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antitrust

Donald Trump claims NFL fans are paying ‘$1,000 a game’ to watch football

May 10, 2026 @ 12:00pm
FootballNFL
Awful Announcing

The Department of Justice opened an investigation into the NFL last month over whether its media distribution practices violate antitrust law, essentially asking whether the league has been systematically pushing games behind streaming paywalls at the expense of fans who can’t afford them. It’s a legitimate and important question for America’s most-watched sport. That’s why…

Read moreDonald Trump claims NFL fans are paying ‘$1,000 a game’ to watch football

Can MLB evade antitrust push into sports broadcasting?

May 5, 2026 @ 8:30am
BaseballMLB
Awful Announcing

Last month arrived the news that the Department of Justice is examining the NFL and MLB – and one might presume other sports leagues – for potential antitrust violations in how their  teams collectively sell and structure media deals.  This is the next logical step in the percolating frustration of many sports fans over their…

Read moreCan MLB evade antitrust push into sports broadcasting?

DOJ reportedly met broadcast TV execs amid sports fragmentation probe

Apr 23, 2026 @ 4:05pm
FootballNFL
Awful Announcing

The Justice Department appears to be casting a wide net in its investigation into whether sports leagues are upholding the terms of a longstanding antitrust exemption as games increasingly migrate from broadcast television to streaming services. As part of that investigation, the Justice Department reportedly met with executives from local station groups at the National…

Read moreDOJ reportedly met broadcast TV execs amid sports fragmentation probe

NFL Pushes Back As FCC Scrutiny of Media Strategy Grows

Apr 22, 2026 @ 5:36pm
FootballNFL
Front Office Sports

The league begins to answer the growing questions coming from Washington.

Read moreNFL Pushes Back As FCC Scrutiny of Media Strategy Grows

NFL meets with FCC to address regulatory scrutiny

Apr 22, 2026 @ 11:30am
FootballNFL
Awful Announcing

As the NFL faces bombardment from seemingly every corner of Washington over its migration of more games to streaming, the league made its first reported response last Friday. According to a report by Joe Flint in The Wall Street Journal, the NFL met with senior officials at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on Friday to justify…

Read moreNFL meets with FCC to address regulatory scrutiny

Ohio lawmaker fed up with Cavaliers’ streaming service shuffle demands legal solution

Apr 21, 2026 @ 6:00pm
BasketballNBACleveland Cavaliers
Awful Announcing

Ohio state Sen. Bill DeMora has had enough. Watching the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs this week required navigating Amazon Prime Video for Game 1, Peacock for Game 2, and back to Amazon for Game 3. And DeMora, a Democrat from Columbus, is now looking into whether Ohio has any legal…

Read moreOhio lawmaker fed up with Cavaliers’ streaming service shuffle demands legal solution

MLB’s streaming rights are now under federal scrutiny

Apr 17, 2026 @ 5:00pm
BaseballMLB
Awful Announcing

Major League Baseball is the next stop in the federal government’s antitrust tour of professional sports. According to Bloomberg News, the Justice Department, which opened a formal investigation into the NFL last week over how the league licenses its broadcast rights, plans to extend that scrutiny to MLB and the other leagues operating under the…

