To pay for something you first need some interest, if they have never watched F1 because it´s been PPV for many years, they will never pay for it. Some smart people thought even if audience numbers went down, asking for money to watch F1 was worth, but they didn´t consider the long term well enoughEl Scorchio wrote: ↑21 Sep 2019, 11:40Pay TV thing is a huge factor as well. When I was a kid you could just watch it all on BBC on a Sunday afternoon for free. Lovely. (And it was the only thing on as well) Now you have to not only access Sky Sports, but also break past the competition- all the other sports that are also on Sky, BT and terrestrial channels at the same time. Much more competition too. Notably on Sundays the premier league is now on all afternoon in direct competition during the football season, and all through the summer there’s cricket, rugby, multi sports events, tennis etc. The market is saturated.
Fair point! I have a feeling that might be more about the heavy drinking than anything else...
Dressing up is optional though
If current F1 didn't suck they wouldn't need all the artificial stuff that is mandatory at the moment - bad tyres, pieces of titanium underneath the cars to simulate the effect of low cars in early nineties and - of course - DRS.Andres125sx wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 12:31First, current F1 do not suck, stop repeating hypes please. Did you watch Silverstone or Hockenheim this season?
I don't think that the managers who were responsible for this kind of planning ever wanted to think long term. They don't need to. A manager implements his plan, gets increase in profit next year, collects his bonus for being efficient and then goes elsewhere to earn bonuses there. End of the story. This is how modern economy works.Andres125sx wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 12:31To pay for something you first need some interest, if they have never watched F1 because it´s been PPV for many years, they will never pay for it. Some smart people thought even if audience numbers went down, asking for money to watch F1 was worth, but they didn´t consider the long term well enoughEl Scorchio wrote: ↑21 Sep 2019, 11:40Pay TV thing is a huge factor as well. When I was a kid you could just watch it all on BBC on a Sunday afternoon for free. Lovely. (And it was the only thing on as well) Now you have to not only access Sky Sports, but also break past the competition- all the other sports that are also on Sky, BT and terrestrial channels at the same time. Much more competition too. Notably on Sundays the premier league is now on all afternoon in direct competition during the football season, and all through the summer there’s cricket, rugby, multi sports events, tennis etc. The market is saturated.
You nailed it Ringleheim. We will probably take flack for it but there needs to be some danger. It has to be heros staring at danger and conquering it.The "spectacle" of the sport was a hell of a lot better back then in every aspect. It was much more exotic, dangerous, and exciting.
The bolded part is just false. F1 was born as a manufacturer competition, not drivers or athletes competition. Did you know first season there was NO driver scoreboard, only manufacturers one?SuperDrummer wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 19:26If current F1 didn't suck they wouldn't need all the artificial stuff that is mandatory at the moment - bad tyres, pieces of titanium underneath the cars to simulate the effect of low cars in early nineties and - of course - DRS.Andres125sx wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 12:31First, current F1 do not suck, stop repeating hypes please. Did you watch Silverstone or Hockenheim this season?
The root cause of the issues is IMHO in the great fraud that Ecclestone managed to perform in the late nineties with selling F1 (which used to be a public property) to a greedy hedge fund. This lead to current crippled perception of the sport. These days F1 is promoted as of of multiple entertainment shows, just as stand ups or pop concerts are. This leads to mantra "we need the races to be unpredictable to keep fans happy". This leads to simulation of racing instead of actual racing. But this is not what F1 is meant to be. If we try to list what any sport is all about, entertainment will hardly come up anywhere near the top of the list. First of all, any sport is a competition of athletes where the best one is always going to win.
You have said this before and it is just plain wrong.F1 was born as a manufacturer competition, not drivers or athletes competition
This statement is 'officially' wrong if we're speaking about F1. Manufacturers were competing in pre-WW2 Grand Prix WC. But anyway, the goal of the real competition is to figure out who is the best driver/engineer/manufacturer, not to simulate a competition to entertain fans, that's the main point.Andres125sx wrote: ↑23 Sep 2019, 11:50The bolded part is just false. F1 was born as a manufacturer competition, not drivers or athletes competition. Did you know first season there was NO driver scoreboard, only manufacturers one?SuperDrummer wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 19:26If current F1 didn't suck they wouldn't need all the artificial stuff that is mandatory at the moment - bad tyres, pieces of titanium underneath the cars to simulate the effect of low cars in early nineties and - of course - DRS.Andres125sx wrote: ↑22 Sep 2019, 12:31First, current F1 do not suck, stop repeating hypes please. Did you watch Silverstone or Hockenheim this season?
The root cause of the issues is IMHO in the great fraud that Ecclestone managed to perform in the late nineties with selling F1 (which used to be a public property) to a greedy hedge fund. This lead to current crippled perception of the sport. These days F1 is promoted as of of multiple entertainment shows, just as stand ups or pop concerts are. This leads to mantra "we need the races to be unpredictable to keep fans happy". This leads to simulation of racing instead of actual racing. But this is not what F1 is meant to be. If we try to list what any sport is all about, entertainment will hardly come up anywhere near the top of the list. First of all, any sport is a competition of athletes where the best one is always going to win.