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Jason Lee pitches the Cyclism for OLN

A Twitter Thread on Eurosport, NBCSN, and Cycling TV Coverage

Posted on 27 September 201729 June 2021 by cosmo

This calls for a [THREAD] /1 https://t.co/C4kI3mva5v

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Eurosport is the best cycling broadcaster in any language I speak, in part because they’ve been doing it forever: https://t.co/qB963kpMib /2

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

While it may *feel* like NBCSN’s been around forever, it’s only existed since 2012. And even then, almost exclusively ASO events. /3

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

There’s a reason for this: /4 (and maybe a mini-Inception thread here? IDK let’s see how it goes)

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017


A network of firearms infomercials and the occasional XC ski race called Outdoor Life Network got US TdF TV rights back in 1999. /5

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

To say the deal went well for them initially is an understatement. (photo from @velonews) /6 pic.twitter.com/v5IJLN3Fim

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Outdoor life became OLN, made 344 hours TdF/Lance-related coverage in ‘04 & spent $20mm pitching it. https://t.co/ntbf09tuRR /7

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Here’s a commercial (w/Jason Lee of “Mallrats” fame) that really conveyed the flavor of the whole thing https://t.co/mUOZKNkRHW /8

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

…aaaand as you might expect ratings immediately shat the bed when Lance left in ‘06 https://t.co/RNJuL6qdeu /9

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Turns out cult of personality is a poor introduction to a complex and byzantine sport. Who knew? /10

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Actually, Eurosport did. @inrng has a good summation Eurosport in that era—but I’m getting ahead of myself. https://t.co/GcvAVNWUd9 /11 pic.twitter.com/pmP0gi8hzV

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

I shouldn’t be too hard on OLN—they had classics & daily live GTs. That I didn’t fail out of #college watching it all was remarkable. /12

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

There was a even a @BobkeRoll show that recapped pro cycling events SportsCenter-style, but I’ve never been able to find it. /13

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

But the bulk of their time & cash always kept after the #TdF & chasing that Lance dragon. /14

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

ANYWAY, OLN rebranded as Versus, briefly bought NHL rights to compete w/ESPN, alienating cyclists even further: https://t.co/T4yQUpbR0P /15

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

When Comcast (which already owned Versus) bought NBC, Versus became NBCSN as you know it now. /16

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Despite the changes—and like, holy crap, things have changed—the NBCSN product has the look & feel of Lance-years OLN. /17

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

This is (IMHO) largely because it’s the same faces and the same people in charge. No need to name names. /18

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Given the cozy relationship with Lance, the collapse in ratings post-Lance, the everything post-Oprah, things would change. You’d think. /19

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

As I have been known to quip, this is why I write code for a living. /20

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Back to Eurosport, tho—throughout all this, they’d been doing pretty much the same steady, inexpensive, but serviceable work. /21

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

No Jason Lee, no Lance Chronicles—just good rotation who can talk for 3hrs straight over a not-always-exciting (or even visible) sport. /22 pic.twitter.com/24HaDhlns3

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

In terms of cost/quality, it’s literally 2 dudes in a room. But as @rouleur notes, 2 dudes w/DS’s cell phones. https://t.co/ypNIrl7OlY /23 pic.twitter.com/H3hMNWC9Fg

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

ES is also notable in that despite cycling’s fragmentation into a zillion idiot fiefdoms, its the one place to see every single event. /24

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

I honestly don’t even know who the US Giro broadcaster is anymore. Fubo? BeIN? The Ghost of Universal Sports? /25

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

This constant presence gives ES institutional knowledge that exists nowhere else. They know last year’s race because they were there /25

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

And fans know they can tune into ES next year because the network was there this time around. /26

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

And this is what’s cool about ES—even w/fat(ter) cash from an acquisition, they’ve stuck to bread/butterhttps://t.co/cMabA5z6TF /27

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Rather than make a Cyclysm™, they’ve sent their commentators to races, and put out reporters to get half-a-dozen interviews post-stage. /28

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

I wouldn’t call it “cheap” exactly, but just crew, talent, and a stylish table. And it makes a huge difference. https://t.co/kUAPhT9JMc /29

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

They’ve also tried new stuff—Lemond on Tour, on-the-bike previews from J-A Flecha, #HTRWW (web only, but still) /30

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

It’s content that aimed at someone who might want to watch cycling, not at appeasing the executives that had to pay for it. /31

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Even if VPN+ES weren’t the easiest way to watch cycling in US, @BriSmithy picking apart wind direction by KM would make me seek it out. /31

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

How much of Eurosport’s cycling bump came from viewers outside the EBU? Not sure. No data to even hazard a guess. /33

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

But it’s pretty clear that theirs is a model that works (even if, as that @inrng article notes, it works for fans better than sponsors) /34

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

And if you’re not at least emulating it, you can’t rely on invisible lines of broadcast rights to protect you from losing viewers to it. /35

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

Whether this matters to NBC—whose business model seems to be setting gigantic sacks of money on fire—is unclear https://t.co/gmmiqqaWB6 /36

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

But at the end of the day, someone has to pay. And @Eurosport seems to be proving when you do it right, the fans are more than willing /FIN

— Cyclocosm.com (@Cyclocosm) September 27, 2017

thoughts on “A Twitter Thread on Eurosport, NBCSN, and Cycling TV Coverage”

  1. SofaCyclist says:
    28 September 2017 at 4:40 am

    This is bang tidy. Thanks, Cosmo.

    Reply

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About the Author

a headshot of Cosmo Catalano

Best known for his How The Race Was Won® video series, Cosmo Catalano began blogging about pro cycling from a bike shop in 2005. Between then and now, he's designed cycling infographics, built cycling web apps, and supplied cycling content to print and broadcast media, all in the name of backing up his near-endless criticism with proof that it can be done better. He complains about cycling on Twitter at @Cyclocosm.

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