Read moreMLB’s streaming rights are now under federal scrutiny

NFL Prepares To Defend Its Antitrust Exemption Amid Justice Department Probe

Apr 10, 2026 @ 7:36am
FootballNFLDallas CowboysNew England Patriots
OutKick

The NFL is not surprised the Justice Department is opening a probe into its broadcast negotiating practices that, when including streaming services, could be in violation of its antitrust exemption under the Sports Broadcasting Act.That's one reason sources familiar with the NFL's position on the matter say the league, which is expected to cooperate with the DOJ investigation, will have at least a two-pronged approach to keeping and perhaps even solidifying its exemption.Some background: The NFL faces a probe that will, in part, try to determine if the league is pricing out fans from watching their games by moving some of the product to pay streaming services such as Amazon Prime, Netflix and YouTube, which would violate conditions of the antitrust exemption, including protecting consumer access.Some NFL fans have begun to voice displeasure with the fact some games are simply not available over broadcast television because they've been moved to the streaming sites. The Sports Broadcast Act of 1961 only applies to broadcast television and courts have previously ruled it does not apply to cable, satellite or streaming services.So, the NFL has a huge problem.The potential consequences of this probe for the NFL include forfeiting the ability to sell games in a league-wide bundle to cable, satellite, and streaming platforms. The league makes an estimated $5-$6 billion per year selling those rights to ESPN, Amazon Prime, YouTube (red zone) and Netflix.The bigger potential consequence would be the NFL losing its entire antitrust exemption.That could force the NFL to completely change its business model because some teams might decide to negotiate their own TV deals, potentially creating a large disparity between big-market and small-market teams that currently doesn't exist under today's pooled TV rights.Competitive balance could be lost. Professional football could start to look more like Major League Baseball and the Dallas Cowboys might become the NFL version of the Los Angeles Dodgers.The NFL does not want that.So it is prepared to make its case to the DOJ or anyone else."It's funny, it's called the Sports Broadcasting Act, and I'm not sure there's a single content owner, league or otherwise, that hasn't done more to support broadcast television than what we do," NFL executive vice president of media distribution Hans Schroeder said last week in addressing the issue. "Again, every game is on broadcast in the home market, 88 percent [of games] is offered as a primary platform through broadcast. So we're very committed to broadcast. We have always been. I think we'll continue to be. We see it as a tremendous way to reach our fans. And our focus is on reach."But the NFL also wants to make the point that in moving to streaming it is serving other fans. New fans. And those fans, the league contends, are also consumers worthy of protection and service.  "We also have to be on the other platforms where we know our fans are spending their time," Schroeder said. "We look at it, and it's probably 8-to-10 years younger when we're on the streaming platform because we know it's a different type of audience."We are incredibly strong believers in the power of broadcast. We're also incredibly committed to making sure we're going to continue to evolve and be on the screens in places where our fans are spending their time. And we're happy to talk to whoever if they have questions about our model because we think our model speaks for itself about where our commitment is and how we distribute our games."That persuasion as to the value of streaming for segments of the population might be considered the NFL's carrot. The stick is league executive vice president and general counsel Ted Ullyot, who moved into the position last May, succeeding Jeff Pash.Ullyot, a former clerk to Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, a member of the George W. Bush White House staff and chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, will lead the league's team amid the DOJ probe. And this: Part of his argument might be that the 65-year-old Sports Broadcasting Act is outdated as cable, satellite and streaming didn't even exist when it was written. So, Ullyot might contend the Act should be rewritten or eliminated altogether.Ullyot's 2025 selection as NFL general counsel was made, in part, with owners recognizing they had antitrust issues. In 2024, a jury in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles ruled in favor of 2.45 million residential and business pay subscribers to Sunday Ticket on DirecTV in a class-action suit. The jury awarded $4.7 billion in damages.A federal judge overturned the verdict when it was discovered witnesses for the subscribers used flawed methodologies, but the initial verdict was a wake-up call for the NFL and others.Then, last year, the House Judiciary Committee requested briefings from the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB about whether antitrust exemptions should still be granted for coordinating their broadcast rights.Amid those court and legislative battles, some owners saw Ullyot as the man to have on their side."We’re going to be a target in antitrust, and in a lot of other ways," New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft told the Sports Business Journal last year. "We’re going to need legal representation that knows how to go on the offensive and play defense to protect where we’re going."

Read moreNFL Prepares To Defend Its Antitrust Exemption Amid Justice Department Probe

DOJ launches antitrust probe into NFL over TV deals

Apr 10, 2026 @ 6:15am
FootballNFL
Larry Brown Sports

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened an antitrust investigation into the NFL regarding its television and media rights agreements. The probe focuses on whether the league’s practices have become anticompetitive, potentially limiting consumer access to games and driving up costs amid the growing shift from traditional broadcasting to streaming services. Concerns have centered on … The post DOJ launches antitrust probe into NFL over TV deals appeared first on Larry Brown Sports.

Read moreDOJ launches antitrust probe into NFL over TV deals

NFL Faces DOJ Investigation With Media-Rights Battle Heating Up

Apr 9, 2026 @ 1:00pm
FootballNFL
Front Office Sports

Washington’s growing scrutiny of the league is deeply layered.

Read moreNFL Faces DOJ Investigation With Media-Rights Battle Heating Up

NFL Faces Justice Department Probe After Fans Express Frustration With Streaming Pivot: Report

Apr 9, 2026 @ 11:29am
FootballNFL
OutKick

The reported investigation comes as Trump administration officials and lawmakers have warned about revisiting the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961. The law allows the NFL to negotiate league-wide TV deals without violating U.S. antitrust rules, provided it meets certain conditions, including protecting customer access.

Read moreNFL Faces Justice Department Probe After Fans Express Frustration With Streaming Pivot: Report

Michael Jordan Breaks Silence on Why NASCAR Lawsuit Was “Personal”

Mar 27, 2026 @ 10:53pm
Motor SportsNASCAR23XI Racing
Total Pro Sports

In a recent interview with CBS’s Gayle King, Michael Jordan acknowledged that the NASCAR lawsuit was personal while 23XI continues to excel on the track

Read moreMichael Jordan Breaks Silence on Why NASCAR Lawsuit Was “Personal”

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