by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #351 IMO, Google wants to make this work. YoutubeTV gains an avenue to establish itself stronger and also have collaborative efforts with some of its NFL content creators.What we see right now is just the beginning. They will want to keep subscribers and NFL fans happy and will likely create and add on new features in the future. Mosaic mode supposedly has been in the works, and this should push it to be completed. (seeing more than one screen at a time.)They currently allow unlimited DVR use. In the library you can DVR as much as you want and it erases after 9 months. So, if this remains for the NFL package - you could DVR every single game and watch as you want.I look at Google here as wanting to please the NFL fan and gain subscribers, not trying to fuck us over and make us miserable because they have a monopoly on ST. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by ramman2999 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 973 Joined: Nov 23 2022 LA Coliseum Veteran The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #352 Can somebody please answer for me. Due to this new deal. Does Fantasy Zone move to youtubeTV do those properties go to YouTubeTV are they NFL properties. For example after the broadcasts they always talk about the properties. Just wanted to know cause it’s very convenient just popping in games. Or does YouTube have to create thier own content? I would guess those properties would stay with DirectTV. Are all those people out of a job? by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #353 ramman2999 wrote:Can somebody please answer for me. Due to this new deal. Does Fantasy Zone move to youtubeTV do those properties go to YouTubeTV are they NFL properties. For example after the broadcasts they always talk about the properties. Just wanted to know cause it’s very convenient just popping in games. Or does YouTube have to create thier own content? I would guess those properties would stay with DirectTV. Are all those people out of a job?That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns... RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #354 Elvis wrote:That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns...Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #355 Last edited by RedAlice on Dec 23 2022, edited 1 time in total. DTV is DEAD.Accept it.Going foreward. Google owns all rights to all games that are not TNF, SNF, or MNF.Amazon has TNF.NBC has SNF.ESPN has MNF.Games will be shown in local markets by the local TV stations.Google now owns: EVERYTHING ELSE.I saw a comment that Google will work it out with bar owners and restaurants to make sure they can show the games. They are our friend, not the enemy. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by ramman2999 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 973 Joined: Nov 23 2022 LA Coliseum Veteran The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #352 Can somebody please answer for me. Due to this new deal. Does Fantasy Zone move to youtubeTV do those properties go to YouTubeTV are they NFL properties. For example after the broadcasts they always talk about the properties. Just wanted to know cause it’s very convenient just popping in games. Or does YouTube have to create thier own content? I would guess those properties would stay with DirectTV. Are all those people out of a job? by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #353 ramman2999 wrote:Can somebody please answer for me. Due to this new deal. Does Fantasy Zone move to youtubeTV do those properties go to YouTubeTV are they NFL properties. For example after the broadcasts they always talk about the properties. Just wanted to know cause it’s very convenient just popping in games. Or does YouTube have to create thier own content? I would guess those properties would stay with DirectTV. Are all those people out of a job?That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns... RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #354 Elvis wrote:That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns...Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #355 Last edited by RedAlice on Dec 23 2022, edited 1 time in total. DTV is DEAD.Accept it.Going foreward. Google owns all rights to all games that are not TNF, SNF, or MNF.Amazon has TNF.NBC has SNF.ESPN has MNF.Games will be shown in local markets by the local TV stations.Google now owns: EVERYTHING ELSE.I saw a comment that Google will work it out with bar owners and restaurants to make sure they can show the games. They are our friend, not the enemy. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #353 ramman2999 wrote:Can somebody please answer for me. Due to this new deal. Does Fantasy Zone move to youtubeTV do those properties go to YouTubeTV are they NFL properties. For example after the broadcasts they always talk about the properties. Just wanted to know cause it’s very convenient just popping in games. Or does YouTube have to create thier own content? I would guess those properties would stay with DirectTV. Are all those people out of a job?That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns... RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #354 Elvis wrote:That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns...Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #355 Last edited by RedAlice on Dec 23 2022, edited 1 time in total. DTV is DEAD.Accept it.Going foreward. Google owns all rights to all games that are not TNF, SNF, or MNF.Amazon has TNF.NBC has SNF.ESPN has MNF.Games will be shown in local markets by the local TV stations.Google now owns: EVERYTHING ELSE.I saw a comment that Google will work it out with bar owners and restaurants to make sure they can show the games. They are our friend, not the enemy. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #354 Elvis wrote:That remains to be seen.But you certainly can't do a redzone or fantasy zone without the having the games so DTV is out.OTOH, the NFL hasn't yet made a deal for bars and restaurants, maybe that will stay with DTV?Still lots of unknowns...Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #355 Last edited by RedAlice on Dec 23 2022, edited 1 time in total. DTV is DEAD.Accept it.Going foreward. Google owns all rights to all games that are not TNF, SNF, or MNF.Amazon has TNF.NBC has SNF.ESPN has MNF.Games will be shown in local markets by the local TV stations.Google now owns: EVERYTHING ELSE.I saw a comment that Google will work it out with bar owners and restaurants to make sure they can show the games. They are our friend, not the enemy. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025 FOLLOW US @RAMSFANSUNITED Who liked this post
by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #355 Last edited by RedAlice on Dec 23 2022, edited 1 time in total. DTV is DEAD.Accept it.Going foreward. Google owns all rights to all games that are not TNF, SNF, or MNF.Amazon has TNF.NBC has SNF.ESPN has MNF.Games will be shown in local markets by the local TV stations.Google now owns: EVERYTHING ELSE.I saw a comment that Google will work it out with bar owners and restaurants to make sure they can show the games. They are our friend, not the enemy. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025
by RedAlice 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 6782 Joined: Aug 07 2015 Seattle Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #356 Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it. Follow our RFU Instagram: @ramsfansunited RFU Season Ticket Holder by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025
by rams74 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 1748 Joined: Nov 19 2015 Glendale, Arizona Pro Bowl The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #357 Gareth liked this post RedAlice wrote:Google will have Redzone.and the NFL channel.to be fair: why is everyone freaking out? this is GOOD FOR US.this is literally the best thing to happen for NFL fans in ever. YouTube wants us. DTV hated us.DTV IS dead for the NFL. accept it.I think everyone has accepted that it's a done deal. We've known for a long time now that DTV was going away. This isn't about accepting it. It's about liking it. Different people have stated what they like about the DTV setup. Things that won't be there or work the same way with Google. If it's a step down for some of us, it's a step down. We don't have to like that.This isn't necessarily good for all of us. It's good for you. That's fine. Can't you just be happy that you're happy about it? But we don't all consume NFL content in the exact same way. Why is it important for you that we all like it? 1 by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025
by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #358 RedAlice wrote:Is no one reading the facts?the NFL has already made a deal with the bars and restaurants. they are going to work it out with Google.This is clearly stated. in the facts.From the AP article:https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/353 ... 023-seasonThe NFL had been seeking $2.5 billion per season for the package. It could still reach that total since the league retains commercial rights to bars and restaurants and is in the midst of selling those rights.From Verge (see below):I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out?Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal. RFU Season Ticket Holder by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025
