ABC is thrilled to lose this one...
By the way... NBC is paying $600 million a year
When NBC was asked about the deal...
Notice he didn't claim that it would be profitable for them Based on the losses at a lower price for ABC, NBC can not make money on the deal. They were desperate to get NFL Football back, and they paid too much for it.
While some might look at the $8.9 billion that ESPN paid for an eight year contract, please remember that they were paying for more than just MNF...
The ESPN deal includes rights to 17 regular season games plus rights across a wide variety of ESPN television and other assets, including NFL PrimeTime; the NFL Draft, which ESPN has covered since 1980; NFL Live; ESPN HD; ESPN Deportes; NFL Films programming; fantasy, ESPN Mobile, video game and data feed platforms.
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Drain on ABC
The 35-year-old Monday Night Football franchise has been a loss leader for ABC, draining a reported $100 to $150 million a year thanks to its $550 million a year price tag. "Retaining Monday Night Football didn't make smart financial sense for ABC," Mr. Bodenheimer, president of ABC Sports and ESPN, said. "We couldn't reconcile the fees against the revenues and that's when we decided the best decision for our company was to move this property to ESPN."
Plus, added Mark Shapiro, executive vice president for programming and production at ESPN, "you can launch a show in September and can carry a show through the season, unlike with Monday Night Football which has always forced you to rebuild mid-season."
Drain on ABC
The 35-year-old Monday Night Football franchise has been a loss leader for ABC, draining a reported $100 to $150 million a year thanks to its $550 million a year price tag. "Retaining Monday Night Football didn't make smart financial sense for ABC," Mr. Bodenheimer, president of ABC Sports and ESPN, said. "We couldn't reconcile the fees against the revenues and that's when we decided the best decision for our company was to move this property to ESPN."
Plus, added Mark Shapiro, executive vice president for programming and production at ESPN, "you can launch a show in September and can carry a show through the season, unlike with Monday Night Football which has always forced you to rebuild mid-season."
When NBC was asked about the deal...
'This one we can afford'
When asked whether it would be profitable, NBC Universal chairman and CEO Bob Wright responded: "This one we can afford." Though he would not comment on questions about whether NBC affiliates would be asked to chip in for the costs.
When asked whether it would be profitable, NBC Universal chairman and CEO Bob Wright responded: "This one we can afford." Though he would not comment on questions about whether NBC affiliates would be asked to chip in for the costs.
While some might look at the $8.9 billion that ESPN paid for an eight year contract, please remember that they were paying for more than just MNF...
The ESPN deal includes rights to 17 regular season games plus rights across a wide variety of ESPN television and other assets, including NFL PrimeTime; the NFL Draft, which ESPN has covered since 1980; NFL Live; ESPN HD; ESPN Deportes; NFL Films programming; fantasy, ESPN Mobile, video game and data feed platforms.
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