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heck, eventually the press boxes will be turned into luxury suites as teams and leagues monetize their own content and shut out independent media.
heck, eventually the press boxes will be turned into luxury suites as teams and leagues monetize their own content and shut out independent media.
Already happening in NASCAR, as some tracks have replaced largely empty media boxes with paying customers.
Just off the top of my head, in the 80s and 90s, at "regular" football games Michigan and Michigan State (ie, non big rivalry) you'd have probably five people from each Detroit paper, five each from each "hometown" paper (Ann Arbor and Lansing), then one or two each from Flint, Saginaw, Midland, Battle Creek, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Grand Rapids, Traverse City plus a couple dozen small dailies sending one person each. That adds up to probably about 75 people, swelling over 100 for big games. I'd be shocked if that entire assemblage sends 15 today.Many years ago, Michigan State added skyboxes you Spartan Stadium by cutting the press box by about half
That's already been done. Media used to get court side seats at NBA and college basketball games; except for a handful of national superstars, everybody's been kicked upstairs into rafter seats.
Plus with the overall decimation of sports staffs everywhere, the total media numbers at games are way, way, way down.