NBA Media Rights Deal to Begin Negotiations

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From The Athletic:

What to expect in the NBA’s next media deal: Amazon, NBC contenders to join

By Andrew Marchand
Apr 22, 2024


In TV rights negotiations, the NBA is seeking new decade-long — or longer — contracts that will alter how it traditionally delivers games, with streaming becoming the principal distribution method, according to league and television executives briefed on the plans.

While the incumbents, ESPN/ABC and TNT Sports, remain intensely interested and very well could retain their rights, it is nearly assured that a new tech partner will join the mix, with Amazon Prime Video the perceived favorite.

Meanwhile, NBC, which aired the Michael Jordan era that elevated the league, covets returning the NBA to its broadcast network and streaming service, Peacock.

On Monday at 11:59 p.m. ET, the exclusive financial negotiation window between the NBA, ESPN and TNT Sports will officially close, allowing league commissioner Adam Silver and his top lieutenants to talk specific contract details with other potential partners, which, besides Amazon and NBC, could include Google/YouTube, Netflix and Apple.

There will be at least three separate packages, which is the NBA’s preference, but the idea of four has not been ruled out, those briefed on the discussions said.

The notion that a pure streamer, like Amazon, could have significant games, including conference finals and perhaps even the NBA Finals at some point over the life of a long-term deal is a possibility, according to executives briefed on the NBA’s discussions.

The NBA Finals’ main broadcasts currently air on ABC, while the conference finals are on ESPN and TNT. Both networks want to retain them.

“We continue to have productive discussions with Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery on a renewal of our media deals,” an NBA spokesperson said in a statement.

The ongoing negotiations are much more complex than in 2014 when, months before the exclusive negotiating deadline, ESPN and TNT both re-upped for a combined $2.6 billion, on average, per season over nine years.

When the NBA is finished with the new deals, it is expected to set its course globally and locally for the future. The league would like contracts for 10 years or maybe longer, according to executives briefed on the league’s thinking, because of the array of companies in the marketplace, which the NBA believes may shrink as streaming continues to replace cable television.

The NBA will broach the idea of partnering with ESPN, Amazon, Apple, Google/YouTube TV — maybe more than one of them — to potentially offer local games direct to consumers. However, one prominent model being contemplated would not offer exclusive rights to these outlets, according to executives briefed on the plans.

For example, in New York, the Knicks are available on cable through MSG Network or with MSGN’s direct-to-consumer subscription app. The NBA could try to sell Knicks games directly to fans on a local level, as a season pass or per game. MSGN offers the same type of service, but also includes other programming.

The NBA’s idea would be to have as many fans have access to the games as possible as cable diminishes.

The NBA timed all of their television deals, domestically and internationally, to end after the 2024-2025 season. This includes NBA League Pass, and its Cloud services, which are currently with Microsoft Azure.

On top of this, with Caitlin Clark’s arrival with the Indiana Fever of the WNBA, the anticipation of a ratings boom off the record-setting numbers for her NCAA Tournament games could result in an upgraded portion for the women’s game, which averaged $40 million per year over the life of its last deal and is currently at around $65 million for this season. The WNBA has more currency in these negotiations than the last ones by a wide margin.

The WNBA is part of the calculus as the league likes to cite that its 230 nights of national windows average more than a million viewers each. The NBA has held steady this year with an overall increase of 1 percent, averaging 1.6 million viewers per game.

Hovering over all the talks is the uncertainty for media companies, such as Disney, the parent of ESPN, and Warner Bros. Discovery, which has TNT under its umbrella. They are all emphasizing their streaming products. TNT Sports has Max and Bleacher Report at its disposal.

Later this fall, ESPN, TNT Sports and Fox Sports will present a joint direct-to-consumer option that is expected to cost between $40-$50 per month, while ESPN will have its own full direct-to-consumer service in 2025 that is expected to be in the $25-30 per month range.

ESPN and the NBA have talked about the league taking a minority equity stake in the network, but that is on the backburner until the rights deals are completed, according to executives briefed on the talks.

Meanwhile, Amazon Prime Video appears to be exactly what the NBA is looking for in a new partner, with its worldwide reach of 200 million viewers, according to its latest shareholder letter, its success with the NFL “Thursday Night Football” package, and its desire to be a part of the league. Amazon is only interested in being involved with a regular- and postseason package of high-level games, according to executives briefed on their thinking.

NBC wants back in on the NBA. While all the negotiations will come down to the final billions, NBC executives, including NBC Universal chairman Mark Lazarus, who formerly was with TNT when it brought in the NBA, has long ties with top league officials.

The incumbents, ESPN, with the playoffs and NBA Finals, and TNT, with the playoffs and the All-Star weekend, want to keep their top inventory but could balance a lesser increase with the creation of a more enticing third package that another entity pays for. The In-Season Tournament, created this year, was designed in part to add more attractive games.

While Netflix, Apple and Google/YouTube are all potential partners, they are seen as less likely for the traditional game packages.

