Tired of sitting on your hands regarding the Bills' future and TV blackouts, get involved.
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Leave a commentIf the Bills ever leave Buffalo...
Buffalo is dead to me. Aside from the Sabres... the Bills are the only reason I'm proud of this city. They bring us together.
Sounds immature but its the truth. Without the Bills - this city would be irrelevant.
Without the sports teams Buffalo is Toledo...
Buffalo without the Bills is no longer known as "Buffalo", it becomes Buffalo, NY...
A looming blackout never served as a stimulus for me to buy tickets. I buy tickets when I have a reasonable expectation of the game being a good one. Be relevant in December and games will sell out. Come hell or high water, if the Bills could make it past Thanksgiving and still be in the playoff hunt, fans will fill the stadium. The Buffa-ronto-chester Bills have a huge fan base that wants to drink beer, hang out with friends, and cheer for their team. Luckily for us we have pleanty of beer and pleanty of friends...now if they could just do something about that whole "being competitive" thing.
Interesting you say that it the blackout policy isn't a stimulus to buy tickets. Check out this report by top sports economists submitted to the FCC that pretty much confirms your point.
Cool. Thanks for the info.
Ben, we appreciate your feedback. With the TV driven revenue model of the NFL, having a team in WNY is a comparable investment to having a team in almost any other city nationwide. Also, if you had $800 million, it would be a very good investment as history has shown. It would be an even better investment if the anti-small market policies like TV blackouts were lifted.
The NFL has done a masterful job of claiming that they defend small markets with policies such as TV blackouts. The reality is that policies like blackouts only allow the league to propagate their created boogie man that small markets are in danger when the policy actually hurts them by keeping ticket prices higher than demand dictates in all markets, large and small.
Once the blackout policy is lifted, the fallout the league would see would level the playing field, likely bring down ticket prices across the league and allow all markets, large and small to thrive on the actual demand, not the one created by a policy.
Forget football and the stupid tbow stupid touchdown ghetto dances and the Bills its about MMA and if NY State would get off their ass they would leagalize it again like it was in early 90's so they can utilize the Aud for that and collect taxes and get some real entertainment in the city.
This isn't something the Congress or the FCC should meddle in, regardless of whether or not blackouts affect ticket sales - which is difficult if not impossible to know for sure anyway.
Let businesses decide if and when their intellectual property is broadcast and where.
By the way - why try to single out the NFL for this?
Why not also demand that all Sabres games be on free TV, legally forced by government? All NHL, NBA, NCAA, MLB? Boxing, fake wrestling, and MMA should all have to be on free TV too? Why? Many of those happen in publicly-funded facilities also, for better or worse.
And other than sports, how about all music, theater, or comedy shows at publicly-funded Shea's, or all concerts in HSBC/FNC arena - all of those should be legally forced by govt to be shown live on some free TV channel? Really?
Leave it up to the NFL and other businesses to decide if and when their products are offered on free TV, standard cable, pay-per-view, live, replay, internet, etc, - or none of those.
Actually it is the other way around. The blackout policy is a government protection/regulation for the leagues. The government is meddling by giving sports leagues like the NFL and MLB antitrust exemptions that virtually no other businesses receive. So 'whatever' I agree, the government shouldn't meddle. They should stay out of sports, remove these regulations and anti trust protections that make no sense and let the market take its course in regard to blackouts and a number of other regulatory issues in which leagues are being shielded. Any thoughts?
matt>"Any thoughts?"
From your website
"The Sports Blackout Rule prevents fans from seeing a home game when the local stadium doesn't sell out. Specifically, it says that if the league tells a local broadcaster to black out a game because tickets didn't sell out, fans are not allowed to watch that game any other way."
Where you at end of that wrote "fans are not allowed to watch that game any other way", my thoughts are the allowing (or lack) should be 100% a decision of the NFL. Games are their intellectual property and theirs alone.
If FCC removes itself from this in some way that leaves it totally up to the NFL as to if, when, and where geographically each of its games are shown, then I'd have no problem with it. I just don't think that's what you're aiming for. You can correct me if I'm misunderstanding.
If it were up to the NFL as it should be, I doubt they would show more non-sellouts on TV in the home markets.
The anti-trust exemption should be ended no matter what. But if it isn't ended, trying to use that as a justification to limit full control over broadcast rights doesn't seem like something the federal govt should be doing. Two wrongs don't make a right.
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Nope, I could honestly care less about the bills.
But I'm guessing since you are reading this blog that you care about Buffalo. Say what you want, they are important to the area as far as perception and emotion. Their long term future is important.
I'm a fan of the team, and the area, and would prefer they stay.
That being said, if a reasonable person had 800 million dollars sitting on a table in front of them (it's a big table), and was told, you can invest this in WNY, or invest it into the Bills, which would do the greater good for the community?
The experience of viewing a game at home will only improve. That's not just an issue in WNY, but league wide (and the reason Jerry Jones put a massive screen across his field).
The question won't just be if someone in WNY has the ability to do this. The second question will be, does a person in WNY have the funds, and believe the NFL is a good investment.