Felonious Python
Minor League Degenerate
- Aug 20, 2004
- 32,511
- 9,772
FanDuel is a sportsbook. Bally is a sportsbook (among other things).Sweet, even more sports betting will be shoved down our throats!
In-market, the options are either pay the cable company, or use the app.Old man here lol(nearly 50) in need of help. Been reading through the replies, but can someone just tell me the easiest way to watch games. I have Xfinity but they make you upgrade your package to get FanDuel and I don’t wanna do that, I’m already paying 200.00. Anyway any help would be much appreciated.
Unfortunately I can’t download apps to my t.v., even though I have Prime Hulu Disney Netflix……..so that part kind of confuses me.
Thank you, appreciate the response!In-market, the options are either pay the cable company, or use the app.
A Roku or Amazon Fire TV stick would allow you to download apps for your TV.
Alternatively, you could watch FanDuel+ on your PC, or another device, if that's of any interest.
The Lightning's season is depressingly on FanDuel Sun, ABC, TNT, ESPN, and ESPN+ exclusive.
Stammer's return was an ESPN+ exclusive, however, Lightning games are normally blacked out in-market. They do become available at some point after the game is played, but that would be the vast majority of the season.
ESPN wants us to buy ESPN+, but not for watching the Lightning. There is a workaround (a VPN), but that's adding complexity.
Some games are also on NHL Network, so if you have FanDuel Sun, then you can ignore that, but if you are out-of-market, it's not on ESPN+.Thank you, appreciate the response!
It seems like standard FanDuel pricing.Did not see any pricing info in the article, going to look into this tonight.
CBS's popularity has always kind of surprised me. It's been seen as the 'old people network' for at least 20 years now, and that was pretty much always going to run out of steam at some point.“If Fox didn’t have the NFL, FS1 … goes under, almost,” Ourand said. “One of the reasons that Skydance paid so much for Paramount is because they have an NFL deal that extends out another decade. Traditional media companies, their whole existence relies on these sports leagues. Because of that, these leagues have an incredible amount of leverage over them and they can go and get the kind of prices that the NBA got, they can get the kind of prices that the NFL got.”
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“Having the leagues go after (streaming), they’re going to find that the whole leverage aspect of what they’ve enjoyed for the past several decades is gonna be turned on its head, and that’s where I think that they should be weary,” he said.
The company, which last month said it was studying the idea, will separate off entertainment and news channels including MSNBC, CNBC, USA, Oxygen, E!, Syfy and Golf Channel. Those assets generated about $7 billion in revenue in the 12 months ended Sept. 30.
Bravo, known for reality TV programming such as the “Real Housewives,” will stay in the mother ship, along with the Peacock streaming service and the NBC broadcast network, the people said.
When a team used to be bad, a team would still get steady cable subscription money. I don't think many people were canceling cable entirely in the 90s because the Islanders were bad. Now, with everything getting Balkanized, a team's play is directly tied with subscriber numbers.And the Blackhawks are unwatchable. And we don’t mean boring, though the Bedard novelty is wearing off and the roster is loaded with stopgap veterans who are essentially just passing through, merely laundry for fans to root for. No, the Blackhawks are literally unwatchable for a huge swath of their fans. For subscribers to the two biggest television providers — Comcast and YouTube TV — the hoops you have to jump through in order to watch this team play hockey are laughable. You must purchase a set of rabbit ears (rabbit ears! In the year 2024!). You must have a room with a window that faces downtown Chicago. You must have the rabbit ears high on your wall somewhere. And you must have a night that’s not too windy. Or too rainy. Or too cold. Or too clear? Who knows? There’s a good chance, on any given night, that you’re going to be looking at something that more closely resembles scrambled HBO in the 1980s than a high-definition hockey game. Your other (legal) option is to pay $20 a month to watch the games on your phone or laptop. But just the Blackhawks. If you want the Bulls and the White Sox — those high-flying, can’t-miss squads — you’ll need to pony up $30. A month. It’s gobsmacking.