"Good evening everybody and welcome to YouTube's Mooooonday Night Fooooootball, I'm Ryan Seacrest, and alongside me is Jason Nash ..."
Hey, don't laugh, this might be the future.
I just listened to The Ringer's Bill Simmons and Bryan Curtis talk about ways NFL games could hit different digital platforms for specific fan bases, and the idea has stuck. Different people, different needs. (Wasn't that an eighties sitcom?)
Anyway, seems like a good idea (another eighties sitcom, surely!).
For example, if you're into betting, Amazon Prime's take on 'Game Of The Week' could offer degenerate gambler, Cousin Sal giving up worthwhile prop bets, as Simmons suggested on his podcast.
Listen, I'd go a step further, as many NFL games are now beamed around the globe and with broadcast teams tailored to specific audiences. Consider ESPN's Crocodile Dundee-style "g'days" before the last Super Bowl, an Aussie-centric broadcast, for better or worse, featuring Steve Levy, Louis Riddick and Brian Griese.
It was fine. The trio was professional, led by Levy doing his syrupy-SportsCenter best, and even tapped into Australian lingo. This all landed ... sort of ... like a Chris Rock bit on a mainstream college campus.
After the game's halftime show, Levy even announced that "Super Bowl 55 is presented by Macca's." Look, it was all at once weird, oddly accurate, and possibly not needed, I thought, as I slowly munched on my Macca's burger.
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