The NBA may also try to steer fans to its games through social media. When users post, the NBA could attempt to have links back to its NBA app, which it envisions as a potential front door to all its games, driving people to authenticate their passwords or possibly to buy individual games.

In the new digital age, the NBA’s next deals will be about tomorrow, not yesterday. As of Monday night, they are free to talk fully with everyone who wants to be involved in what’s next.

 
I think that things are going to cost more, not less, with streaming packages from multiple entities.
 
I think that things are going to cost more, not less, with streaming packages from multiple entities.
It's funny, in a way, it's what everyone has been asking for...why can't I just pay for the channels I want, while railing on cable. And now each entity is going to start to test the limits of how willing people are to do that, as they all split up and make us pay 30 different services instead of 1 or 2.
 
It's funny, in a way, it's what everyone has been asking for...why can't I just pay for the channels I want, while railing on cable. And now each entity is going to start to test the limits of how willing people are to do that, as they all split up and make us pay 30 different services instead of 1 or 2.
So you are saying my Comcast watch everything all the time for one price that includes internet WiFi access and the fastest streaming available isn’t such a bad deal after all?
 
Will never forget about 10 years ago having a long discussion with friends at a BBQ about how they wanted ala cart programming for their sports and didn't want to have to pay cable for all the food/life/entertainment channels. I tried so very hard to explain why that was actually the last thing they want but they didn't listen. Now instead of one cable company, I'll be paying 8 different streamers who are all raising their prices by the same amount the single cable company did. Add in more and more of them cracking down on password sharing and all of this is just bad for the consumer, that is until Amazon or Apple just puts all the streamers in a bundle and sells it to me for one 'low' cost.
 
THE BLAZERS NEED TO DRAFT HOMELANDER... NOW!!!!!!!
Homelander-Drinking-Stillwells-Milk-1068x600.png
 
If this goes the way of MLS and is picked up by Apple or Prime, there will be NO local or visit broadcasts anymore. They will be neutral shows with different commentators coming in and out. Those who watch the Timbers know what I mean. Good or bad.

Tough watching the Timbers score a goal and they don’t show Timber Joey and the log….the national directors and producers just don’t know the importance or history of that. You won’t get replays to see questionable calls on your beloved Blazers that’s for sure. Some like that type of show though. And the worst teams will get the bottom of the barrel crews unfortunately.

Should be interesting.
 
If this goes the way of MLS and is picked up by Apple or Prime, there will be NO local or visit broadcasts anymore. They will be neutral shows with different commentators coming in and out. Those who watch the Timbers know what I mean. Good or bad.

Tough watching the Timbers score a goal and they don’t show Timber Joey and the log….the national directors and producers just don’t know the importance or history of that. You won’t get replays to see questionable calls on your beloved Blazers that’s for sure. Some like that type of show though. And the worst teams will get the bottom of the barrel crews unfortunately.

Should be interesting.
Well this sounds depressing. Love the local broadcasts, even more now that I’m on the other side of the country.
 
If this goes the way of MLS and is picked up by Apple or Prime, there will be NO local or visit broadcasts anymore. They will be neutral shows with different commentators coming in and out. Those who watch the Timbers know what I mean. Good or bad.

Tough watching the Timbers score a goal and they don’t show Timber Joey and the log….the national directors and producers just don’t know the importance or history of that. You won’t get replays to see questionable calls on your beloved Blazers that’s for sure. Some like that type of show though. And the worst teams will get the bottom of the barrel crews unfortunately.

Should be interesting.

So Blazer broadcasting would be no more?
 
If this goes the way of MLS and is picked up by Apple or Prime, there will be NO local or visit broadcasts anymore. They will be neutral shows with different commentators coming in and out. Those who watch the Timbers know what I mean. Good or bad.

Tough watching the Timbers score a goal and they don’t show Timber Joey and the log….the national directors and producers just don’t know the importance or history of that. You won’t get replays to see questionable calls on your beloved Blazers that’s for sure. Some like that type of show though. And the worst teams will get the bottom of the barrel crews unfortunately.

Should be interesting.
Even without Apple and Prime it could've been headed that way eventually, regional sports networks are all going bankrupt. Sure NY and LA teams could probably always have a decent contract but it might just make more sense for the league to sell games for dozens of teams at once instead of each franchise trying to get their own local TV deal.

There still should be the same amount of broadcasts though, as Prime Apple whatever is going to have to hire a ton of TV crews. I guess there might not be separate home/away broadcasts to your point so they will all be neutral.

