Sky is not a British television providor. It is a television providor that serves Britain and Ireland
Sky is not a British television providor. It is a television providor that serves Britain and Ireland
Explain how it is a UK television system? Because they are headquartered in the UK?!
You misinterpreted the point, deal with it.
Also your follow up examples are also wrong. News of the Screws and the Sun are sold in Ireland, edited, artwork and printed in Dublin with a full editorial team based in Dublin.
Quit when you are behind.
Yeah they are Irish Editions which is part of the bigger UK group.
BSKYB are Headquartered in the UK, they run UK adverts in every channel and the everything is geared towards the UK market.
They are called British Sky Broadcasting or BSKYB and it is available in the Republic because they have a big interest in British Sport and speak the same language and enjoy other the variety of channels no other broadcaster has.
So yes it is a british company who have a market in the Republic.:rolleyes:
It's all very simple - Sky broadcasts to Britain AND Ireland. ITV didn't have to pay compensation for showing live football on a Sunday afternoon but Sky Sports do. I don't know why you're trying to turn this into a "Sky is British, just like Northern Ireland" argument:confused:
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix....l-mediaprofile
Quote:
BSkyB's ambition is to be the leading entertainment choice in the UK and Ireland. More than 8 million customers - equivalent to almost one in three households in the UK and Ireland - enjoy an unprecedented choice of movies, news, entertainment and sports channels and interactive services on Sky digital, the first and most popular digital pay-TV service in UK and Ireland.
Quote:
Q. Which countries does Sky operate in?
A. Sky operates principally in the UK and Ireland. Some of Sky's wholly-owned or joint venture channels are distributed across the world by other cable and satellite operators.
Germany? Belgium? France...? :confused:Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Bruce
In the words of Ali G:
"Iz you 'ere on 'oliday?"
:D
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On the deal. Its a good deal for the Irish League IMO, and I'm not sure if it is or isn't a good deal for the NI international team. Although there is a reasonable risk to the scale of the BBC's Saturday afternoon coverage, Sky has quite good production values and so coverage will start to look a lot less like just some bloke with a camcorder. BBCNI and UTV will still be able to offer coverage on their news programs and shows like Season Ticket.
As for NI, its only very recently that there has been consistent live terrestrial coverage of international matches (coinciding with an upturn in fortunes), and the Sky deal presumable ensures that there will be live TV coverage of the games even if the team starts to do badly.
Bottom line, though, is that its a handy amount of cash for the IFA, and they could certainly do with it.
It's nothing to do with Northern Irelands political situation, you are saying that not me. BSkyB is a british firm. But we'll just have to agree to disagree.
Soon enough they will be a world wide firm when they merge with some american company i've never heard of.
Whether SKY is British or not is entirely irrelevant. The Nationality of the company had nothing to do with the Irish Governments intervention in the SKY/FAI deal (which was prompted more by a chorus of RTE led whinging than anything else). The issue was the pay per view element(which strictly speaking it wasn't) and denying free to air coverage of Ireland matches.
I may be wrong, but I thought the compensation agreed for FAI clubs was a UEFA requirement. The reason why Sky Premiership matches kick off at 4 pm on a Sunday is because that is 5 pm in Continental Europe i.e. when Sunday afternoon matches kicking off at 3 pm local time have finished. UEFA were worried that crowds in less popular leagues in Belgium, Holland, Scandinavia etc would suffer if local fans could instead watch English Premiership football via a satellite dish.
Therefore, since it is in the same time zone as the UK (unlike the rest of Europe, barring Portugal) the FAI could have insisted that UEFA ensure that English Premiership games be scrambled by Sky for transmission in the Republic; presumably they preferred the compensation.
If ITV did not pay compensation to FAI clubs in similar circumstances, that will have been because they are a terrestrial channel (That UTV can be picked up in Border areas is by-the-by; perhaps UEFA felt sorry for people who have to live in Cavan etc? ;) )
Lads, anymore discussion on the Britishness/Internationalness of Sky and I'll close the thread. It's blown from a minor misunderstanding into a full blown petty off topic discussion. Focus on the deal and its pros and cons.
Yeeeeooo!! Anyway, I think it is a great deal for the National team and our League, and will hopefully give us that much needed exposure.. I also hope, in a stange twist, that it give the Beeb a boot in the hole, and they produce the highlights package we have been asking for for years.
Added to the Setanta coverage, all in all, the future is looking bright(er).