Twitter to stream NFL – Brace yourselves – Live Sport viewing is changing fast.

In Australia the cat was set amongst the pigeons when Optus won the rights to broadcast the English Premier League in Australia.  Well, a similar cat – but a whole lot bigger, is about to run around the US broadcast pigeons as Twitter does a deal with the NFL to broadcast Thursday Night football.

Sure, here in Australia we don’t care too much what the NFL are doing, but what this deal is doing is painting a very interesting picture of the future of sports viewing.

The Optus EPL deal is arguably much more disruptive than Twitter potentially broadcasting an NFL game – Optus own every single broadcast right.  TV, Online and Mobile.  That means Fox Sports won’t have any EPL games.

To get the sport to the Aussie Fans, Optus have done a deal with SBS to broadcast some content, but not all the games in the same way they were on Foxtel.  Instead, Optus is hoping EPL fans will sign up to Optus broadband and get “Optus TV with Fetch” – this nifty little box streams TV channels via the internet and Optus is launching a 24/7 Football channel just for the EPL.

Additionally, you’ll be able to watch a new Optus EPL app on your mobile or online.

That’s a brave brave new world.  But the EPL (With due respect to its fans) is not the big-league in Australia.

The NFL is one of the richest sporting events in America and it’s broadcast rights are worth in the order of $25 billion a year – thats US dollars.

So imagine one of the games was available to stream on Twitter?  Imagine need to have a Twitter account to watch it.

That’s probably something like the grand plan – starting somewhat slowly with Thursday Night football.

The biggest companies in the world are all trying to get more users, more regular use from their users and to know more about you so they can get their share and a growing share of the advertising dollars which are shifting more and more to digital properties.

We’re entering a world where the biggest telecommunications companies, social networks and technology companies like Google will be competing against traditional media and broadcast companies for the what has been traditionally the holy grail of broadcasting – sports rights.

Sports broadcasting attracts massive audiences, huge advertising revenue.  Live Sports broadcasting along with live Reality TV are the best thing Free-to-Air TV has in its arsenal to maintain audiences and advertising revenue – if companies like Optus, Telstra, Vodafone, Facebook, Google and Twitter start bidding for rights like the NRL and AFL not only will the price go up, but potential viewers will be forced to follow the new wave of broadcast platforms.

Seems great for the sporting codes with the potential for a huge windfall – but for viewers, this brave new world will take a lot of adjusting to.

 

 

Recent Posts

  • Tech

Reddit takes the Australian Government to the High Court over the Social Media ban

When Reddit was named by the eSafety commissioner and then the Minister for Communications as…

11 hours ago
  • Lifestyle

Qantas the 6th most delayed airline in the world according to Flighty Global Passport Report

I fly a lot. I need information about my flight, the gate I'm headed to,…

15 hours ago
  • Tech

Google set to launch new AI Assisted Smart Glasses in 2026

Google has unveiled plans to launch Smart Glasses powered by AI over the next year,…

2 days ago
  • Tech

TikTok enforces Social Media Age Ban and deletes videos made by under 16s

Kids across Australia are waking up to the Albanese Government's Social Media Minimum Age legislation…

3 days ago
  • Motoring

Uniden’s iGO Play 10+ bringing smart features to any vehicle

If you have an older car, devoid of all the smart features of Apple CarPlay…

3 days ago
  • Lifestyle

IKEA shows that zero-emissions logistics is possible

When you have any fleet there is no getting around that it has an impact,…

3 days ago