Amazonâs pregame coverage featured a bunch of veteran players and broadcasters. | Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images
It didnât crash! Thatâs the most important thing you can say about the first Thursday Night Football game aired on Amazon Prime Video. Amazon didnât crumble like HBO Max did during the House of The Dragon premiere. It didnât crash like CBS All Access during the 2021 Super Bowl. It even streamed better than DirecTV did five days ago. There were some reports of blocky resolution and buffering, but in general, Amazon hung in there, and it aired a football game.
Watching the Kansas City Chiefs and Los Angeles Chargers play, I got the distinct sense that âairing a football gameâ was Amazonâs one and only goal for the evening. There was nothing particularly innovative or new in the broadcast, from the choice of cast to the style of programming. But that was surely by design: even legendary commentator Al Michaels, hired by Amazon to call these games, said he wasnât âgoing to reinvent the wheel. None of us are.â
This was the first game in its decade-long deal with the NFL, for which Amazon is paying about $1 billion a year for exclusive rights. Amazon has streamed NFL games in the past, but its new package is both more expensive and much higher stakes than the last-choice games it had before. And ultimately, how impressive Amazonâs accomplishment is depends on how many people actually watched; Amazon was telling advertisers to expect 12.5 million viewers, which would make it bigger than House of the Dragon, but we wonât know the real numbers for a bit. Regardless, how Amazon does will have a lot to do with how quickly sports turn to streaming â so if youâre rooting for the death of pricey cable bundles, you were rooting for Amazon to pull it off. And it did.
In the hour of coverage leading up to the game, there was surprisingly little fanfare or Amazon rah-rahing. A few seconds into the broadcast, pregame show host Charissa Thompson did say âwelcome to the long-awaited debut of Thursday Night Football on Prime Video,â but she was only barely audible from the center of a Chiefs crowd. In general, the whole thing felt remarkably like… a football game.
Everyoneâs parents trying to find the Chargers/Chiefs game on Amazon Prime: pic.twitter.com/lzr40HIw02
â Pickswise (@Pickswise) September 15, 2022
There were a few signs of who was running the show, though: the Prime logo in the top-right corner; the players miming the swoopy-arrow logo in promotional segments; a section of the pregame show sponsored by Audible; the prompt to ask Alexa who led the league in passing yards; the âPrime Storiesâ bit showing the most important storylines heading into the game.
And, best of all, about 45 minutes into the broadcast, we had our first sighting of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who was laughing on the sideline in a green polo. I noticed him at least once more during the game, too. I sincerely hope thereâs a contractually obligated number of Bezos shots per game. And I hope that number is in the hundreds.
The most noticeably Amazonian thing, though, was the ads. A shockingly high percentage of the ads aired during the game were for Amazonâs own products and content â regular reminders that Lord of The Rings: The Rings of Power is a show on Prime Video that Amazon would very much like you to watch, along with plugs for seemingly every other show and movie on the service.
Itâs possible that Amazon had spare ad inventory to fill with its own stuff, but it also wouldnât be surprising if the company is happy to forego ad revenue to help the broadcast serve as one big advertisement for its services. Amazon keeps saying it views its NFL investment as a long game, one that could ultimately be much bigger than ad revenue. It clearly wants Prime to grow more than it needs a few more of T-Mobile and Chipotleâs dollars.
a stunning amount of the ads on Amazon Prime are for Amazon Prime, the service I am paying for to watch the ads
â Rodger Sherman (@rodger) September 16, 2022
Live streaming in general is much more volatile than cable: how the feed looks to you depends on your Wi-Fi speeds, your streaming device, and even which ISP you use. Making it work for everyone will be Amazonâs greatest challenge, and the internet had its share of complaints, but it worked seamlessly for me.
The broadcast came through my Fire TV Stick in 1080p because the dream of 4K sports is apparently still just a dream. It did have Dolby Digital Plus audio, though through my (admittedly crappy) TV speakers, it sounded like Amazon has some mixing work to do. I could sometimes hear the players clearly but not the crowd, so it occasionally felt like the game was being played in front of a crowd of about 16 people.
I like how this Amazon Prime TNF broadcast is a throwback to figuring out how to best put aluminum foil on your antenna while moving furniture and bodies around to figure out the best reception.
â eammon (@theeammon) September 16, 2022
A few times during the game, I flipped over to the alternate broadcast. Alternate broadcasts are becoming a big part of the future of sports. Itâs a great idea: instead of listening to whichever doofus the network picked to call the game, you can choose to watch with the commentators of your choice.
Amazonâs most notable alternate broadcast featured Dude Perfect, the group of trick-shot athletes who have become internet sensations. âThis will be the longest continuous piece of Dude Perfect video in the history of ever,â Dude Perfectâs Tyler Toney said early on, welcoming the audience to the groupâs first live broadcast ever. They then began to chat about what they were planning for the game, the challenges they were going to do, something about breaking a world record… and then they were immediately cut off by the end of the pregame show and an ad break.
Prime Video also offered the game with a broadcast in Spanish, which was nice, along with a broadcast paired with âPrime Vision,â an always-on view of Amazonâs Next Gen Stats. (The thing you mostly learn watching a broadcast like this is that Amazon likes to brand everything in sight, and most of the names sound too much alike.) The Dude Perfect broadcast was more like hanging out on the couch with your friends while the game plays on silent in the background. Itâs fun! But itâs not really a football show.
I also watched some of the game with Amazonâs X-Ray menu active. The feature showed real-time stats, play-by-play info, key replays, and a surprisingly handy list of bios for every player on either team. It was all the stuff youâd Google or pick up your phone for right there on the screen. Itâs super handy.
I donât want to be conspiracy guy but that call sucked and itâs interesting because Amazon needs a good game
â Big Cat (2-0 in my last 2) (@BarstoolBigCat) September 16, 2022
Ultimately, though, I gave up on all the alternate broadcasts pretty fast and returned to legendary broadcaster Al Michaels. On the default in-game broadcast, Amazon didnât take many risks. None, in fact. Its on-screen bug with the scores and time was a little busy for my taste, but that was as wild as Amazon got. The first-down line was there all game. The feed flipped between the crowd, the sidelines, the players, the field, the replays, everything, just as youâd expect.
Honestly, I expected much more Amazon during the game. I thought Iâd be able to Click Here To Buy This Jersey and order everything I saw in a commercial. I half figured Alexa would be a sideline reporter, asking the coaches inane questions about how they motivate their guys. Whereâs the Ring doorbell camera snapping security footage from the top corner? Why no pop-up telling me to order now and my Whole Foods delivery will be here at halftime? Amazon had a lot of deals surrounding the game, but none of it showed up in the broadcast. To be clear, thank goodness for that: I donât want any of those things, and they all would have made the experience worse. But a lot of other companies would have done it, and Iâm glad Amazon didnât.
Amazon has a lot of football left to air â 14 more games this year and nine more yearsâ worth after that. I suspect weâll start to see Amazon experiment more, both with how to air the game itself and how to turn all of that investment into revenue. But for now, Amazon streamed a football game. Good start.