Mark Anderson
Posts: 12168
Joined: 9/1/2007
Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: David Levine quote:
ORIGINAL: Mark Anderson quote:
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ORIGINAL: Mark Anderson quote:
ORIGINAL: TJSweens quote:
ORIGINAL: Bill Jandro quote:
ORIGINAL: David Levine quote:
ORIGINAL: Bill Jandro Hard not to think Kaep isn't an idiot. Opting out of his final 12ml season only to find out no one even wanted him? His hair dew says it all Giving up his career for something he believes in is a bad joke. His career was over because he isn't a good football player and is a toxic locker room presence. This is as bad as KG's posts... Truth hurts No, bullshit smells. There are much less talented QB than Kaep with jobs in the NFL. They keep getting work over Kaep because he caused trouble for the NFL. He's not the 1st and won't be the last talented professional sports player who doesn't have a job because they are not good for a locker room. Coaches want one thing. Everyone on the same page trying to win games. A hundred reporters asking players about non-sports related stuff hurts the team chemistry and attention to detail. His issue wasn't in the locker room. Players from all over the league have rallied around him. The issue is with the NFL and their all American pristine image. NFL ratings are down. If you owned a business and employees were doing things to negatively affect your bottom line, would you tell them not to do those things? That's on Trump, not Kaepernick. But that's only a very small reason why ratings are down: quote:
The 2017 drop in viewership is attributable to a myriad of reasons, though TV executives pin overexposure to NFL programming as the key driver. TV executives argue that the league's push to maximize reach — by increasing the number of Thursday Night Football games and Sunday morning games played in London, for example — has hurt appeal and devalued the sports programming. CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus said the additional games "diluted the Sunday afternoon packages and affected the ratings," per The Wall Street Journal. More broadly speaking, shifting consumer viewing preferences have played a role in diminishing NFL audiences. A sizable portion of consumers aren't interested in watching sports programming — 48% of respondents indicated access to sports was not important to a pay-TV subscription, according to an RBC study cited by Variety. Moreover, over 1 million consumers cut the cord in the first three quarters of 2017 alone, which, in turn, likely affected the viewership of live sports and the NFL. But even with all that, 33 of the 50 most watched programs in all of 2017 were NFL games. Figured that. Network TV is just horrible talent shows, reality garbage or regurgitated cop or hospital dramas.
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