Posted on 02/14/2014 3:13:32 PM PST by xzins
I think you will need different economic times to accomplish that.
The difference between the for profit and not for profit designations is in paperwork they fill out, and in whether some funds are subject to double taxation if they follow certain paths. They aren’t illegitimately evading taxation by the designation.
Crony capitalism at its worst protected by government.
Someone being paid 44 million in a “non-profit” job is rubbing the nation’s nose in his little corner of cronyland.
Interesting perspective. Part of the problem is that very few people would pay $25 to watch an NFL game at home. And once the number of viewers declines, the television advertising revenue will decline, too.
Your proposal is interesting, but that’s $3000 per year to watch the games that you propose. I doubt the average fan would be willing (or able) to pay that. I am a casual fan; I usually watch at least part of a game on Sunday, but there is no way I would pay $25 to watch a game.
A pay-per-view option is interesting, but it needs to be set in the more $2.99-$5.99 price range, and it should only be out-of-market games. But the network affiliates wouldn’t like that, so it’s probably a non-starter.
I think otherwise. Maybe that was true years ago when TV was crappy and you had to bang on the TV and bend a coat hanger to get the signal to come in halfway decent. Even with a decent signal, you had to deal with cheesy graphics and second-rate audio. Check out these highlights from a 1978 game and you get the picture of how awful it was. And this was a playoff game!
In recent years, the technological advances in televising football are simply astonishing. You are practically part of the action on the field now and soon you will have ability to control your own camera angles and rewind and replay whatever angle you choose. Then you have add-ons like the NFL Redzone experience - that allow you to automatically switch to games when a scoring opportunity presents itself. I saw this feature at my brother-in-laws house and words cannot describe how awesome that was. If I wasn't cutting my cable, I'd be signed up for it already. (BTW, I would pay $25 a game as a pay-per-view.)
People are giving up season tickets because the best seat in the house is now in their own living rooms. So you see, the very business model of televised football would change if it was no longer offered for free (along with that incessant barrage of obnoxious commercials).
I do think enough people would pay $25/game to not only make it feasible but to earn the NFL and networks even more revenues than they ever made before.
And yes, they could do it without commercials.
Sure, you would initially get a lot of outraged fans who would vow to never watch another game again. But slowly, they will come around and decide that $25/$50 for an afternoon of football is not such a bad deal after all. Especially when you can invite your friends over to split the cost and take advantage of all the technology you will have at your fingertips (ability to control camera angles with unlimited replays.)
By the way, I think pay-per-view should extend to everything, not just sports. True a la carte audio programming. Not only would it make us be more selective with what we choose to watch (we might pick up a book a little more) but all the crap that we see on the 200+ channels will start to disappear. Quality programming will be directly rewarded.
If it were that strong a business opportunity I think the NFL would have done it by now. One big flaw I see in that model is that some games will generate hardly any revenue at all. Who — including die-hard fans of the teams themselves — would pay $25 to see a game between the Cleveland Browns and the Carolina Panthers?
Pay-per-view is more likely to take hold in a sport that simply doesn't have much appeal to casual viewers. The NHL would probably be ideal for it, since it is much more of a "cult" sport than a "popular" sport.
So long as they choose to watch a game, the dollars will roll in!
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