Archive for Thursday, November 20, 2008
Fans must pay when BCS sells out
November 20, 2008
Advertisement
Unless you’re one of the dwindling millions who still get your television from rabbit ears, it probably didn’t register.
And if you are one of those dwindling millions, it doesn’t matter. The people who run big-time sports don’t care about you anyway.
That became more than apparent this week when the Bowl Championship Series sold out to the highest bidder and, in the process, sold out more than 15 million American households who now will have to find another way to watch college football’s biggest games.
They did it for the money, a staggering half a billion dollar’s worth over four years. They did it because when the worldwide leader in sports comes calling, they know better than to not listen.
They did it because they can. No one uttered a peep. No one said much of anything, unless you count some sour grapes from the Fox network that couldn’t match the economic muscle of ESPN.
It’s just business as usual, and the business in this case is college football, which long ago gave up the pretense of being anything other than a big money factory for the schools that play it.
Can’t afford cable or satellite TV? Too bad, but you’re not the demographic advertisers want watching anyway.
The demographic they do want are the members of some 98 million American households who pay for the television they watch, though most of them have no idea that they fork out an extra $3 or so every month for the right to have ESPN piped into their living rooms.
The television giant commands by far the biggest subscriber fee from cable and satellite companies, mainly because it offers the most sports programming for a nation that seems to have an insatiable appetite for games on television.
It’s a nice business model that the free television networks can’t match, and it generates so much money that it allows ESPN to outbid them for almost any event it wants.
But it also means that you’re essentially paying now for sports you used to get for just the price of watching some commercials. The trend is toward pay television, and it accelerated in the past week as ESPN added both the biggest college football games in the United States and one of golf’s majors — the British Open — to its ever-expanding lineup.
That’s bad news for people who either can’t afford or don’t want to pay for cable or satellite. But it will hardly be noticed by most of the rest of us, who look at the monthly television bill as a basic necessity much like they view their electric bill.
“I think we all treat our cable bill now as part of the woodwork,” said Neal Pilson, a former CBS executive who now works as a consultant in the television industry.
Remember when the idea of having to pay to watch the Super Bowl seemed laughable? It’s not so funny anymore.
Pilson said Congress would probably step in before that happened, but with Monday Night Football already on cable and the BCS heading there, not much seems sacred anymore. That’s especially true when the NFL has its own cable channel and Major League Baseball will soon have its own, too.
It’s a slow but insidious process, but there’s no doubt about the final result.
In the end, you’ll be paying for what you once got for free.
More like this
- Value of bowl game sponsorship questioned December 28, 2003
- Drowning in a sea of fees February 23, 2003
- Fox offers $2.5 billion for postseason September 26, 2000
- KICKOFF TIME NEARS FOR WORLD CUP June 12, 1994
- Rutgers miffed over television blackout December 7, 2006
Top ads RSS
Marketplace
Arts & Entertainment · Bars · Theatres · Restaurants · Coffeehouses · Libraries · Antiques · Services
- Blog: How Has Obama's Stimulus Helped You? November 21, 2009 · 59 comments
- Quiet revolution taking place in America November 25, 2009 · 118 comments
- Federal government seeking easement on 1 million acres of Flint Hills November 25, 2009 · 13 comments
- Turbine manufacturer passes on Lawrence site November 24, 2009 · 75 comments
- Haskell freshman dies in Montana jail November 24, 2009 · 27 comments
- Lambert performance causes stir November 25, 2009 · 41 comments
- Stay or leave? It's business as usual for Mangino in wake of probe November 25, 2009 · 39 comments
- On the street: Is Thanksgiving your favorite holiday? November 25, 2009 · 44 comments
- Dropping home values may not accurately reflect market November 25, 2009 · 37 comments
- Blog: Tasering Your Preteen: Can You Imagine? November 24, 2009 · 68 comments
- Former KU Chancellor Laurence Chalmers dies November 25, 2009
- Message warns students at Perry-Lecompton not to attend class today April 20, 2007
- Pale veggies pack plenty of nutrition December 17, 2008
- KU says student didn't follow proper lab procedures before exposure to toxic chemical November 25, 2009
- School district may have to tap contingency fund November 24, 2009
- Lawrence likely to land distribution center November 24, 2009
- Keenly attuned blind couple have different way of ‘looking at’ things October 12, 2009
- 6News video: SLT opponents gather for forum June 15, 2008
- Kansas ranks 24th in nation when it comes to health November 24, 2009


Post a comment
Requires free LJWorld.com registration. Register or log in below.
Read our full policy. Also, read about banned accounts and harassing comments.
Post a blog entry
You have to be logged in to blog on LJWorld.com. Please log in or sign up.
Learn more about blogging on LJWorld.com.