Sunday, September 1, 2013

How to Watch Sports in Modern Times

With our current set up we now have Digital Video Recorder [DVR] service through our satellite provider. Although I realized it was an improvement over the VCR, I did not realize the difference would be so great that essentially we have been launched into a new universe. Although there is a learning curve with it and the remote that is needed, it is actually easier to use overall than a VCR. More importantly, it just does more things and does them more efficiently. You can record at least two things at once and watch a third - and play something you recorded on another TV while the other TV plays something else. The amount you can record is enormous. Really, you get hooked and start to think of the old VCR like you think of your old typewriter. I just got caught up with hooking up things and we now have the DVD/CD/XM players going; and the VCR. But the latter is now just set up to play, not record.

It has changed the way I want to watch TV. You sit there while a commercial comes on and all of a sudden it hits you, "I can just record this by pushing a button, watch something else for a while, even read!" After a suitable length of time you start watching the show again, but this time blowing through the ads. You wind up at the end of the program at the same time as usual. It's great!

I am definitely watching more sports, and watching them differently. It's probably fair to say in my life I had gotten to where I wasn't really watching sports. Oh, I'd tune in once in a while for an inning or two of baseball, maybe the first and fourth quarter of an interesting NFL game, parts of a NHL contest. Enjoyment came with this, and I can even say I can get into the relaxed pace of baseball [it requires an adjustment after hockey season!] But three or more hours devoted to watching sports had gotten to be really too much for me. Living on the East coast, I have come to realize, meant often not staying up to watch who won prime time events as well. This situation held for me when working full time, part time, and when not working at all. I was just not going to spend that much time and then say, as Woody Paige quipped recently, gee I was watching some commercials and a football game broke out for a while!

Baseball is what I've been experimenting with so far. Here's the formula,

*set it up to record 6 hours to catch any extra innings. Again, capacity for DVR is enormous. Record any and all you have any notion to do.
*don't even start watching at first; about one hour should go by, not necessarily more, ideally.
*tune in and watch the first inning or two completely to catch up with the pitchers, current stats for the players, and some team news as the announcers slowly disgorge that. Skip only the commercials.
*innings 3-6 watch unitl the first 2 outs of each half-inning, and if no one is on base and the pitcher seems to be in control, fast forward through the action and the batch of commercials to the next team's at-bat. If you missed some scoring, you will be able to tell, and also if you don't f-forward too fast you can see the bases get loaded by the graphic, and go back.
*in these middle innings it should be also possible to skip other slow moments, such as when for some mysterious reason the batter or the pitcher is still not ready. If a pitcher is especially slow, you can f-forward slowly and when you see the batter look at the pitcher or the pitcher look at the catcher's signals, you know it's time to go back to normal speed for a pitch.
*by the 7th inning, pitchers may change [that means a commercial break to blow through], often other line-up changes, and a more interesting part of the game. Especially if the latter is holding up, go back to watching each pitch. 
*If you've been using up your bought time ideally,  you get caught up with real time about by the end of the 8th inning. You get a hint of where you are with a graphic that comes up when you use the controls too.
*If you don't get a chance to start watching until the game is into later innings, it's just time to accelerate all of this to get to the 7th or 8th innings. You can keep an eye out for action and stop and 'rewind'  too, by looking at the graphics and the score. This is just as well since there are so many baseball games; I'm wondering if especially with football you might just wait to watch until the next day. Ironically, this also means there is more risk you will accidentally be told the final score prematurely, though. 
*Extra innings? I prefer to finish up the next day, especially on evening games.

Bear in mind also you can still do the opposite of skipping, and instead repeat good plays or events that were accidentally missed, etc. This just buys you more time to skip what you'd like to skip. It never happened with a VCR, but I start to think of the DVR as my time machine. Sometimes you have to be reminded that you can only view the past. For example, it doesn't buy you anything to freeze the action during commercials, you might as well just use the mute button. You can only 'buy' time when you freeze action that you are actually going to watch later. On the other hand, when you repeat events, you've bought something your 'time machine' can use. 

Now some fans who watch entire baseball games might be critical of some of the above, assuming that person still exists. The thing is, I am now really watching baseball games, not little bits of them and trying to keep up interest by getting the highlights and final scores later. I hope to be able to watch football, baseball, and hockey when all three are going at the same time! That, friends, is going to be a challenge! DVR service is the only thing that might make it possible

Any program that can still be enjoyed the next day, Sue and I pretty much just go ahead and record. Even just a program that starts earlier in the day than we will want to start watching, that also is well worth recording. With DVR, recording just a small portion before watching, while the real time show is still going on, is not only possible but something you find yourself doing all the time.

A final note: At one time it looked like TiVo was going to accomplish the "Kleenex" feat and become the name people were going to use for this ability to record without tape. It even became a verb for a while! I think it is because the cable and satellite services started offering the service without having to buy a device to hook up that this usage is almost gone. TiVo is still around and continuing to be innovative, though, it seems.

4 comments:

Matt said...

It's funny because they recently talked about a survey someone had done that found that most people now only don't use the DVR on Sports, but skip commercials on everything else. That's why they have such huge predictions on TV contracts for the future. The theory is most people want to see the sports live, but for any other show they would be willing to watch later and skip commercials.

It would be tough to watch sports later when my phone is buzzing telling me the final score of the game.

I think the future prediction for the next NFL TV contract is something like $15 Billion. The NHL's Canadian TV contract is up next year. Should be pretty big.

Marsha Schmidt said...

I am baffled. Did you just figure out how to use a DVR?

But in any case, you have baseball all wrong. I have decided that baseball needs to be listened to. When I was a kid growing up, my dad would turn on the radio in his shop loud enough so we could hear it as we worked, or we cleaned up after dinner, or we sat outside enjoying the evening drinking beer (my Dad and brother) and just listening and talking. It really does not command full attention but it is easy to follow with a good announcer. If something exciting happens, you can check it out on the telly. You absolutely cannot get that affect with hockey. You can listen to it, but it is not the same as watching it. Baseball has just the right flow for an easy listening speed and a few interesting moments in between.

We have started to go to baseball games again and yes, that transition from hockey is tough. But I decided that I even want a radio when I am in the park so I ordered a old fashioned transistor radio from Amazon. I cannot wait to use it.

Carlw4514 said...

>Did you just figure out
>how to use a DVR?

Yes, we did not have one till now. A VCR is not the same, and, for practical purposes, unusable for watching part of the recording before the real-time event ends.

>tough to watch sports later
>when my phone is buzzing
>telling me the final score
>of the game.

I'm worried about similar problems with the other sports, but don't have that problem with baseball. But note that you can still use the DVR to skip Ads etc and then catch up to the real-time game before the final score.

>baseball needs to be listened to

I know what you mean, and agree. But I can no longer do 9 or more innings like that

Anonymous said...

The DVR is wonderful. We did not have one before because I refused to pay Comcast - we made do with the VCR. When we moved to Lexington and signed on with DirecTV I got the DVR Genie and it is magic. Wow. So we have learned how to use it for all commercial television programs. I can do a three hour Morning Joe in two hours. All sports events have too many commercials. I remember listening to baseball with my Uncle Harold or later in the 80s. It was fun. It had a rhythm. Today there are many more commercials; the commercial breaks are more frequent and last longer. Look at hockey, especially the playoff games in the later periods. The game is manipulated by television commercials even when you are at the game. You might say marketing is ruining sports and television entertainment. When I am concentrating on a game or program, I don't want interruptions every 8 minutes or every inning break for a Bud Lite, Progessive Insurancce or Ford 150 commercial. The DVR is a lifesaver.
SFW