For a message board post...... Yes.sp6r=underrated wrote:
322 Words = Long
Come on you can do better then that
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For a message board post...... Yes.sp6r=underrated wrote:
322 Words = Long
cupcakesnake wrote: On another note, when are we going to stop talking about tv ratings? Who cares? It's a dying medium that will suffer perma-death once a profitable streaming model wins out. I've never owned a tv, so the only time I'm contributing to tv ratings is when I got to a sports bar or visit my hometown (where I watch tv in my parents basement, lol). I'm not an atypical audience member. Most people watch legal and illegal streams. Broadcast tv has died, and sports is the last bastion of it. Why do we think this is a useful metric for the long term growth of the game?
Thaddy wrote:I can tell you right now the Bulls will collapse by mid season and will be fighting in or for the play in.
Remember it.
Raps in 4 wrote:The NFL has no problems with parity and promoting small markets. You don't hear reporters talking daily about how great it would be if Mahomes played in LA, NYC, or Miami. The three best QBs in the league play in **** Kansas City, Buffalo, and Baltimore and you never hear a peep about how they need to force their way to bigger markets asap.
Meanwhile, ESPN has spent every moment of the last decade talking about how good Giannis would look in a Lakers uniform.
Patches Perry wrote:Many of us view parity as a good thing, but it is unquestionably bad for ratings.

Raps in 4 wrote:The NFL has no problems with parity and promoting small markets. You don't hear reporters talking daily about how great it would be if Mahomes played in LA, NYC, or Miami. The three best QBs in the league play in **** Kansas City, Buffalo, and Baltimore and you never hear a peep about how they need to force their way to bigger markets asap.
Meanwhile, ESPN has spent every moment of the last decade talking about how good Giannis would look in a Lakers uniform.

Chuck Everett wrote:The second apron has only been in effect for two seasons. We've had five new champions in a row even before it came into effect (so why are you blaming the CBA for parity?). Market the new players and stop focusing on the fogies. OKC should have been playing on Christmas Day and had more National TV games during the season. Same with the Pacers. Why does Orlando get no national TV games? If the Lakers are as popular as people believe, you don't need to give them more national games. People will get League Pass just to see them.
Great post, sir!Raps in 4 wrote:The NFL has no problems with parity and promoting small markets. You don't hear reporters talking daily about how great it would be if Mahomes played in LA, NYC, or Miami. The three best QBs in the league play in **** Kansas City, Buffalo, and Baltimore and you never hear a peep about how they need to force their way to bigger markets asap.
Meanwhile, ESPN has spent every moment of the last decade talking about how good Giannis would look in a Lakers uniform.

HotelVitale wrote:cupcakesnake wrote: On another note, when are we going to stop talking about tv ratings? Who cares? It's a dying medium that will suffer perma-death once a profitable streaming model wins out. I've never owned a tv, so the only time I'm contributing to tv ratings is when I got to a sports bar or visit my hometown (where I watch tv in my parents basement, lol). I'm not an atypical audience member. Most people watch legal and illegal streams. Broadcast tv has died, and sports is the last bastion of it. Why do we think this is a useful metric for the long term growth of the game?
Very few people are concerned about the actual economics or marketing theory here, it's just become another magnet for concern trolling. Pretext for people to say what's wrong with the NBA and why it sucks now, with everything from overhyping Lebron to the in-season tournament to the usual blah about wuss-ifying the game and 3 pt shooting. That's really what at least 80% of the posts and conversations are here when the topic comes up.
I know I just shouldn't engage but it's such a strange phenomenon. And yeah I've also never owned a TV that I was paying for cable on (had some for movies and video games pre-streaming), and I'm in my 40s.

Raps in 4 wrote:The NFL has no problems with parity and promoting small markets. You don't hear reporters talking daily about how great it would be if Mahomes played in LA, NYC, or Miami. The three best QBs in the league play in **** Kansas City, Buffalo, and Baltimore and you never hear a peep about how they need to force their way to bigger markets asap.
Meanwhile, ESPN has spent every moment of the last decade talking about how good Giannis would look in a Lakers uniform.
The Master wrote:Not saying that to the OP, but the whole ratings discourse kinda shows who's a real fan, and who's a casual/hater.
Because why do you care about ratings?