ESPN Releases Tool To Help You Find Where To Watch The Game. Thanks, Fractured Streaming!
from the bandaid-that-bullet-wound! dept
The fractured entertainment streaming environment we’re currently in continues to be a problem. Where’s that thing you want to watch? Well, not only could it be in one of a dozen places today, depending on what agreements have been worked out with content owners, but where that content can be streamed might also change in the future. So where you watched those old Battlestar Galactica episodes today might not have the content half way through you watching them. And despite some success in recent experiments run, this is also a huge problem when it comes to watching live sports.
With sports, the public not only has to contend with a convoluted and fractured streaming environment, but also with one-off games being streamed on platforms they otherwise don’t appear on as well as the additional factor of deals that teams and leagues have with regional sports networks. As an example, take the Chicago Cubs. Most of their games appear on the team’s dedicated RSN, the Marquee Network. But some of their games are also part of national broadcasts on ESPN or Fox. And a couple stream exclusively on Apple. Where will you find the game on any particular day? Get your pipe and funny hat out, because you have to cosplay as Sherlock Holmes to get your answer.
Now, we could all recognize this problem and come up with a better way to provide live sports streaming so that there is no confusion. But since we’re apparently not going to do that, ESPN has instead developed an app to treat the symptom rather than the underlying disease.
Launching today on ESPN.com and the various ESPN mobile and streaming device apps, the new guide offers various views, including one that lists all the sporting events in a single day and a search function, among other things. You can also flag favorite sports or teams to customize those views.
“At the core of Where to Watch is an event database created and managed by the ESPN Stats and Information Group (SIG), which aggregates ESPN and partner data feeds along with originally sourced information and programming details from more than 250 media sources, including television networks and streaming platforms,” ESPN’s press release says.
Now, as Ars Technica points out, none of this means you’ll actually be able to stream these games. You might not have the service on which it is being streamed. Or you might fall victim to the always-idiotic local blackout rules. In fact, the most useful part of this app might actually be in educating the public on how insane and complicated this all is. Perhaps that will result in a public conversation about why all of this fracturization exists in the first place.
But at least this guide will help people find where their games are being streamed. And, it seems, this is part of a broader effort by ESPN to get more rights to more games to eventually turn the Where to Watch app into a central location for most people to stream most sports content.
ESPN execs have said they hope to start offering more games streaming directly in the app, and if that app becomes the go-to spot thanks to this new guide, it might give the company more leverage with leagues to make that happen.
That could certainly be more convenient for viewers, though there are, of course, downsides to one company having too much influence and leverage in a sport.
See, this is why we cannot have nice things. The public cut the cord, preferring streaming largely over traditional cable television. So then the streaming platforms turned streaming into the same cable-style nightmare that caused the cord-cutting in the first place.
Filed Under: live sports, sports, sports streaming, streaming, where to watch
Companies: disney, espn


Comments on “ESPN Releases Tool To Help You Find Where To Watch The Game. Thanks, Fractured Streaming!”
(Some middle manager in a board room of Sports Execs) “If we split our offerings between 20 different services…. then we can collect licensing fees from 20 different services!” (Execs) “Brilliant! Give that man a 50 million dollar bonus to celebrate our earning 20x the profits!”
Sounds like the old Macy’s vs Gimbels conundrum, times n.
What I heard: “Exclusive listings of exclusive content” will soon be a vigorously protected IP category
Quit watching monday night football when they went to exclusive espn.
wipes a tear from his eye
With them not being OTA that means more crappy B rated movies are aired and that makes me happy.
Someone have to launch a streaming service only for live events, so ESPN will just have to update their website and apps to add this another service.
Then repeat every year until the end of Humanity.
Wait. Did we just come full circle back to TV Guide?
Re:
Ish… they tell you when there is a game, they can’t tell you where/if you can see it.
ESPN
I have never wanted ESPN. It is/was always bundled with something and I always had to pay for something I did not want. Hey, understand that most “men” want sports but I have found the actual programming is subpar and I can get my sports fix with the normally broadcasting. So, I have a bundle now that does not include ESPN and I am not paying the stupid amount they want for it.
Pirate broadcasts are free and available anywhere in the world.
Corey Doctorow is proven right again
Needing an app to show which streaming service might be showing your favorite pro sports ball game is peak enshittification, especially when you may need a VPN to work around local blackouts anyway.
I have already dropped streaming services for discontinuing a series and raising rates, and I dropped cable years ago because I was tired of paying for multiple ESPN channels I never watched
Re:
No, peak enshittification comes when streaming services start suing ESPN for republishing their schedules. (Cutting off their noses to spite their faces, since ESPN could only be sending them business, but the services see only another ‘licensing opportunity’.)
Re: Re:
I thought I had hit bottom but you’re right. It’s a horrible image, but come the day I’ll have layered VPNs and bit torrent
true to life fiction
Once upon a time, one of my favorite features of Roku was searching for content to see where it was streamed. If it was not on a service I already had, or if was only for rent, well, there were alternatives out there but at least I tried to go legit first.
And I lived happily ever after.
The End.
Fuck TV altogether. I have an over-the-air digital conversion box, made by NAXA, that gives me somewhere around 100 separate channel-feeds for free, now that I bought the box, over ten years ago. And, I don’t watch that crap anyway! I’ll occasionally use my 35-year old vid monitor to watch very well-done local news over one particular over-the-air channel; I’ll watch “Star Trek: Discovery” or “Strange New Worlds” when CBS rarely decides to show an episode or two on the standard over-the-air network (which sounds great thru my two-amp, eight-speaker sound system, replete with side-mounted dual center-channel coverage); and I usually catch the Super Bowl, especially if the 49ers are involved. Tonight I plan to watch the Pres debate between Kamala and the fat overstated orange dotard. I’m hoping he’ll tell us more about Hannibal Lecter, and electric sharks. Or maybe he’ll have a live-coverage heart attack, now that would be cool! And that pretty much sums that up!
Please fail spectacularly. Piss the fuck off.