I am I
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You're wrong on many accounts. How do you think they know it costs $3M to run a 30 sec ad during the super bowl? Because they buy those slots.Exactly....Trying to gift you the ability to see past your own ideals is impossible.What drives TV ratings?ESPN is making a bunch of money off of it, what do you think I meant by ESPN is doing it for ESPN? What are you even talking about? ESPN isn't making bank off these extra bowls from the fans, they make it from the TV ratings and the advertising. You honestly think they are getting rich from the fans dedication? LmaoI swore to myself not to reply to your posts anymore, but can you seriously not see the internal inconsistency in your own post here?It's not for the players, it's not for the universities, it's not for the fans. It's for ESPN to make more money off of a live televised game that most fans will not watch anyway, but hey at least there will be some background noise for bars and resturaunts on an idle Tuesday.
And adding more bowls makes more boxl execs. Making more bowl execs makes more corruption etc etc.
If it's only for ESPN, then ESPN would make no money on it and they would stop doing it. So, by the very fact that they profit off of it, we know it is indeed for the fans, who are the consumers in this case.
Just because you won't watch doesn't mean no one will watch.
As to the rest, if universities don't want to pay for bowl bonuses, write better contracts (i.e., linked to records) and/or contest the existing contracts. Poor administration decision are not a convincing reason to limit games.
Because like I said, if it's about "profitability" then a lot more than just the bowl games need to be cancelled.
This is becoming comical.
Say the 47th bowl on the schedule is played between 4-8 Wyoming and 5-7 Florida International. Sure, fans of both teams are going to watch. Thats. About. It. Plus if the game is on say ESPN2 at 3pm it will be airing for bars etc. to have on.
Where do you think the most money comes from in this scenario? Is it the fans of the teams watching on free TV or is it from the advertisers?
The only people seriously watching most of these bowls are the fans from these schools. However, they are still on in sports bars, restaurants...etc....which drives up some of the TV viewers that ESPN uses to sell advertising.
The advertiser doesn't give a flying rip if the school has 5 million fans or 5 thousand. If people are in public and the TV is on, they are going to see the ad even if they don't care about the game.
Also, I believe advertising for these games are in package deals. Let's say Bud Light wants to buy ads. They don't specify they want to be in the middle of the Wyoming Florida International game. They buy a package that gets them on for all games. ESPN would then go to them and say....hey....Now their's 47 games so your cost now is jumped to XYZ.
Also, I think you are grossly underestimating how many people there are in the United States that watch ESPN and other sports channels. There are millions and millions of eyes on the tube at any given moment. The advertisers pay to be on those channels.
For instance when my wife has some dumbass reality show, there are ads for tampons, baby products, make up lines and cleaning supplies. When I watch football games, there's ads for trucks, beer, shaving, and financial planning.
ESPN would rather air a college football game than some other meaningless re run or sport. Yes, the consumer pays for it because we buy the products on the tv. And we pay $$ for ESPN to be on our select cable plan. It's cost like $7 for ESPN to be on Comcast. It only costs like $1 for NATGEO to be on the cable programming. It all adds up, because YOU are not the only person in the world, there are millions and millions of people who watch, buy, gamble, etc on college football and every other of the 600 channels on TV.
ESPN wants the games