If you want some long-term relationship advice, I offer you this: Find someone who loves you as much as news outlets love end-of-the-year content.
The New Yorker did a piece 11 years ago on why our brains love lists, and it holds up today. Among other reasons: It spatially organizes information and promises a story thatâs finite.
The NFL story will, of course, continue in 2025 and beyond, but in the space below, we offer eight NFL media stories that captured our interest in 2024.
1. Tom Brady begins his NFL broadcasting journey
Fox has the broadcast rights to the Super Bowl this year, which means Brady will call the leagueâs most important game in his rookie season as a TV analyst. He is 15 games into a 10-year, $375 million deal with Fox, a journey that has prompted plenty of commentary on his performance, including multiple pieces from this author.
Bradyâs broadcasting work has improved during the season â not to the point of being an elite TV analyst, but the progress is noticeable. Still, the long-term prediction here is that Bradyâs juggling act as Las Vegas Raiders owner and TV analyst, and the restrictions that come with that, feels unsustainable for Fox and Brady.
2. Netflix lands an NFL package of games
Netflix and the NFL announced in May a three-season deal for Christmas Day games through 2026. That deal becomes even more magnified given Netflix securing the exclusive broadcast rights in the United States for the 2027 and 2031 editions of the Womenâs World Cup. These are significant signals to the marketplace (along with its WWE rights deal, given its live element) that Netflix has shifted from being interested in sports-adjacent properties to being a legitimate sports rights holder.
The streaming giant aired the Kansas City ChiefsâPittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore RavensâHouston Texans games on Christmas Day and largely succeeded in avoiding a glitch-filled rerun of its Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight event.
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‘Watch what Netflix does’: Unwrapping the NFL’s Christmas Day experiment
3. Peacock airs a regular-season game from SĂŁo Paulo
The Philadelphia EaglesâGreen Bay Packers game on Sept. 6 was the NFLâs first-ever regular-season game in South America and aired exclusively on Peacock, the streaming networkâs third exclusive NFL game following the Buffalo BillsâLos Angeles Chargers regular-season game in December 2023 and the Miami Dolphins-Chiefs AFC wild-card playoff game last January.
The result was a significant viewership win for the league and the streamer. Peacock delivered 14.2 million viewers for Eagles-Packers, well above the 7.3 million for Bills-Chargers and Peacockâs second-best NFL streaming audience ever only behind the Chiefs-Dolphins game (23 million viewers). The numbers include figures from the over-the-air markets in which the games ran.
The NFL will play eight international games in 2025, including in Madrid, as Spain will be the sixth country to host an NFL regular-season game. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and Chiefs owner Clark Hunt have talked openly about playing 16 games overseas annually in the near term, per this report from SBJâs Ben Fischer. Itâs clear we will soon see a Sunday morning window with a new international media-rights package.
4. Super Bowl LVIII sets TV ratings record
We live in an apples-to-pomegranates world when it comes to comparing the sports viewership of today versus yesteryear, due to factors including new out-of-home viewership data and cord-cutters and cord-nevers. Using todayâs metrics, via Nielsen and Adobe Analytics, the Chiefsâ 25-22 overtime victory over the San Francisco 49ers in Februaryâs Super Bowl averaged 123.7 million viewers across television and streaming platforms. That makes it the most-viewed program in history, shattering the previous mark of 115.1 million for Kansas Cityâs last-minute win over Philadelphia in the previous Super Bowl.
5. The rise of alt-broadcasts
The alternate broadcasts of NFL games launched into a new stratosphere in 2024 with a âSimpsonsâ animated alt-cast of âMonday Night Footballâ airing on ESPN+ and Disney+, and NBC Sports making its NFL alternate broadcast debut on Peacock with last weekâs Texans-Chiefs game. It follows alt-broadcasts on Nickelodeon and ESPNâs now long-standing Manning Brothers broadcasts and one using âToy Story.â
6. The âNew Heightsâ podcast blows up
The popular podcast â hosted by brothers Jason Kelce, the Eaglesâ center from 2011-2023, and Travis Kelce, the current Chiefs tight end â inked a deal with Amazonâs podcast network, Wondery, in 2024 to be the programâs new home.
The show has found itself on measurement lists of the biggest podcasts in the United States and has nearly 2.5 million subscribers on YouTube. One of the interesting notes in the deal is Wonderyâs plans to translate the podcast to different languages to increase its global audience, including in NFL-strong markets such as the United Kingdom and Mexico. Thatâs a blank space for NFL fans.
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7. New broadcast rules for increased access
It was not an accident that you saw more in-game interviews during NFL games this season. Last May, the NFL broadcasting department outlined access changes for the NFLâs television partners after a review between the league and its media rights holders. The shared goal? To enhance the game content that we see as NFL viewers. The new rules included in-game coach interviews for all games, pregame player interviews for all games, network pregame locker room coverage, preseason player interviews, and coachesâ booth network cameras. Look for it to continue.
8. NFL ordered to pay $4.7 billion in âSunday Ticketâ antitrust trial ⊠only to see it overturned
In August, the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles overturned a $4.7 billion verdict against the NFL for colluding to raise prices for its âNFL Sunday Ticketâ television package. The judge disqualified expert testimony used by the jury to determine damages. (The juryâs verdict had threatened to upend the leagueâs strategy of selling exclusive television packages to broadcasters.) Next up: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Per Sporticoâs legal writer and sports law professor, Michael McMann, a decision is likely many months, if not longer, away.
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Imagining NFL on TV in the year 2030: Tom Brady out, Travis Kelce in?
(Top photo of a Netflix âChristmas Gamedayâ banner at Wednesdayâs Chiefs-Steelers game: Mark Alberti / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)