Moderator: Community Team
Symmetry wrote:Now, I've personally never found it all that interesting, but I was recently fascinated by a study that an average televised game features only about 11 minutes of actual playing time over the course of three hours. The ads take up more time.
What's the appeal? Surely rugby has the same thrills without the non-stop commercial breaks begging fans and players to stop beating up women and drink more poor quality beer.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
pancakemix wrote:Quirk, you are a bastard. That is all.
saxitoxin wrote:Commercial breaks don't matter; the game isn't organized around commercial breaks. There just happens to a be a lot of times when there is nothing happening and they use that time to insert commercials.
American football is about more than the game, it's about the pageantry and spectacle; bands, cheerleaders, dancers, twirlers, fireworks, blah blah. I was at an English rugby match once and there was no pageantry. At halftime they had a couple drunk retards stumble onto the pitch and try to kick a ball through the uprights. Then the game restarted - the stupid game with no rules and no strategy, just a bunch of guys who only use steroids in their thighs and nowhere else running around.
saxitoxin wrote:Commercial breaks don't matter; the game isn't organized around commercial breaks. There just happens to a be a lot of times when there is nothing happening and they use that time to insert commercials.
tzor wrote:As an American I have to say that ... er ... Football in the United States (Can't really comment on Canada and their extra 20 yards) is terribly boring. Even when I like watching the game. A lot of oversized and overweight players really made a lot of the options more ... well boring. And a lot of the Quarterbacks suck these days, especially on the teams I love to follow.
tzor wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Commercial breaks don't matter; the game isn't organized around commercial breaks. There just happens to a be a lot of times when there is nothing happening and they use that time to insert commercials.
No, that's not true. American Football was the first sport to surrender completely to commercial breaks (the second, ironically is the National Hockey League, but they managed to cover that up in recent years by having people with shovels "dry scrape" the ice while the commercial breaks happen). There is a referee whose only job is to indicate that commercials are being run. Game play cannot resume unless he gives his approval. Originally this was signaled through his cap.
tzor wrote:"Time" is a relative dimension in American Football and there is really very little time when NOTHING is going on.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
mrswdk wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Commercial breaks don't matter; the game isn't organized around commercial breaks. There just happens to a be a lot of times when there is nothing happening and they use that time to insert commercials.
American football is about more than the game, it's about the pageantry and spectacle; bands, cheerleaders, dancers, twirlers, fireworks, blah blah. I was at an English rugby match once and there was no pageantry. At halftime they had a couple drunk retards stumble onto the pitch and try to kick a ball through the uprights. Then the game restarted - the stupid game with no rules and no strategy, just a bunch of guys who only use steroids in their thighs and nowhere else running around.
I too get frustrated when I go to sports stadiums and all anyone there wants to do is watch people play sports.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Yes, it is true.
American football (NFL): The National Football League requires twenty commercial breaks per game, with ten in each half. (Exceptions to this are overtime periods, which have none.) These breaks run either a minute, or two minutes in length. Of the ten commercial breaks per half, two are mandatory: at the end of the first or third quarter, and at the two-minute warning for the end of the half. The remaining eight breaks are optional. The timeouts can be applied after field goal tries, conversion attempts for both one and two points following touchdowns, changes in possession either by punts or turnovers, and kickoffs (except for the ones that start each half, or are within the last five minutes). The breaks are also called during stoppages due to injury, instant replay challenges, when either of the participating teams uses one of its set of timeouts, and if the network needs to catch up on its commercial advertisement schedule. The arrangement for college football contests is the same, except for the absence of the two-minute warning.
tzor wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Yes, it is true.
He said, she said ... Wikipedia says ...American football (NFL): The National Football League requires twenty commercial breaks per game, with ten in each half. (Exceptions to this are overtime periods, which have none.) These breaks run either a minute, or two minutes in length. Of the ten commercial breaks per half, two are mandatory: at the end of the first or third quarter, and at the two-minute warning for the end of the half. The remaining eight breaks are optional. The timeouts can be applied after field goal tries, conversion attempts for both one and two points following touchdowns, changes in possession either by punts or turnovers, and kickoffs (except for the ones that start each half, or are within the last five minutes). The breaks are also called during stoppages due to injury, instant replay challenges, when either of the participating teams uses one of its set of timeouts, and if the network needs to catch up on its commercial advertisement schedule. The arrangement for college football contests is the same, except for the absence of the two-minute warning.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:There just happens to a be a lot of times when there is nothing happening and they use that time to insert commercials.
According to a Wall Street Journal study of four recent broadcasts, and similar estimates by researchers, the average amount of time the ball is in play on the field during an NFL game is about 11 minutes.
In other words, if you tally up everything that happens between the time the ball is snapped and the play is whistled dead by the officials, there's barely enough time to prepare a hard-boiled egg. In fact, the average telecast devotes 56% more time to showing replays.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB100014240 ... 2055561406
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
mrswdk wrote:Why would I go to Milan when I live in LONDON.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:IOW let's say, in a game, teams use three of their six time-outs in a half,
Article 1 The Referee shall suspend play while the ball is dead and declare a charged team timeout upon the request for a timeout by the head coach or any player to any official.
Item 1: Three Timeouts Allowed A team is allowed three charged team timeouts during each half.
Item 2: Length of Timeouts. Charged team timeouts shall be two minutes in length, unless the timeout is not used by television for a commercial break. Timeouts shall be 30 seconds in length when the designated number of television commercials have been exhausted in a quarter, if it is a second charged team timeout in the same dead-ball period, or when the Referee so indicates.
Talapus wrote:I'm far more pissed that mandy and his thought process were right from the get go....damn you mandy.
DoomYoshi wrote:f*ck off, saxitoxin. Next time you go to a game and you wonder why the players are just milling about the field and nothing is going on; over and over and over again you will quickly realize how many commercial breaks are totally unwarranted. I can read and practice the entire Kama Sutra in the amount of wasted time on Sundays.
Users browsing this forum: ConfederateSS