Ian P. wrote:If a tape delay were carefully done they could air the entire event with commercial breaks without losing out on any of the race.
That's what Fox did for their 4-5 races a year. Every commercial break resumed where the action stopped. You were a few minutes behind, but the 3-4 laps normally lost during a break were still shown, even if it was a bit behind. Not the best solution, which would be no commercial breaks, but a compromise that worked. The problem they had was at they started coverage on the warm up lap, and ended at the checkers. Which is BS because there's like two hours of coverage before the NASCAR races, and about a half hour afterwards. And NASCAR is crap, so it really stings to be shortchanged like that.
Ian P. wrote:My vote is for Steve M. David H. and Bob V. to get picked up by someone astute enough to see the potential.
It is my understanding that Hobbo and Steve are free agents, but Bob is contractually bound to Speed/Fox. I'd love to see all three get the gig, but I doubt it's possible, sadly.
bhallg2k wrote:Realize that NBC is a bit more than just NBC, that it's NBC, NBC Universal, USA Network, Hulu, G4 and all Comcast Sports channels, and I think it's pretty easy to see that such a move is potentially a pretty big step up from the current arrangement with Speed/Fox.
I realize that, but I have no inclination they'll do anything but absolute bare bones, tape delayed crap riddled with commercials. If Fox couldn't do it, and they didn't, then I have very little hope for NBC or their subsidiaries. They after all showed who won events before they were tape delay aired from the Olympics, and Formula 1 has nowhere near the audience or commercial viability that the Olympics does. The only hope they have is ESPN3, but I don't know who owns ESPN, and their ALMS coverage is by far the worst broadcast of any sporting event I've ever seen. From severe and inexcusable audio dropouts (they played the audio from the very beginning of a race for
20 minutes after an hour and a half of racing before it was fixed), to commentators being way louder than race cars, ESPN3 coverage is
barely tolerable. The only reason I suffered through it on ALMS race weekends is because they had Hindy and Jeremy Shaw commentating.