Baseball has been abuzz over the purported size of the Los Angeles Dodgers TV deal. Rumors have it at the $6 billion to $7 billion range over 20 years - amounting to $300 million or more per year to the team. To put this in perspective, the highest payrolls in baseball are a bit above half that, and most are 1/3 or less.
What is interesting is that the economics of the setup make no sense whatsoever.
Let's say the Dodgers get 100,000 viewers per game. At $2 million per game or so, this works out to a CPM of $20,000. To put this in perspective, the Super Bowl has a CPM which peaked at $31.
However, this article sheds light onto what is going on: it has nothing to do with economics but everything to do with a consumer scam:
http://www.videonuze.com/article/wil...ers-mega-deal-
Essentially the TV deal is a vehicle by which the various cable companies expect to be able to fleece cable subscribers. The Dodgers, as it turns out, averaged 67000 viewers a game - and the largest baseball team audience (Yankees) is a bit over 300,000 viewers a game. However, if the Dodgers can get their games into the basic cable TV subscriber package, the cost of the contract can then be charged to each and every subscriber.
Approximately 99% of the LA cable subscriber market does not watch Dodgers games.
How's that for a scam, paying for what you don't watch?
That's what our economy appears to be about these days.
What is interesting is that the economics of the setup make no sense whatsoever.
Let's say the Dodgers get 100,000 viewers per game. At $2 million per game or so, this works out to a CPM of $20,000. To put this in perspective, the Super Bowl has a CPM which peaked at $31.
However, this article sheds light onto what is going on: it has nothing to do with economics but everything to do with a consumer scam:
http://www.videonuze.com/article/wil...ers-mega-deal-
Essentially the TV deal is a vehicle by which the various cable companies expect to be able to fleece cable subscribers. The Dodgers, as it turns out, averaged 67000 viewers a game - and the largest baseball team audience (Yankees) is a bit over 300,000 viewers a game. However, if the Dodgers can get their games into the basic cable TV subscriber package, the cost of the contract can then be charged to each and every subscriber.
Approximately 99% of the LA cable subscriber market does not watch Dodgers games.
How's that for a scam, paying for what you don't watch?
That's what our economy appears to be about these days.
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