the jets, pates, bengals and ravens are all good teams. we might see them all at 1-1 in a few hours. the ravens are still a good team. they did not lose to a bad team today
good point. meantime, tennessee shot themselves in the foot. that no flag really killed their momentum.
yall missed nothing, they needed 20 and threw for 6. clock ran out. my cbs better not be lying, i better have the jets game. on to the game thread.
I always find it funny how the stations cite "contractual obligations" in order to leave the game during crunch time. While it's true that there are contractual obligations to show the local game, there is no such obligation to show three minutes of ads before showing the local game, which is what they do.
I don't think that is correct. Companies paid good money to have their commercials air at 4:10-4:15 or whatever the exact time was that we're talking about here. If CBS in New York stayed with the Pitt-Tenn game to the end, then there would have been two or three commercials that would have never aired in New York.
I don't think ads before the game are considered more desirable than ads during the game. As for ad spots sold, it's up to the station to decide how many ad spots they want to sell. The point is that it's misleading. What they say implies that the NFL requires them to not show you the end of the game. That's false. If they wanted to, they could show up until kickoff of the local game. CBS could have shown the end of the Steelers game. They know fans get upset about it, so they try to pretend that it's someone else's fault.