by Elvis 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 41542 Joined: Mar 28 2015 Los Angeles Administrator The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #359 https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/235 ... day-ticketWhy YouTube spent the money on NFL Sunday Ticket YouTube is growing fastest on TVs, chief product officer Neal Mohan tells us. But say goodbye to that other RedZone channel.By NILAY PATEL / @recklessDec 23, 2022, 6:00 AM PST|7 Comments / 7 NewYouTube won the big bidding war for NFL Sunday Ticket yesterday, beating out Apple, Amazon, and ESPN with a deal worth a reported $2 billion a year. NFL fans will now be able to get the out-of-market games package as part of the YouTube TV bundle or on its own in the main YouTube app as part of the Primetime Channels feature.It’s a big win for YouTube and Google, which have been slowly but steadily taking over the TV streaming market. And it makes sense for the NFL, which got a deal that looks a lot like the cable and satellite deals it’s used to, dressed up in an app that actually works along with some fancy streaming tricks like live stats and the ability to say “creators” and “Gen Z” while gesturing at YouTube.I caught up with YouTube chief product officer (and previous Decoder guest) Neal Mohan briefly to talk about the deal, what it means for the experience of watching NFL games, and whether this gets the NFL’s broadcast partners like Fox and CBS any closer to games in 4K. (Spoiler: sigh.) I also confirmed a key difference between buying Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV over the main YouTube app: only YouTube TV will offer DVR features, per YouTube spokesperson Allison Toh.We’re also assuming Sunday Ticket will be priced differently in the different apps, but Neal didn’t have any details on pricing yet. He did say the NFL’s RedZone channel with Scott Hanson would now be part of Sunday Ticket, which means the DirecTV RedZone channel with Andrew Siciliano is probably not long for this world. And I asked him if all this means we’re just back to cable bundles, which... well, read on.This interview has been edited for length and clarity.What was the best argument inside YouTube for making this deal?Neal Mohan: YouTube’s always been a place for sports fans. We’ve had partnerships with the NFL, other sports leagues and federations, teams, athletes for years and years. A lot of our viewers have consumed sports content, whether it’s highlights, clips, live games, etc., on our platform for a long time. So it’s part of our investments along those lines.There’s three specific things that I think make this unique in terms of the experience we can deliver to sports fans. The first is that living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens — whether it’s the YouTube main app, whether it’s YouTube TV. We’ve invested a lot there through second-screen type experiences, interactivity, hiding spoilers, et cetera. We’re working on multiscreen as well for sports fans.“Living room screens are our largest and fastest-growing screens.”The second is we have a subscription business, and it is a big part of our future. [Subscription video on demand] and [advertising-based video on demand] combined are the twin engines of our future growth. Through this deal, our fans can access Sunday Ticket through whatever point they want. They can get it on the main app through Primetime Channels, which I’m super excited about. They can get it as part of YouTube TV. They can get it obviously on all devices. Then the final piece, which is actually the most exciting for me personally, is the overall creator economy on YouTube and what we can do for the overall ecosystem. As part of this, we’re going to have creators have exclusive access to games, everything from the first game all the way through the Super Bowl, so that they can produce content on the NFL channel, but they can also produce their own content for YouTube shorts.The NFL has already invested in original programming like NFL Follies and Game Day access, which was an Emmy-winning program they have on YouTube. All those creator elements are something that the league is very excited about — you’re seeing [NFL commissioner] Roger [Goodell] talk about that as well.But I’m particularly excited about it because I know how important that is for sports fans on YouTube. Part of this is everything that we can do with creators, both in terms of formal arrangements like the one that I described [and also the] enormous amount of shoulder content on YouTube. There’s an enormous amount of commentary. The way [my son] consumes NFL content is not just the live games but all the creator commentary around it as well. I expect this to really be an investment in doubling down on that type of creativity on YouTube. Will creators have access to game footage directly? Will they be able to remix things that are on Sunday Ticket?They’ll be able to work with NFL content, whether it’s game content, whether it’s behind-the-scenes access. They can produce for the NFL channel, and they can also make Shorts out of it. As you know, Shorts is one of our strategic priorities. It’s a fast-growing product on YouTube, and a lot of Shorts content is already NFL-related content. I think this will just accelerate that. So will you be able to remix highlights into Shorts?You’ll be able to do things like remixing highlights, clips, interviews, commentary, all of those types of things, whatever our creators can do in that shortform format.If I was a YouTuber and I wanted to livestream alongside a game, would I be able to do that?We don’t have the specifics around those types of pieces worked out, but obviously, the game footage is part of the deal. The type of content you see on YouTube today — where there’s a YouTuber who is talking about the game, reacting to the game — that is going to be a meaningful part of what we’ll see on YouTube on the main app on those creators’ channels. Not just the NFL channel but on creators’ channels as well. Are you finally going to help the NFL broadcast in 4K?