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Apple wants to be a sports brand, and the NFL is happy to help for a price. The NFL that Apple Music has replaced Pepsi to become the new partner for the Super Bowl Halftime Show, beginning with Super Bowl LVII, which will be played on Sunday, February 12, 2023. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. But reportedly the NFL .
The news is another example of a New Hollywood streaming business expanding into the lucrative live sports market. Apple has already made deals to broadcast Major League Baseball and Major League
Soccer games on Apple TV Plus, and New Hollywood rival Amazon
broadcasts the NFL's Thursday Night Football. Why? Because . Apple is also reportedly in talks with the NFL for the rights to a package of Sunday football games. Consider the cost of being a Super Bowl Halftime Show to be a down payment for what Apple really wants: broadcastingNFL games.
Apple has good motivation to compete with Amazon, which became the first streaming service to hold exclusive rights to a package of NFL games, in a deal to broadcast Thursday Night Football (at an annual cost of $1 billion to Amazon). The Thursday Night Football broadcasts kicked off September 15, and so far the results for Amazon look great. When the numbers were tallied up by Nielsen and reported September 22, , exceeding the 12.5 million viewership that Amazon had promised to advertisers. The game was the most-watched program of the night. No. 2 was CBS’ Young Sheldon, with 3.5 million viewers. Amazon estimated that viewership numbers topped 15.3 million. The additional numbers from Amazon's tracking comes from the company's ability to measure viewing across connected TVs, their apps and who might be watching a separate feed on Twitch. By any measure, the results are especially impressive when you consider that to watch the game, fans needed to get an Amazon Prime subscription, which costs $139 annually – thus reducing the potential pool of viewers.
Amazon reported big numbers in one other crucial area: Prime sign-ups. , the September 15 broadcast drew a record number of Prime sign-ups for a year-hour period – bigger than Prime Day or other big shopping days such as Black Friday and Cyber Monday. This is important because Prime is a cash cow. Amazon Prime sales generated an estimated $30 billion in revenue in 2021. Each Prime member spends about $1,400 per year, while the non-Prime subscribers spends $600.
If Apple successfully expands its reach into live sports, streaming sports programming will only get more competitive. Viewers can already stream sports content via options such as MLB TV, NFL Game Pass, ESPN+, and Hulu + Live TV. Apple will rely on streaming as an entrée to Apple Music and Apple TV+. But Amazon Prime will scratch and claw for more programming the same way it attracts viewers for all its streaming content: Amazon Prime. No one else can bundle together a sports viewing package with all the benefits that come with Prime, ranging from free shipping for Amazon purchases to savings at Whole Foods.
Sports streaming will become more personalized and dynamic as well. Amazon Prime already offers different formats for TNF, including Prime Vision with Next Gen Stats such as Passing Score, a first-of-its-kind artificial intelligence tool that combine seven machine learning models, including a new model to predict the value of a pass before the ball is thrown, to evaluate quarterback passing performance. To answer Amazon, Apple will need to offer an innovative alternative, assuming Apple lands a programming deal with the NFL beyond the Super Bowl halftime show.
But sports streaming will become more expensive for fans as New Hollywood extends its reach. Live sports is already becoming fragmented like entertainment has become since the streaming wars started. And we know how that will play out for sports fans: watching sports will mean subscribing to multiple streaming platforms.
As for the Super Bowl Halftime Show:
Bottom line: this is another example of New Hollywood streaming companies like Apple delving into live sports. The Super Bowl halftime show will continue to feature safe artists befitting its global scope, but Apple Music and the NFL might lean into younger, international names. The event will become a branding opportunity that will rely on Apple’s powerful content distribution machine, to the benefit of Apple Music.