The NFL is increasing its presence on major streaming platforms while maintaining most games on broadcast TV, even as the Department of Justice probes its media rights practices alongside MLB’s.
A 1961 law helped the National Football League build its TV empire. Now streaming, lawsuits and lawmakers are challenging its ...
The Justice Department has begun an investigation into whether the NFL has violated anticompetitive practices with their television contracts that require consumers to pay subscription costs to watch ...
“What we’re essentially seeing play out here is a classic case of a monopolized industry using their power and control to ...
Last month arrived the news that the Department of Justice is examining the NFL and MLB – and one might presume other sports ...
To address that problem, both the NAB and others have suggested that the antitrust exemption given to the NFL and other major ...
(ABC) — The Justice Department has opened an inquiry into whether the National Football League violated anticompetitive practices in its TV deals and then required customers to pay too much in ...
I'm Attorney General James Uthmeyer. Next week, the NFL's annual league meeting begins in Phoenix, Arizona, and the NFL draft is only *** month away. Ahead of the annual meeting, my office is sending ...
Last week, reports revealed that in the NFL’s bid to sell a five-game streaming package for the 2026 NFL season, Netflix, FOX ...
The NFL isn't the only league that enjoys an antitrust exemption for its broadcasting rights.
The FCC is seeking public comment on sports streaming shifts as a 1961 law that shields the NFL from antitrust rules faces new scrutiny over paywalls.
This originally appeared in Friday’s edition of The A Block, Awful Announcing’s daily newsletter with the latest sports media news, commentary, and analysis. Sign up here and be the first to know ...
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