[Laughs] There’s nothing specific about that in this deal, but I know that is a long-standing request of yours.So we should expect 1080i and 720p broadcasts from the NFL in Sunday Ticket?We haven’t gotten into production specifics. As you know, the Sunday Ticket package is basically the games that are produced by CBS and Fox. The regular season, Sunday games, out-of-market.In terms of the user experience for the streams, YouTube TV does have some stats, it has some replay features. Are you going to be offering more of those?Multiscreen is something that we have been working on for YouTube TV. So you should expect that as part of the experience.A lot of this conversation is about YouTube TV, but I’m very excited about being able to offer [Sunday Ticket] service in a la carte fashion on [YouTube] Primetime Channels. We’re going to invest in bringing all of those features that sports lovers appreciate on YouTube TV to the main YouTube app. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket through Primetime Channels, you’ll be able to benefit from features like key plays and game highlights, hiding spoilers, and those types of features that our sports fans have kind of come to expect and enjoy on the YouTube TV side.Do you need to be a YouTube premium subscriber to get Sunday Ticket?No, you don’t have to be a Premium subscriber to subscribe to Primetime Channels. DirecTV runs a RedZone channel of its own. Are you going to keep that alive?We have NFL RedZone. That’s part of our arrangement here. That will continue to be available. So you’re not going to keep the Andrew Siciliano RedZone?Our deal is the core Sunday Ticket package, the residential package. For RedZone, it’ll be the Hanson RedZone.Whatever the formal name of that is. The NFL RedZone Channel.Will I be able to say I want one game or I want one team’s season?Right now, it is the Sunday Ticket package. That is a bundle for the season. I’m assuming you’re not going to tell every bar and restaurant in America to go buy 15 Chromecasts. How do you think that will play out? Our deal is for residential rights. The commercial rights are separate, and that’s not part of our deal.Are you going to have any integrations with the hardware side of Google? Chromecasts, Nest Hubs? It feels like an easy win to say “make the football follow me around the house.” This is about maximizing access for YouTube fans on the main app, on YouTube TV, regardless of device. For our sports fans, a lot of that is on television screens.There’s that old quote about the only media business models being bundling and unbundling. We have definitely gone through a pretty substantial unbundling over the past decade. This feels like a big marker for the rebundling of media. Is that how you see it — that you’re rebuilding bundles or driving people toward larger bundles?No, the way I see it is, it’s about maximizing user choice. Not only will our fans be able to access Sunday Ticket on whatever device they have — we’ve talked about living room screens, but obviously also mobile devices, desktop, and laptops — but also through whichever app they consume YouTube on.I’m going to call you back at the beginning of next season and ask you that 4K question again.[Laughs] I’m ready for it. RFU Season Ticket Holder by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business 662 posts Jul 21 2025
by St. Loser Fan 2 years 6 months ago Total posts: 10896 Joined: May 31 2016 Saint Louis MO Hall of Fame The Future of the NFL on TV: Sunday Ticket to YouTube POST #360 RedAlice wrote:It is in the articles I have read. It says either subscription or as a premium channel.Here:The games will be available as an add-on for an additional fee to YouTube TV, the company’s $64.99 streaming package, or available for purchase separately through its YouTube Primetime Channels, another product.https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/22/busi ... icket.htmlalso: I am not trying to argue. I think this overall is a great solution for everyone.Because it's great for you doesn't mean it's great for everyone. Until YTTV/Google get the local sports carriers this is a no go for me and other people who like sports besides football. I can do a sports bar for 5 or 6 LA Rams game a year that aren't carried here. But 41 road St. Louis Blues and 162 Cardinals baseball games missing from YTTV are a deal breaker. Reply 36 / 67 1 36 67 Display: All posts1 day7 days2 weeks1 month3 months6 months1 year Sort by: AuthorPost timeSubject Sort by: AscendingDescending Jump to: Forum Rams/NFL Other Sports Rams Fans United Q&A's Board Business