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The Death of the Blackout Rule, and Why the NFL Fights On

The FCC ruled 5-0 against the NFL, showing that their stranglehold over government and fans could be coming to an end.

Dave Zirin

October 1, 2014

(REUTERS/Mike Segar)

The NFL is on quite the losing streak, reeling from one public relations disaster to the next. Yesterday it was officially announced that the NFL lost again, taking a 5-0 drubbing from the Federal Communications Commission in a unanimous vote to end its repugnant local television “blackout rule.” Existing since 1976, the rule allowed the NFL to make sure that games would not be televised in local markets if the stadiums were not almost entirely sold out 72 hours prior to the broadcast. This may have made at least a logical business sense in the 1970s, when a team’s solvency lived and died on the basis of home attendance. That was also a time when 50 percent of all games were eligible for blackout. But given that we are living in an era when 99 percent of games sell out, the rule’s existence made about as much sense as giving away free packs of unfiltered Lucky Strikes with every ticket…. or denying that playing in the NFL can be linked to debilitating head injuries

In addition, given the fact that owners make billions on television deals, luxury boxes, personalized seat licenses, and public subsidies, the idea that the NFL should still be in a position to decide whether their games get aired is the height of corporate arrogance. It is made even worse, of course, by the fact that unlike in 1976, we the people have paid our own tax dollars toward every single NFL stadium, whether we are fans or not. We also pay exorbitant cable television fees for “free” channels, money that flows towards the NFL coffers. This is a league built on a foundation of public welfare, yet they still want to decide who amongst the public gets to watch. Stunningly, the NFL may be fighting the FCC ruling. Instead of bowing away gracefully and recognizing, as Keith Olbermann, artfully explained, just how achingly anachronistic the ruling is, they could be girding up to figure out someway to keep the blackout rule in place.

I spoke to Brian Frederick of the Sports Fan Coalition (full disclosure, I have a seat on the SFC board) who has written an e-book called Upset about the fan-based push against the NFL’s lobbyists that made today a reality. I asked him, if the rule is so irrelevant to the NFL’s bottom line, why exactly they have fought so hard to keep it. He said, “The NFL spent has decades fighting to receive subsidies from the government – from approval of the AFL/NFL merger to its nonprofit status to its precious antitrust exemption for negotiating broadcast contracts. The NFL fears that if it loses this subsidy, all these other subsidies would be subject to greater scrutiny, as they should be. The NFL is simply trying to protect its spoils and quash a rebellion from fed-up fans."

As for the FCC, they have defended the blackout rule in every instance since the inauguration of the rule. What has changed? The current mood about the NFL cannot be ignored when assessing why this decision was made. As observed in Forbes, “… the FCC could have issued its ruling much in advance of today. Thus, there perhaps exists an argument that the current climate surrounding the NFL–from the Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson suspensions to the Redskins name debate and concussion litigation–finally motivated the FCC to pull the plug on its sports blackout rules.”

The NFL has been able to maintain a relationship of power and dominance over players, fans, and the viewing public for far too long. Their army of twenty-six full-time lobbyists has ensured that the government does not get in the way. Any puncture in their seemingly impenetrable armor, any humbling of their status, any ability to let some oxygen into their room should be seen as very welcome.

As Frederick said to me, "For the first time in modern history, an organized group of fans went up against the professional sports leagues and beat them in the public policy arena. The FCC's elimination of its blackout rule is the first step in extricating the government from the business of professional sports. The NFL and the other leagues should be on watch that when they abuse fans and the taxpaying public in the interests of profits, those fans now know how to play defense." It's bigger than blackouts and the fight has finally been joined.

Dave ZirinTwitterDave Zirin is the sports editor at The Nation. He is the author of 11 books on the politics of sports. He is also the coproducer and writer of the new documentary Behind the Shield: The Power and Politics of the NFL.


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