I'm not paying any money to Sky TV, so will have to give up on watching F1 just as it was getting good, and settling down on BBC again. Makes me wonder why I pay to watch live BBC TV, as there are fewer and fewer live broadcasts that I consider worth watching - iplayer (recorded shows) option seems a more attractive option.
:nono:
So - basically - you just want TV shows for free, and aren't prepared to pay for them to be made at all if you can avoid it. How is the BBC ultimately going to make those shows and put them on a server for you to download for free.![]()
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If you want something, pay for it - be it a decent photograph of your wedding or a close-up of some tennis-player's arse...
:nono:
It costs a fortune to go and see any sport live, let alone top-rank sport, so £20-odd per month is a bargain by comparision, especially when you look at the huge range of sport they give - football in every possible flavour, boxing, motor racing, golf, tennis, and tons more.
Sky does not release any audience figures, even internally. But it will put on an obscure minority sport from the other side of the world, live at 3am, with full studio production, in HD / 3D, compared to the BBC who might put the results on their website 2 days later... and sky are happy to make a program that has a (probably) tiny audience as it adds-up overall, whereas bbc/itv/c4 pull the plug on anything that goes under 1m...
Anyway, F1 stopped being interesting many years ago when it became nothing more than a parade of mobile advertising hordeings going round in circles, with 0.1 second differences in tyre changes supposedly being interesting![]()
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A recorded race is not the same as a live race. Die hard fans will always watch it live.
cam1986 said:A recorded race is not the same as a live race. Die hard fans will always watch it live.
I consider myself a die hard fanI absolutely love F1, but for one reason or another I can't watch every race in a season live and I'm sure it's the same for many
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Obviously the sponsors will be very disappointed if loads of UK Formula 1 fans stop watching their TVs!
The sponsors will quickly realise that if so many UK fans are so uninvolved with Formula 1 that they're too mean even to pay for the core viewing experience, that they've simply been wasting a lot of time and effort trying to persuade those same "devoted fans" to buy into the sponsoring products' "share of heart".
Luckily there are other fast growing global markets that are already far more important for them.
No its not. Over £400 per annum for something we were told was guaranteed to be free to air until at least 2018?? How is that a bargain???!
Its not a bargain by any stretch of the imagination, especially as you're also paying for stuff you don't want.
F1 has been free since the very first time it aired on TV. Our TV licence fee, as a BBC programme, paid for our viewing. Why should we pay an additional £400+ per annum to watching something that has been free to air because suddenly Bernie needs more money and the BBC need to save. Great, works for them but who suffers? Us faithful F1 fans.
Its akin to putting the world cup on Sky and only showing half the games on terrestrial tv, (not comparing this toUK football as it is on Sky at the moment as its just the UK championships so they are only national games), as F1 is a worldwide championship. If they put the World Cup on Sky and charged people £400+ to watch it there'd be complete uproar!
flossie said:Its a bargain compared to going to see the races in person.
Its a bargain because you get tons and tons of other sport on top of your tedious high-speed version of the M25 at rush hour.
You complain about having to pay for one specific sport and getting loads of others included. 5 entire channels dedicated to 24 hours of sport, showing everything in full, instead of a few hours of mixed-up coverage of a bunch of sports on weekend afternoons, with the occasional event in full...
But that's exactly the same as the licence fee - you pay for the whole lot, and get lots of mass-market programming you aren't interested in. Non-sports fans have to pay for the World Cup and Wimbledon, Pensioners pay for Childrens shows, let alone all the Daytime tv for the unemployed, or the endless stream of Dancing shows. I can't remember when I last watched anything shown on BBC-1 or BBC-3 for example... but I still pay for my licence fee because there's some stuff on BBC-2 and 4 that's great.
"faithful" fans will put their hands in their pockets instead of expecting stuff for free. Its still cheaper than going down the pub for one afternoon. People who were watching it just because its on will find something else to stare at. The complaining about stuff being slightly more expensive just makes people sound like a spoilt child, its not good...
If they did, you'd get to see every single match though, not just the England ones. Just as the Champions League coverage is far far greater on Sky than ITV. Think about that... And anyway, I hate football, why should my licence fee go towards supporting the incredible corruption of FIFA?
Anyway, you can't expect logic to be found at the BBC nowadays when it comes to money, an organisation that spent £800m on a political move to Manchester to buildings owned by someone else and closing the best studio facilities in the world that they owned themselves.
Youre right about the BBC though, bunch of idiots.
Jimmy_Lemon said:How are they idiots? They have kept coverage but cut costs, seems like they have done the best they could. They could quite easily gone "we can't afford it" and sky would have it all.
Because try committed to something they couldn't afford. That to me is pretty stupid and at the very least, incompetent and short sighted.
The original deal with the BBC had a few more years left to run, let's not forget that.
Mny won't like to watch it 2nd hand and many won't be able to afford to pay skys high price.
Jimmy_Lemon said:afaik it has one year left, and I haven't seen any details saying if it was the BBC's choice to end it early....it might have been said, but I haven't seen it anywhere.
Then more fool them.
Why is everyone is talking as if the only way of seeing a GP next year will be on Sky :shrug:
If you don't have / want a Sky sport subscription you will still be able to see EVERY race on the BBC. (Bernie has said that the beeb will show every race in it's entirety). OK half of them won't be live broadcast but come on, I'm sure a lot of people record the race and watch it after the event anyway. Certainly the one's that are on at silly o'clock in the morning.
Sorry. None of that washes with me.
You clearly hate f1, and love Rupert Murdocks media machine of which I want nothing to do with. I therefore wouldn't expect you to understand our argument, or feelings towards this.
flossie said:Ah, sorry, I thought this conversation might be about logic not irrational emotions...silly me.
It's a bit unsure as to whether the whole race will be aired delayed. Apparently the show will be 75 mins long, obviously that can't show the whole race as races tend to be at least 90 minutes long.
As far as I understand it, 10 races live and the rest will be as extended highlights on the BBC. Sky will show every race live though
Ah, sorry, I thought this conversation might be about logic not irrational emotions...silly me.
News Corporation, which owns 39 per cent of BSkyB, is said to be trying to put together a consortium to buy Formula 1 from CVC Capital Partners.

Thanks Karl - the bloody keyboard is now covered with water![]()

It's very well written and sadly not far from the truth....Customer reaction has been mixed, but a focus group survey found that most would have no problem with rectally inserting the company's new hand-shaped viewing card so long as football came on the telly...