ChatterBank3 mins ago
Cup Final
14 Answers
At last, they think it's all nearly over, but why on earth is it on two channels? An intelligent programmer would have put something really good on instead of the football. Not even half the population is remotely interested, whoever is playing.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Less than15 million people watch TV anyway on a Sunday night. If only one channel showed football tonight they'd get maybe 10 million and the other channel would get maybe 5 million. Neither channel wants only 5 million viewers so rather than toss a coin they both settle for 7-8 million each. It's BBC2 and Channel 4/5 who could benefit
>An intelligent programmer would have put something really good on instead
Wrong. Why should they pay to show a major film for example, and then find almost nobody is watching it.
I think you will find a lot of the population are interested, my wife and her sister both sat and watched it, and neither of them usually watch football.
Wrong. Why should they pay to show a major film for example, and then find almost nobody is watching it.
I think you will find a lot of the population are interested, my wife and her sister both sat and watched it, and neither of them usually watch football.
4getmenot has provided the answer to your question. ("Because they've both paid for it").
ITV have invested a great deal of money in buying a package of programmes which included the World Cup Final. They will have hoped to recoup their outlay (and to make a profit) by selling advertising around those programmes. They have to show the match in order to get their advertising revenue..
The BBC will have also bought a package of programmes. Apart from the 'loss of prestige' that they'd suffer if they failed to show the Cup Final, it's likely that FIFA would not have offered them a package which did not include the rights to show the Final. Licence payers would rightly protest if the BBC failed to show a programme which their money had been used to pay for.
Chris
ITV have invested a great deal of money in buying a package of programmes which included the World Cup Final. They will have hoped to recoup their outlay (and to make a profit) by selling advertising around those programmes. They have to show the match in order to get their advertising revenue..
The BBC will have also bought a package of programmes. Apart from the 'loss of prestige' that they'd suffer if they failed to show the Cup Final, it's likely that FIFA would not have offered them a package which did not include the rights to show the Final. Licence payers would rightly protest if the BBC failed to show a programme which their money had been used to pay for.
Chris