El Scorchio wrote: ↑07 Jun 2021, 14:26Yes I did, because you said 'They know that they cover a lot more than a british audience. They COULD do it in another way.' and I made the point that don't feel they should have to do things in a different way or adapt things, just because other people also receive their coverage second hand.marvin78 wrote: ↑07 Jun 2021, 14:10As I said, I don't moan. I actually don't even care. I only care about the difference, which is there. Do you even read the text or are there just trigger words for you?El Scorchio wrote: ↑07 Jun 2021, 14:00
But they are funded by British viewers' Sky subscriptions. Their primary duty is to cater for a British audience that pays their wages and get more British viewers watching to increase their revenue. So of course they say what British people probably want to hear and concentrate on the British drivers. It's basically incidental and happenstance that their commentary is used elsewhere.
As mentioned, you might as well in the same breath moan at Dutch or Italian broadcasters for hardly being neutral. They are doing just the same job as Sky but for different audiences. It's not Sky's fault that most of the world understands English and not Dutch or Italian.
By that logic, the Italians shouldn't at all talk more about Ferrari, just in case there's a load of Italian speaking non nationals listening somewhere.
I wrote they COULD and not they SHOULD. And again: There is a difference. They really could do it in another way, because they know, they are not only covering british audience. That's what a user wanted to point out. And he is right. So what es the problem here? For me they can do what they want. Sports broadcast is never really objective. That's fine. It does not bother me because I know that it is not possible to be totally objective.