5 Ways To Make Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass Better In 2024
The post 5 Ways To Make Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass Better In 2024 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Inter Miami’s Argentine forward Lionel Messi waves to a TV camera as he arrives for the round of 32 … [+] Leagues Cup football match between Inter Miami CF and Orlando City SC on August 2. Messi’s move to MLS will help MLS Season Pass draw viewers no matter what they do on the production end. But that doesn’t mean Apple TV shouldn’t make improvements in 2024 AFP via Getty Images There’s still nearly two months months until we crown the 2023 MLS Cup Champion, but in terms of a TV and streaming product, Saturday night marked the end of the first year of the staple of the league’s MLS Season Pass production. As part of its agreement 10-year, worldwide streaming agreement with Apple TV, the creation of the MLS Season Pass subscription service changed how fans watched the league in a number of ways, but no more so than concentrating the majority of the league’s matches on Saturday night. This was the final such Saturday, with all games kicking off at either 6 p.m. ET or 9 p.m. ET to ensure no advantage in the battle for the postseason. Previously, the vast majority of games kicked at 7:30 p.m. local time. And while there were certainly many good things about the first year of regular season coverage, there’s also plenty that can and should be improved ahead of a new campaign that could begin as early as late February. Here’s five changes MLS and Apple should make to how MLS Season Pass covers the regular season in 2024 and beyond: Twin Saturday Night Match Windows Making Saturday night a league-wide staple was a good move. Making every game kick off at the same time locally took the idea too far, and didn’t make much sense for an international TV…
The post 5 Ways To Make Apple TV’s MLS Season Pass Better In 2024 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Inter Miami’s Argentine forward Lionel Messi waves to a TV camera as he arrives for the round of 32 … [+] Leagues Cup football match between Inter Miami CF and Orlando City SC on August 2. Messi’s move to MLS will help MLS Season Pass draw viewers no matter what they do on the production end. But that doesn’t mean Apple TV shouldn’t make improvements in 2024 AFP via Getty Images There’s still nearly two months months until we crown the 2023 MLS Cup Champion, but in terms of a TV and streaming product, Saturday night marked the end of the first year of the staple of the league’s MLS Season Pass production. As part of its agreement 10-year, worldwide streaming agreement with Apple TV, the creation of the MLS Season Pass subscription service changed how fans watched the league in a number of ways, but no more so than concentrating the majority of the league’s matches on Saturday night. This was the final such Saturday, with all games kicking off at either 6 p.m. ET or 9 p.m. ET to ensure no advantage in the battle for the postseason. Previously, the vast majority of games kicked at 7:30 p.m. local time. And while there were certainly many good things about the first year of regular season coverage, there’s also plenty that can and should be improved ahead of a new campaign that could begin as early as late February. Here’s five changes MLS and Apple should make to how MLS Season Pass covers the regular season in 2024 and beyond: Twin Saturday Night Match Windows Making Saturday night a league-wide staple was a good move. Making every game kick off at the same time locally took the idea too far, and didn’t make much sense for an international TV…
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