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What is the NFL saturation point?

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  • What is the NFL saturation point?

    How many time slots can the NFL consume and continue to attract viewers?

    So now there's a Sunday morning game, the Dolphins/Jets started at what, 6:30? 1pm game, 4pm game, Sunday evening. One or two on Monday night. Thursday.

    That's up to 7 slots @3h each for 21h/week. When is it enough, or even too much?
    --
    Imagine for a moment a world without hypothetical situations...

  • #2
    we hit it a couple years ago when we went to thursday games iMO

    if the packers weren't on right now, i would not be watching football after watching the first 2 games today

    and tomorrow night i'm leaning towards watching the big bang theory, and don't care at all about the game tomorrow night

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    • #3
      Not until the advertising dollars say so.
      All tyrannies rule through fraud and force, but once the fraud is exposed they must rely exclusively on force.

      George Orwell

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      • #4
        I haven't left the house today. Love it.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by esoxx View Post
          I haven't left the house today. Love it.
          Same here.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by red View Post
            we hit it a couple years ago when we went to thursday games iMO

            if the packers weren't on right now, i would not be watching football after watching the first 2 games today

            and tomorrow night i'm leaning towards watching the big bang theory, and don't care at all about the game tomorrow night
            Yup.

            Thursday night games are stupid and hurt players.

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            • #7
              Love me some Thursday nights.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by red View Post
                we hit it a couple years ago when we went to thursday games iMO
                this. needs to go along with the london experiments.

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                • #9
                  Not a fan of the Thursday games or the London experiment. The majority of Thurs. night games have been complete crap because I just don't think it gives teams enough time to recover physically or plan properly for the next game. My preference would be to do away with both.

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                  • #10
                    NFL games were special when they were limited to Sundays. NFC was CBS, AFC was NBC. You always knew where to find a game. The late games were limited to west coast teams playing at 1:00 their time. For a while, CBS and NBC alternated having a national broadcast of a second game at 3:00. Saw a lot of the Raiders, 49ers and Rams in those days. Three games on Sunday, but you had to switch back and forth between the two early games played at the same time, That was a lot of work in the days before remotes, and, yes, mechanical tuners could wear out!

                    The radical move to add Monday night games on ABC was a huge deal. Most of you might not appreciate what a big deal that was. People talked about the games all day Monday and all day Tuesday. Monday night football parties were huge, they felt almost like playoff games. Not many people I knew had more than one TV, so sometimes non-fans (usually wives/girlfriends) would get together at one house while other met at another to watch the game. For a while, NBC and CBS ran Monday night movies opposite ABC's Monday night football.

                    Every game was still a special event.

                    Now, I look at the jumbled up mess, with four time slots on Sundays, one or two on Mondays, plus Thursday. (Do they still play any Saturday games? They did for a while.) Never knowing when your team plays, with the possible last minute time shift, and bye weeks thrown in, it has gotten to be too much work to foloow teams and scores. Games aren't "special" at all anymore.

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                    • #11
                      Special or not, the current level of exposure Provides Ever increasing advertising dollars. Until that trend reverses the NFL will continue to find additional time slots to exploit
                      All tyrannies rule through fraud and force, but once the fraud is exposed they must rely exclusively on force.

                      George Orwell

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Upnorth View Post
                        Special or not, the current level of exposure Provides Ever increasing advertising dollars. Until that trend reverses the NFL will continue to find additional time slots to exploit
                        Sure, and fantasy football was a God-send to the NFL. Even formerly lukewarm NFL fans have become rabid over following "their" players. More people are following more games, and more viewers=more $.

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                        • #13
                          I have a friend who only watches NFL red zone and follows 'his team' online. I started a convo about what chip had done to their oline. He had no clue because they don't get fantasy points.
                          All tyrannies rule through fraud and force, but once the fraud is exposed they must rely exclusively on force.

