The short term financial model of Subscription TV deals will kill viewer numbers and the knock on of killing advertising revenue to teams. The next generation of fans and young drivers inspired to follow F1 or become a driver will come from a commensurately smaller pool.Unc1eM0nty wrote:F1 is going to die along with its aging fan base, I grew up watching motor racing - sadly the kids of today wont![]()
Its so ironic that a sport that prides itself on technology it just so backwards when it comes to promoting itself with no online content whatsoever.
WEC is fun to watch but the production quality isn't really on a par with Formula 1 IMO. WEC are in this weird middle ground where they have a pretty limited online platform while also having pretty limited TV coverage so the viewing experience is not overly fantastic. WEC should really double down on the online platform and follow in the footsteps of Motogp, WRC and the American sports leagues.Just_a_fan wrote:I've enjoyed some of the coverage of WEC. They are pretty impressive machines and the racing is often good too. I quite enjoy MotoGP/Superbikes etc. too but I've never followed it consistently like I have F1 for nearly 30 years. Touring cars can be fun too, and rallying is also interesting although coverage is sparse.
There are other options out there.
So agree.Shakeman wrote:The short term financial model of Subscription TV deals will kill viewer numbers and the knock on of killing advertising revenue to teams. The next generation of fans and young drivers inspired to follow F1 or become a driver will come from a commensurately smaller pool.Unc1eM0nty wrote:F1 is going to die along with its aging fan base, I grew up watching motor racing - sadly the kids of today wont![]()
Its so ironic that a sport that prides itself on technology it just so backwards when it comes to promoting itself with no online content whatsoever.
I love no sport enough to line the pocket of Murdoch so my interest in F1 will be constrained to free to air radio. If last week's BBC broadcast is anything to go by it will be a short lived interest because the commentary was awful.
The sport is on its last legs and the prognosis is not good. Maybe F1 dying and a new Formula taking its place would be a good thing. I'd like to see some of those future F1 concept cars racing sooner rather than later.
Sky Sports F1’s coverage, also airing from 15:00 to 18:30, averaged 546k (3.9%), peaking with 966k (7.3%) at 16:05.
Source...Numbers stayed relatively stable throughout the Grand Prix on Channel 4, hovering constantly around the three million mark before rising in the last few laps. Last year, BBC’s live coverage averaged 3.83m (26.0%) over a shorter 185-minute slot, peaking with 5.31m