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Leagues and Governing Bodies

NFL TV, PART III: AN NBC SETBACK OR DOES IT WANT "MNF"?

          NBC's loss of the AFC package was the "latest blow to
     the must-see network, which is already reeling from the end
     of 'Seinfeld,'" according to Bob Raissman of the N.Y. DAILY
     NEWS.  But it still has "a chance to snare the lucrative
     'Monday Night Football' franchise from ABC."  Raissman adds
     that it is "unknown whether NBC -- which recently signed a
     $1 billion-plus deal with the NBA and owns rights to all
     Olympic Games through 2008 -- is willing to shell out the
     big bucks to stay in the NFL game" (N.Y. DAILY NEWS, 1/13).
     NEWSDAY's Steve Zipay writes that two "high-ranking
     television executives familiar with the talks said that NBC
     was totally out of the NFL picture" (NEWSDAY, 1/13).   
          AT A LOSS? Also in N.Y., Eric Mink examines NBC' loss:
     "No question, losing NFL football is bad for NBC.  It will
     make the network less attractive to advertisers seeking
     hard-to-reach male viewers, and it certainly won't do
     anything to help feed audiences into its already struggling
     Sunday-night prime-time lineup."  But Mink does write that
     NBC "will not be hurt nearly so badly as CBS was" when it
     lost the NFL to Fox in '94.  NBC still has the NBA, MLB,
     golf and Wimbledon and the French Open along with the
     Olympics.  Mink: "[T]he biggest impact of NBC losing the NFL
     might well be psychological. ... With the end of 'Seinfeld'
     and now the loss of Sunday football, the glow is gone and
     the myth is dead" (N.Y. DAILY NEWS, 1/13).  A source at NBC
     said "officials were shaken yesterday by the turn of
     events."  The source: "There was genuine fear and loathing
     in the halls of NBC today" (N.Y. POST, 1/13).    


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