                          George Orwell

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Patler View Post
                            NFL games were special when they were limited to Sundays. NFC was CBS, AFC was NBC. You always knew where to find a game. The late games were limited to west coast teams playing at 1:00 their time. For a while, CBS and NBC alternated having a national broadcast of a second game at 3:00. Saw a lot of the Raiders, 49ers and Rams in those days. Three games on Sunday, but you had to switch back and forth between the two early games played at the same time, That was a lot of work in the days before remotes, and, yes, mechanical tuners could wear out!

                            The radical move to add Monday night games on ABC was a huge deal. Most of you might not appreciate what a big deal that was. People talked about the games all day Monday and all day Tuesday. Monday night football parties were huge, they felt almost like playoff games. Not many people I knew had more than one TV, so sometimes non-fans (usually wives/girlfriends) would get together at one house while other met at another to watch the game. For a while, NBC and CBS ran Monday night movies opposite ABC's Monday night football.

                            Every game was still a special event.

                            Now, I look at the jumbled up mess, with four time slots on Sundays, one or two on Mondays, plus Thursday. (Do they still play any Saturday games? They did for a while.) Never knowing when your team plays, with the possible last minute time shift, and bye weeks thrown in, it has gotten to be too much work to foloow teams and scores. Games aren't "special" at all anymore.
                            I remember those days of having to flip channels and yes, MNF was definitely a treat (Chargers/Dolphins anyone?).

                            The NFL won't do Saturday games until the playoffs, because Saturday belongs to college football and they are done by that time.
                            All hail the Ruler of the Meadow!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Patler View Post
                              NFL games were special when they were limited to Sundays. NFC was CBS, AFC was NBC. You always knew where to find a game. The late games were limited to west coast teams playing at 1:00 their time. For a while, CBS and NBC alternated having a national broadcast of a second game at 3:00. Saw a lot of the Raiders, 49ers and Rams in those days. Three games on Sunday, but you had to switch back and forth between the two early games played at the same time, That was a lot of work in the days before remotes, and, yes, mechanical tuners could wear out!

                              The radical move to add Monday night games on ABC was a huge deal. Most of you might not appreciate what a big deal that was. People talked about the games all day Monday and all day Tuesday. Monday night football parties were huge, they felt almost like playoff games. Not many people I knew had more than one TV, so sometimes non-fans (usually wives/girlfriends) would get together at one house while other met at another to watch the game. For a while, NBC and CBS ran Monday night movies opposite ABC's Monday night football.

                              Every game was still a special event.

                              Now, I look at the jumbled up mess, with four time slots on Sundays, one or two on Mondays, plus Thursday. (Do they still play any Saturday games? They did for a while.) Never knowing when your team plays, with the possible last minute time shift, and bye weeks thrown in, it has gotten to be too much work to foloow teams and scores. Games aren't "special" at all anymore.
                              Unbelievable. The NFL was total crap in the 70's, 80's, and 90's for seeing a breadth of teams and players. If you were out of market, good luck getting to see some of the great players playing for other teams. I saw my first Packer game in Iowa in '73 and only saw a handful for the next 6 years until moving back to WI (some would argue this is a blessing). In the meantime I got steady dose of Dallas, Pittsburgh Oakland and Miami - and the Vikings losing in Superbowls. Can't even remember other teams. Deacon Jones? Only saw him on 'The Odd Couple.' Hardly ever saw Fouts, but at least had a chance with the late games.

                              Monday Night Football was so popular because it was the only game in town - literally - no other sports on the tube and three other channels. It's either that or "Falcon Crest," reruns of "Hogans Heroes," or "bowling for dollars," "Night Rider" and "Murder, She Wrote."

                              The extra days of football are great, but I'd gladly give up Thurs if it helped players.

                              With NFL Sunday Ticket, and streaming. you can get as much as you like. That's saturation.

                              But what the hell, if you're getting too much, flick the power switch and do something else.

                              Gotta love Capitalism and all the options.

                              Who wants fewer options, fewer choices?
                              "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

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