Tag archive for "blackouts"

Blog, Issues, Where Are My Games?

Monday’s Call to Action by Brad Blakeman

1 Comment 01 March 2010

blakeman_bradleyI traveled last week to Salem, Oregon to testify before Members of the Oregon General Assembly with regard to Comcast Cable’s blacking out of Portland Trail Blazers home games. Thousands of Trail Blazers fans are denied enjoying their favorite past time because of the greed and control exercised by a cable provider who refuses to provide the feed for home games to competitors in areas they cannot and do not service.

SFC struck a nerve in Oregon and challenged lawmakers and fans to take on Comcast, the Trail Blazers, and  satellite providers to “do the right thing” by fans. There is no good reason why tens of thousands of sports fans are unable to enjoy Trail Blazers home games in the comfort of their homes, their favorite restaurant or bar.

Now it is up to the fans to get off the bench and take to the court and take on this issue, head on. There is no doubt that fans can make a difference and SFC is there to help.

Sign the petition directing Oregon State representatives to take on this issue.

Become a fan of the Local Chapter in Oregon, SFC-Portland, on Facebook.

Follow SFC-Portland on Twitter.

Uncategorized

Tim Tebow Recruited by Crist to Avoid Blackouts?

1 Comment 14 December 2009

tim_tebowGovernor Charlie Crist spoke recently to the Jacksonville Jaguars ownership about the possibility of drafting University of Florida quarterback Tim Tebow. Crist believes that Tebow’s presence will be an avenue for the team to sell more tickets, keeping the Jags in Jacksonville. 

Whether that discussion was right or wrong, this Governor sees the glaring problem in Jacksonville and wants to fix it. 

The impact of the Jaguars leaving Jacksonville would cost the city jobs, charitable support, and future stadium-based revenue. There are close to 2500 seasonal employees on a typical game day, not to mention the employees of the multiple businesses that rely on game attendees patronage.

Local charities that partner with the Jaguars Foundation will no longer receive the annual $1 million in donations. The charitable gifts from high paid players and the generous ownership (see Weaver Family Foundation) will travel with the team.

Any hope of Jacksonville to remain a contender as a site for an event such as the potential United States hosted 2018 or 2022 World Cup will be dashed without a state of the art facility. There is no state of the art facility without a team to fund the stadium upkeep.

The situation in Jacksonville is a complicated one. However, the answer to rebuilding this team’s fan base is not continuing the NFL-sanctioned blackouts due to lackluster ticket sales.

The economy certainly contributed to the Jaguars’ current dilemma, but the NFL’s policy only serves to further damage that economy by alienating fans from their home team, with or without Tim Tebow.  Enough is enough.

Uncategorized

Jacksonville Fans Black(out) and Blue

No Comments 09 December 2009

BLACKOUTThink watching your home town NFL team is your right as a tax payer (considering you helped pay for the stadium)?

Think again Jacksonville Jaguar fans.

Thus far, every home game  in 2009 has been blacked out.  To add insult to injury, this is a team in the playoff hunt, holding down a wild card spot after 13 weeks of play.

Let’s add this up: publicly funded stadium, a winning team, third lowest ticket prices in the league, but still not enough tickets have been sold to satisfy Roger Goodell’s minimum requirements for local television coverage.

No matter where the ticket prices rank league wide, the NFL shouldn’t uphold this policy in these economic times.  Abel Harding, a business columnist at the Florida Times Union, told Conan Neal on Talk of the Nation, “that’s been a big deal, and that’s where it goes back to a lot of people saying maybe the NFL is being a bit greedy here, enforcing the blackout rule in the middle of an economic downturn…they’re making plenty of money. Maybe if they had some consideration, they might waive it for a year or so but they have not done that.”

The Sports Fans Coalition  is committed to supporting legislation that will enable fans to watch their home team’s games.

TV Blackouts Shut Out Fans

Uncategorized

TV Blackouts Shut Out Fans

No Comments 29 October 2009

Your local sports teams probably got a lot of your public resources to get their arena built.

But you might be shut out from watching those games on TV just based on who provides your pay-TV service. If you live in New York, Philadelphia, or San Diego, for example, you can watch some of your local teams on TV in beautiful High Definition, but only if you subscribe to cable. If you subscribe to satellite or get TV from your phone company or a new provider, you’re probably out of luck. That’s because your cable company either owns the team, owns the venue, owns the network carrying the games, or some combination of all these things. So the cable company wants you to pay it to see the games, and not pay any of its competitors.

You might think that there ought to be a law designed to prohibit that kind of anti-competitive behavior. There is. In 1992, Congress passed a federal statute that requires cable companies to sell the programming that they own to their competitors on fair terms. 47 U.S.C. 548. By making that programming available to cable’s competitors, Congress helped bring in a new age of competition against cable from satellite, phone companies, even small startups.

There’s just one problem: the law has a loophole. A cable company can get around this requirement to sell its programming to its competitors if it uses a certain kind of technology to deliver its signal. Big cable has made sure that this loophole stays in federal law.

So you can guess how this story ends: big cable companies use that loophole to keep your local sports programming away from you, unless you sign up for their service. It doesn’t matter if you think cable is too expensive, or if you just hate your cable company and want something different, or even that your tax dollars went to help build that stadium where the team plays. You’re out of luck, and federal law does nothing to help you.

Final score: sports and cable industries win, sports fans lose.





About SFC

SFC is the American sports fan’s advocate in the D.C. public policy arena fighting for sports fans in every city across the country.

Sports Businesses, Leagues, and Universities are grasping for our cash left and right. Let's join together to keep their hands off our wallets unless and until we have a say in how that money is spent. Futhermore, we sports fans believe we should be able to watch our games, no matter how we get our media.

Read More >>

SFC on Twitter