. said:Right, that's the point. If you still pay for cable but don't watch ESPN - you aren't hurting them at all. They make their money off you whether you watch the network or not. That was basically the business model. They made crazy fees off every cable sub regardless of whether or not those people watched a single second of ESPN.
Even what they do cover caters to the Boston-New York-Chicago-LA markets. Case in point: The Indians are on an historic 22-game winning streak and all ESPN cares about are the Dodgers (who were on a massive LOSING streak, BTW)Just my take... I'm sure there are some individuals who have tuned out because of views of PC-ness. But I think overall it's a pretty small factor compared to others that have been shared like people using other mediums for their sports news.
I think looking at the thread here reinforces that a bit. I skimmed from the beginning and noticed that though the OP threw out PC as an idea, we went pretty much 2 1/2 pages without support that it was a factor.
It seemed more like a couple of users showed up later who contribute a lot of volume on topics of PC-ness. That's just the sense I get. While it may be dominating the thread now, it feels more like it's a lot of volume from a few who debate hotly anytime something related to PC presents itself.
 Meanwhile, MLB network was giving them all the love they could possibly muster.
  Meanwhile, MLB network was giving them all the love they could possibly muster.Gotcha. Yeah if I didn't care about college football I would use fubo instead of PS Vue. I did a free trial of it a few weeks ago so I could watch the away USMNT World Cup qualifier and was pretty impressed with the service.I will say that I've subscribed to traditional cable for two brief periods since 2012, but I've mostly been a purely internet/non-cable TV consumer for that period.
I currently subscribe to fubo.tv, which doesn't have ESPN at all.
Anti Christian much?rodg12 said:The other ironic thing is if you trace the decline back to the start it was during Tebowmania!!!! Nobody was complaining about his politics and non sports stuff being covered. Yet, that's when the decline started.
Not as bad as JETS IN L.A.!ESPN sucks.
But whoever is in charge of commercials for NFL games is even suckier. If I have to watch that GMC Sierra truck commercial one more gawddamm time I'm gonna puke on my Chiefs tube socks:
Me and you sittin on a train,
Me and you this song is in my brain.
Me and you eating cheerios,
Me and you gonna go get some ho's.
Me and you drive the same truck,
Me and you now I don't give a fook.
Blah blah blah me and you and me and you and you and me and me and swc take that to the puke bank brohan.
Negative. I believe in God. Have accepted Jesus as my Lord and savior.Anti Christian much?
 
