Just_a_fan wrote: ↑21 Sep 2019, 18:06
NathanOlder wrote: ↑21 Sep 2019, 17:43
It may be on pay tv here in the UK, but more people than ever pay for the premier league in the UK. and by doing this, means you get the F1 thrown in with it. So I wouldn't say that's a major factor.
28 million households in the UK, <9 million households have Sky. Of those that pay for Sky, not all will be paying for sports packages so fewer than 9 million households have access to F1. By it being on Pay TV, F1 has massively reduced the possible audience in the UK. That's just straight up obvious from the numbers. Everyone in the UK gets BBC, ITV, C4 etc. whether they pay Sky for it, pay someone else, or just use FTA TV. By F1 not being on one of those channels, it's possible exposure has been massively reduced. There is no arguing with that, I'm afraid.
Now, if someone hasn't seen F1 before, why would they pay for a subscription on the off chance that they might like it? If it was FTA, then there is no risk and people will have a look. Some will like it and stay. Those people are the ones F1 has lost, and will continue to lose year on year, so long as it's behind a pay wall.
I'm still sticking with it not being a major factor in why the teenagers of today don't watch F1.
1 factor is Kids aren't in to cars today like they used to be. And thinking about that, the reason is probably the same as to why kids aren't in to cars, and why kids aren't in to F1. Technology! In 1989 On a sunday, you could tune in to F1 on tv, or go to the park with your mates.
30 years on, you can tune in to 1000 more channels, or play a games console online with unbelievable games, or sit and play on a smartphone, tablet, laptop.
Kids these days play shooting games, 30yrs ago, shooting games were --- and lasted 1 minute.
Technology advances are the real cause in my opinion.