Dman374
Georgia Tech Fan
- Messages
- 56
Longtime viewer, first time poster. After looking at the realignment and media deal threads I was curious... how do YOU watch College Football? More specifically, who actually still has traditional cable?
Was partially inspired to ask this question after I read this article from The Athletic. It's a summary of Amazons investment into Diamond Media Regional Sport Networks (Bally). It's a two part discussion I wanted to pull into it's own thread.
Part 1: Direct to Consumer
For those of you that don't know, if you don't pay for Comcast/AT&T/Fubo you can pay Bally $20/month to watch the Braves. I didn't pay this last year because T-Mobile had a thing with MLB, and I able to watch the games on the MLB Roku app. If I didn't have that random perk I would've paid the $20/month to watch my Braves. What does that have to do with Georgia Tech Football? Well, in the article I was shocked to find out last year only 220-300k people subscribed. That's not just the Braves, that's for every MLB/NBA/NHL team they broadcast. Turns out this direct to consumer model resulted in a $77 Million dollar loss. According to "a person briefed on Diamond's plan" they're projecting DTC subscribers will rise from 300k last year, to 1.7 million this year, to 2.7 million in 2025, and 3.6 million in 2026. Although I do think those yearly increases are inflated, I wonder what the Braves subscriptions alone were last year, and what they'll be next year. If that T-Mobile perk is gone I will be one of them. The other item discussed is marketing DTC service using Amazon's existing prime video subscribers, and watching exclusively on the Prime Video App and killing the Bally app. You'd pay extra over standard prime, but that's the same thing with MLS season pass on Apple TV. My part 1 was trying to gauge outside my bubble would you pay extra to watch all Georgia Tech Games? Or Maybe all ACC games? Or all ESPN network games? At what point would you consider not paying for cable or a streaming service and just signup directly to watch sports? Open ended question, what would be your pain tolerance for price, or how often you're charged? At what point would it temp you if you're considering cutting the cord if you haven't already?
Part 2: Traditional Cable
This is what I am really curious about... Do you pay for cable? Or a Streaming Service? If you pay for a streaming service is it for football season or all year? I'm probably in the minority when I get outside my friend group, but I literally do not watch cable tv unless it's sports, and we only pay for it during football season. A lot of my friends I use to go over and watch games with in my 20's don't pay for steaming tv unless it's football season either. I've got family older than me who still have traditional cable, with traditional remotes, and I want to clarify I'm not for killing the traditional model, but if you're still paying for cable every month what keeps you hooked? For all my family it's like 2 or 3 networks out of their entire cable package (My Grandma and her Hallmark Channel) that's not sports or local channels, but just curious. Also, another open ended question, where do you see the traditional TV model going?
For context, we're in our mid 30's, two children under 4. Our setup is we have Roku's on every TV in our home, a Tablo Quad connected to an Antenna in the attic. We have Disney Plus for the kids (considering canceling because they would rather watch YouTube), Apple TV plus (included in phone plan & never watch), Netflix (wife watches), and Amazon Prime (my oldest likes Pete the Cat). Last football season we paid $274 for Sling for 5 months (Don't Recommend even if it's the cheapest option, only 1 Disney/ESPN stream at a time was nightmare. Didn't read fine print), year before we used Hulu, although we canceled after March Madness.
Was partially inspired to ask this question after I read this article from The Athletic. It's a summary of Amazons investment into Diamond Media Regional Sport Networks (Bally). It's a two part discussion I wanted to pull into it's own thread.
Part 1: Direct to Consumer
For those of you that don't know, if you don't pay for Comcast/AT&T/Fubo you can pay Bally $20/month to watch the Braves. I didn't pay this last year because T-Mobile had a thing with MLB, and I able to watch the games on the MLB Roku app. If I didn't have that random perk I would've paid the $20/month to watch my Braves. What does that have to do with Georgia Tech Football? Well, in the article I was shocked to find out last year only 220-300k people subscribed. That's not just the Braves, that's for every MLB/NBA/NHL team they broadcast. Turns out this direct to consumer model resulted in a $77 Million dollar loss. According to "a person briefed on Diamond's plan" they're projecting DTC subscribers will rise from 300k last year, to 1.7 million this year, to 2.7 million in 2025, and 3.6 million in 2026. Although I do think those yearly increases are inflated, I wonder what the Braves subscriptions alone were last year, and what they'll be next year. If that T-Mobile perk is gone I will be one of them. The other item discussed is marketing DTC service using Amazon's existing prime video subscribers, and watching exclusively on the Prime Video App and killing the Bally app. You'd pay extra over standard prime, but that's the same thing with MLS season pass on Apple TV. My part 1 was trying to gauge outside my bubble would you pay extra to watch all Georgia Tech Games? Or Maybe all ACC games? Or all ESPN network games? At what point would you consider not paying for cable or a streaming service and just signup directly to watch sports? Open ended question, what would be your pain tolerance for price, or how often you're charged? At what point would it temp you if you're considering cutting the cord if you haven't already?
Part 2: Traditional Cable
This is what I am really curious about... Do you pay for cable? Or a Streaming Service? If you pay for a streaming service is it for football season or all year? I'm probably in the minority when I get outside my friend group, but I literally do not watch cable tv unless it's sports, and we only pay for it during football season. A lot of my friends I use to go over and watch games with in my 20's don't pay for steaming tv unless it's football season either. I've got family older than me who still have traditional cable, with traditional remotes, and I want to clarify I'm not for killing the traditional model, but if you're still paying for cable every month what keeps you hooked? For all my family it's like 2 or 3 networks out of their entire cable package (My Grandma and her Hallmark Channel) that's not sports or local channels, but just curious. Also, another open ended question, where do you see the traditional TV model going?
For context, we're in our mid 30's, two children under 4. Our setup is we have Roku's on every TV in our home, a Tablo Quad connected to an Antenna in the attic. We have Disney Plus for the kids (considering canceling because they would rather watch YouTube), Apple TV plus (included in phone plan & never watch), Netflix (wife watches), and Amazon Prime (my oldest likes Pete the Cat). Last football season we paid $274 for Sling for 5 months (Don't Recommend even if it's the cheapest option, only 1 Disney/ESPN stream at a time was nightmare. Didn't read fine print), year before we used Hulu, although we canceled after March Madness.