  today. but the lack of viewers will hurt them when it comes time to renegotiate their contract with the cable providers. Plus, advertisers know who and how many people are watching any particular network and will/will not place their ads based on it.Moe. said:Right, that's the point. If you still pay for cable but don't watch ESPN - you aren't hurting them at all. They make their money off you whether you watch the network or not. That was basically the business model. They made crazy fees off every cable sub regardless of whether or not those people watched a single second of ESPN.
For sure. But what will hurt them even more is the drop in total subs. I don't think we are disagreeing or anything, but the subs dropping is what's killing them, not the ratings. It's not like anything other than their live events drew huge ratings anyhow.today. but the lack of viewers will hurt them when it comes time to renegotiate their contract with the cable providers. Plus, advertisers know who and how many people are watching any particular network and will/will not place their ads based on it.
so technically you're right, ESPN is getting my money today...but looking long term, it's another story.
This pretty much sums it up. The increase of non sports content obviously leads to people tuning out. No way around it. People tuning out leads to less financial gain. Is it the only reason people have tuned out? No freakin way. Is it the biggest? Nope. Not even close. I think people are less interested in sports these days and they are more interested in getting info on their phones. Two things against espn.Just my take... I'm sure there are some individuals who have tuned out because of views of PC-ness. But I think overall it's a pretty small factor compared to others that have been shared like people using other mediums for their sports news.
I think looking at the thread here reinforces that a bit. I skimmed from the beginning and noticed that though the OP threw out PC as an idea, we went pretty much 2 1/2 pages without support that it was a factor.
It seemed more like a couple of users showed up later who contribute a lot of volume on topics of PC-ness. That's just the sense I get. While it may be dominating the thread now, it feels more like it's a lot of volume from a few who debate hotly anytime something related to PC presents itself.
Why?I think people are less interested in sports these days
Agree. Did they ever have huge viewer numbers for their talk shows?It's not like anything other than their live events drew huge ratings anyhow.
Megyn Kelly basically gave the finger to her base when she railed against Trump and then turned around and tried to hug the people she used to give the finger to as a host on Fox News. Turning on her base and trying to embrace the other side is not a recipe for success. Neither side wants to listen to her.There are reports out there that they wanted to replace her, but that her co-host, Michael Smith, threatened to bail if they axed her. No clue is those reports are true, but it wouldn't surprise me. If nothing else, I would give him props for his loyalty, even if she doesn't deserve it.
This is potentially a major disaster for ESPN because Trump is now going in hardcore on ripping them, and his hardcore fans (zealots) love to try and take down anyone or anything Trump criticizes (look at how Megyn Kelly's popularity has fallen off since their spat), and with already being worried about falling ratings and subscriptions, can ESPN really take a chance on losing a big chunk of their viewership because of one host (who is mediocre at best anyway)? I guess we will see.
Have you been to ESPN's fantasy sports section recently? You have to actively seek out written articles hidden amongst all the freaking videos. So dumb. This is why I gladly pay a few bucks a month to The Athletic. I just want to read my sports like an old person.At least they didn't pivot to video like FoxSports.com ...
https://twitter.com/JimmyTraina/status/910194981796765696
This is a fair point. Berry's been all about video and crap this year and it started filtering in a couple years ago. Infuriating. Chasing these video ad dollars is so short-sighted.Have you been to ESPN's fantasy sports section recently? You have to actively seek out written articles hidden amongst all the freaking videos. So dumb. This is why I gladly pay a few bucks a month to The Athletic. I just want to read my sports like an old person.
I know. I'm a devoted reader of Stuart Mandel and consider him the gold standard for college football writing. Fox booting him for video was just asinine. The only subscription I've ever purchased for internet access was for FBG years ago. Athletic is the only one I pay for now. Well worth the monthly fee (I did month to month to see if I liked it; I'll probably buy the discounted annual price soon). It's really well done. Love the layout - looks like a good old fashioned sports page from a major city's newspaper. No ads, no videos, no clutter just let me read your well written words!This is a fair point. Berry's been all about video and crap this year and it started filtering in a couple years ago. Infuriating. Chasing these video ad dollars is so short-sighted.
I'm just glad ESPN still has the Zach Lowe and Bill Barnwells of the world on staff. I hope The Athletic remains successful. There is a market for high quality writing like that.
I mean, Ken Rosenthal had to freaking write articles on FB for a time when FoxSports pivoted to video. That was insane.
I just read a Brett McMurphy post on SEC football schedules on his Facebook page.This is a fair point. Berry's been all about video and crap this year and it started filtering in a couple years ago. Infuriating. Chasing these video ad dollars is so short-sighted.
I'm just glad ESPN still has the Zach Lowe and Bill Barnwells of the world on staff. I hope The Athletic remains successful. There is a market for high quality writing like that.
I mean, Ken Rosenthal had to freaking write articles on FB for a time when FoxSports pivoted to video. That was insane.
Hate to ruin the narrative but those shows are doing well and making plenty of money for espn.Still a lousy number. Reruns on Discovery Channel probably get that.
@sportstvratings
Most-watched telecast on cable last week:
Pioneer Woman: 1.097mm
Murder She Wrote: 673K
Gunsmoke: 668K
Andy Griffith Show: 648K
Ranges last week:
SC6: 379K-492K
First Take: 371K-673K
Definitely more than SC6 or whatever they called it.This thread has more viewers than ESPN.
Yeah, apparently not.Hate to ruin the narrative but those shows are doing well and making plenty of money for espn.
okYeah, apparently not.
Obviously, they are very savvy in contract negotiations from what I here. Job security there is great too.ok
edit: they aren't paying Stephen A Smith 4 mil a year because they are losing money on him guy.
 
 You honestly think espn isn't turning huge profits still? I can't imagine the level of sunken capacity it would take to think that.Obviously, they are very savvy in contract negotiations from what I here. Job security there is great too.
Clearly they are making Plenty!
So, you're on the ESPN payroll. Probably ought to disclose that to us.Hate to ruin the narrative but those shows are doing well and making plenty of money for espn.
 
 I've never watched one of those shows, especially that awful debate crap. I just like breaking incorrect narratives.So, you're on the ESPN payroll. Probably ought to disclose that to us.
 
  is that you high fiving yourself, bromingo? :I've never watched one of those shows, especially that awful debate crap. I just like breaking incorrect narratives.
I don't know what week that is referring to, but there are definitely higher rated shows than that.Hate to ruin the narrative but those shows are doing well and making plenty of money for espn.
TimeslotI don't know what week that is referring to, but there are definitely higher rated shows than that.
http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/daily-ratings/sunday-cable-ratings-sept-17-2017/
Your mother would probably know.what the hell is Pioneer Woman?
I wonder how much a 30 sec. national ad goes for during weeknight sports talk programming.Timeslot
 
 I don't know what the ad rates are, but I remember reading in the past that first take prints money for espn. Fs1 is really really struggling though, just an awful network.I wonder how much a 30 sec. national ad goes for during weeknight sports talk programming.
Cable fees are a bigger source of revenue for ESPN than advertising but the latter still matters. The network used to be able to reliably deliver a male audience for advertisers.
I don't know but I'm gonna guess that her hair removal policy is one that @Christo would thoroughly endorse.what the hell is Pioneer Woman?
