Carr Has FCC Looking at Migration of Sports Programming from Free TV to Streaming Platforms

'… Watching your favorite team play isn’t as easy these days. Many games are still on broadcast, but an increasing number are on a range of different online platforms,” Carr says.

Carr Has FCC Looking at Migration of Sports Programming from Free TV to Streaming Platforms
💡
■ Carr Expects a Battle with a TV Network Will Land in Court ■ NTIA’s Roth Critical of U.S. Allies over Speech Codes ■ NSR Analyst Harlalka: ‘A Good Move by Charter’ to Hire Nick Jeffrey ■ Carr Meets with DIRECTV CEO to Discuss Nexstar-TEGNA Deal ■ TV Vet Emily Barr Fears Localism Suffers after Nexstar-TEGNA ■ DigitalBridge Doesn’t Break Out WOW! Q4 Numbers ■ Scripps’ Retrans Revenue Fell 1.6% in Q4 2025 ■ ImOn Rolling out Fiber Broadband in Wisconsin, Minnesota ■ Virginia Broadband Leader Praises Carr FCC on Pole Decision

Sports: The FCC’s Media Bureau is seeking comment on how live sports, including NFL games, are distributed as games move across more streaming services and platforms, a shift the bureau said can make events harder to find and more expensive for viewers. “… Watching your favorite team play isn’t as easy these days. Many games are still on broadcast, but an increasing number are on a range of different online platforms,” FCC Chairman Brendan Carr said on his X feed Wednesday. “We want to understand the marketplace today, the experience of consumers, and how the changes impact the ability of broadcast TV stations to continue delivering local news, information, and other programming.” NFL games, once the near-exclusive home of broadcast TV, have migrated beyond cable and satellite to streamers Amazon Prime Video, Peacock, Netflix, and YouTube. Typically, streamed games are available on free TV just in the home markets of the teams on the field. (More after paywall)

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell

Member discussion

Popular Tags