Personally I care 99% about seeing the game on the court, not filler/commentary/etc
 
So Blazer broadcasting would be no more?
First off, I’ve heard nothing but what you guys have about all this. I CAN say that my people at Amazon who are in charge of their NFL coverage have been reaching out to all my guys around the league asking intricate and detailed questions about what it takes to put on an REGIONAL NBA broadcast.
So the are definitely looking into it.
Now, when they talk about Amazon/Apple, it could just be they simply take over the NATIONAL COVERAGE like TNT/ABC/ESPN do now. If that’s the case, you won’t see anything different regionally other than where to catch those NATIONAL games.
But what some don’t realize is 95% of the NBA’s regional broadcasts are controlled, ran and crewed by networks. It used to be FSN/Comcast/etc…… but recently Bally’s took over almost all of them and now those are going away I believe.
So the directors and producers and announcers all are Bally’s employees for example. There are just a few teams, including us that have their own broadcasting department. That changes everything really. Those teams are able to shop their product around and have TONS more control.

@SlyPokerDog to answer your question…..Timbers Broadcasting just disappeared as well as EVERY other MLS teams once AppleTV took over exclusive broadcasting rights to every MLS game. A game went from TWO broadcasts being sent to their markets for every game, to ONE what we call international show that is a straight generic neutral broadcast. Different announcers/directors/producers all the time each week. Like I said above….no local vibe to a show or coverage. FOX will broadcast some of the huge matchups, but they are simple using the AppleTV broadcast/feed.

Now if that happens to the NBA, You would see a completely different vibe and feel to shows around the league.

SideNote: I’d most likely have to change careers unfortunately. Losing HALF of what I make in a year would be a game changer for @THE HCP !
 
If this goes the way of MLS and is picked up by Apple or Prime, there will be NO local or visit broadcasts anymore. They will be neutral shows with different commentators coming in and out. Those who watch the Timbers know what I mean. Good or bad.

Tough watching the Timbers score a goal and they don’t show Timber Joey and the log….the national directors and producers just don’t know the importance or history of that. You won’t get replays to see questionable calls on your beloved Blazers that’s for sure. Some like that type of show though. And the worst teams will get the bottom of the barrel crews unfortunately.

Should be interesting.
I've been watching opposing or national streams since Mike and Mike were shit-canned anyway.

I'd prefer to bring them or somebody who actually cares about the team back, but if not the national feed is better than Calabro IMO. He's not a Blazer fan, just like the national guys aren't.

It would suck for local people to lose income though.

I'd prefer that a local station broadcast it and pay the local crew, as long as we get somebody local to do the commentary.
 
Yeah, so there won’t be an opposing team feed if that happens. Simply one generic broadcast. I work those Timbers games for Apple, and it’s just strange.
 
Yeah, so there won’t be an opposing team feed if that happens. Simply one generic broadcast. I work those Timbers games for Apple, and it’s just strange.
Gotcha. Yeah I just look for anything that doesn't have Calabro.

I'd much prefer a more local crew with a more local commentator. Paid by a local station.

What does it cost to do a broadcast? How many people are paid? Average salary? Plus equipment and fees?

Seems like it would be worth doing to get that many eyes on local ads...
 
Gotcha. Yeah I just look for anything that doesn't have Calabro.

I'd much prefer a more local crew with a more local commentator. Paid by a local station.

What does it cost to do a broadcast? How many people are paid? Average salary? Plus equipment and fees?

Seems like it would be worth doing to get that many eyes on local ads...
Truck/Studio is around $25,000 each show…..plus crew rates and satellite time, you are looking at $35-$40,000 a game.
I’m not expert on that side of things though.
People are paid by their position. Everybody gets a certain rate for 10 hours. You would get more working an NBA game in LA, than you would a gymnastics event in Corvallis for example though.

Local crewing companies basically charge $850 to have a body there. So whatever is left over from that crew members rate they pocket and that’s how they operate.

Like I said the above truck numbers are total estimates.
 
Truck/Studio is around $25,000 each show…..plus crew rates and satellite time, you are looking at $35-$40,000 a game.
I’m not expert on that side of things though.
People are paid by their position. Everybody gets a certain rate for 10 hours. You would get more working an NBA game in LA, than you would a gymnastics event in Corvallis for example though.

Local crewing companies basically charge $850 to have a body there. So whatever is left over from that crew members rate they pocket and that’s how they operate.

Like I said the above truck numbers are total estimates.

I'm curious...when you're traveling to various venues, are all control trucks and studio layouts and formats pretty much the same, or is there a significant learning curve for each?
 
I'm curious...when you're traveling to various venues, are all control trucks and studio layouts and formats pretty much the same, or is there a significant learning curve for each?

Some of the trailers have different floorplans which make it difficult for HCP to deliver coffee and donuts to everyone.
 
Truck/Studio is around $25,000 each show…..plus crew rates and satellite time, you are looking at $35-$40,000 a game.
I’m not expert on that side of things though.
People are paid by their position. Everybody gets a certain rate for 10 hours. You would get more working an NBA game in LA, than you would a gymnastics event in Corvallis for example though.

Local crewing companies basically charge $850 to have a body there. So whatever is left over from that crew members rate they pocket and that’s how they operate.

Like I said the above truck numbers are total estimates.
Typical price for a 30 second ad is $5-$100 per thousand views from what I'm seeing online.

Do you by chance know how many minutes of commercials there are in a typical Blazer game?
 
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