Jonas Knox
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The Clippers have been, you know, Kawhi's had a really good bounce back year, but the Clippers, you never know, especially in the postseason.
And it just feels, you know, the Sixers are always banged up seemingly.
There's always a problem there with Joel Embiid or whoever, you know, is dealing with whatever they're dealing with.
I look at it and I go, it would be nice, but the seven-game format kind of kills the suspense and the opportunity for some of these lower seeds to make a run at this thing.
Next one, and I know we're up against it, but the next one, we just had the conversation where we brought up the antitrust laws protecting the National Football League.
viewership and how viewers are getting bludgeoned in terms of viewership how you're able to watch it everything is paid for but it's an outdated law that represents what the NFL has been negotiating now that you have streaming streaming was not a thing when this law was made and so to
To look at where the NFL is now and how many platforms out there they're using to expand their reach, to expand their distribution, and it's streaming.
Well, Amazon Prime owns the rights to the play-in.
If you do not have Amazon Prime...
You cannot view the play-in NBA playoff games.
Are the NBA play-in playoff games important enough for you to actually get a prime subscription?
Now, you may cancel after.
I don't know what the rules are.
I'm sure they're aware of that.
So they're going to find a way where they're going to still get their pound out of you before you get out of there with your cancellation after seeing the games.
But doesn't this sound interesting that you cannot find on cable, Dish, any other regular television station
you cannot watch the game.
It's almost as if the question is, are these play-in games worth the number of boxes you're going to have to break down from Amazon?