You can get commercial free Peacock. It is the Premium Plus option. $9.99/month vs $5.99/month. Not worth the extra money to me.I got Peacock yesterday but not for the game. I saw there was a deal and there were a few shows I wanted to rewatch. I didn’t realize there were commercials on Peacock![]()
What did/does commercial free Peacock do during a commercial break in a live sporting event? Not being snarky, genuinely curious.You can get commercial free Peacock. It is the Premium Plus option. $9.99/month vs $5.99/month. Not worth the extra money to me.
Business rates for most anything have always been much more than residential.DH knows the owner of a local sports bar who said that if he wants Peacock for one t.v. in the bar it will cost him $3500 per year. and i thought the fees for a private residence were price gouging.
I watched something live awhile back and totally expected commercials but instead it was just a screen that said something like "your show will resume shortly" with the most annoying music ever.What did/does commercial free Peacock do during a commercial break in a live sporting event? Not being snarky, genuinely curious.
It comes down to whether they have the rights to air the commercials in a specific market I believe. I don't know how often commercials are different in Kansas City (for example) vs Orlando. Referring to the network inserted commercials, not the locally inserted ones of course.I don't know why they didn't just air the commercials. I don't have the ad free version and don't mind commercials. Give one a chance to run to the kitchen for a drink or snack.
The thing in Prime’s pocket is they at least have around 200M global subscribers, Peacock prior to this game had in the 30-40M range.As a no longer NFL watcher, is this really any different than TNF being on Amazon? Granted, that's regular season vs playoffs, but same idea, right?
Still the same IMO. Remember when MNF went to ESPN, meaning you had to pay in order to see it? Then CBS moved March Madness (and part(?) of the Final 4) to their cable channels. Then Amazon picked up TNF. Now Peacock is getting into the mix. Everyone wants their money.The thing in Prime’s pocket is they at least have around 200M global subscribers, Peacock prior to this game had in the 30-40M range.
It comes down to whether they have the rights to air the commercials in a specific market I believe. I don't know how often commercials are different in Kansas City (for example) vs Orlando. Referring to the network inserted commercials, not the locally inserted ones of course.