Seems to be the most popular one at the moment.
But the epetitions website seems on the brink of falling over. Did our wonderful government perhaps underestimate how many people might want to use the website?
After convivial lunch with executives from Sky and neglecting the fact that their constituents will be out of pocket, and tax revenue will go down.Diesel wrote:the government had an option to protect it earlier this year, but opted not to
Just out of curiosity, at what point do you declare victory in this plan? Is it when the BBC's numbers fall enough that their already tenuous support for F1 drops to zero and they cancel their contract entirely, or is it after Sky realizes that their subscriber base isn't rising enough so they decide to supplement their revenue with adverts during the race?donskar wrote:I want to sincerely urge you technical boffins to work together (perhaps PMs?) to work out a workaround that is understandable, accessible, and usable by the average F1 fan. The ideal goal is to have thousands (at least) F1 fans watching the races FREE -- and legally. I ask not for myself: my 70-hour weeks provide me with enough filthy lucre to buy the cable package that includes Speed.
The only possibility of victory is if F1 teams, circuits and FOM need to return to free to air to get viewer numbers to satisfy their sponsors.Pup wrote:Just out of curiosity, at what point do you declare victory in this plan? Is it when the BBC's numbers fall enough that their already tenuous support for F1 drops to zero and they cancel their contract entirely, or is it after Sky realizes that their subscriber base isn't rising enough so they decide to supplement their revenue with adverts during the race?
I wonder how many teams' sponsors are heavily dependent on the UK market. McLaren come to mind, since their Santander sponsorship seems to be entirely geared toward the UK, but what of the others?richard_leeds wrote:The only possibility of victory is if F1 teams, circuits and FOM need to return to free to air to get viewer numbers to satisfy their sponsors.
According to this, the UK market was 4.8%, at least in 2008...Diesel wrote:I highly doubt the UK is only 5% of the F1 market. Where are you getting these figures?
But I don't know how these numbers are calculated - they all seem very high, as I've read in multiple other places that the BBC's F1 audience averages about 5mil, with peaks in the 7-8mil range. Households vs viewers, I'd guess, but I know that FOM has been criticized in the past for grossly inflating it's viewer numbers. But since all of the numbers above came from FOM, I figure its safe to assume that they are all inflated equally.Formula one's global television audience grew in 2008, a report by the sport's commercial authority has revealed. The figures for last season jumped to 600m per race, which is 3 million more than in 2007, F1's official Global Broadcast Report said. Italy, with nearly 38 million viewers in 2008, remains the leading television market in Europe, but the British market jumped 7 per cent to over 29 million viewers per race as Lewis Hamilton drove to the title.
How are these ratings actually used? I mean, from the amount of viewers there still are a lot outsude the UK, and a lot of those outside the UK cant even get a Sky subscription if they wanted to. That is even a worse concern, they are now effectively blocking whole Formula 1 for me and a lot of others. Sure I can watch in my own country, but that is so ridiculously bad, it makes you cry, Germany isnt an option either, since well, I hate Germany(Sorry guys). The excuse of Globalisation is an complete joke, Sky serves like 5 country's or so, and BBC is available for most of europe, and I believe a lot of countries out of Europe can receive BBC too.Pup wrote:You might take a look through this thread on Atlas, as it covers this subject in detail with what seems to be a lot more authority than certainly I can offer...
A detailed look into UK F1 television ratings
Long story short, the UK is a bit under 5% of the total F1 TV market. But as I said, that 5% might be incredibly valuable to some sponsors, and completely irrelevant to others.
Can you please post a reputable source for TV ratings, something a bit more official? A bunch of users pulling together stats from several different sources is hardly reliable.Pup wrote:You might take a look through this thread on Atlas, as it covers this subject in detail with what seems to be a lot more authority than certainly I can offer...
A detailed look into UK F1 television ratings
Long story short, the UK is a bit under 5% of the total F1 TV market. But as I said, that 5% might be incredibly valuable to some sponsors, and completely irrelevant to others.