The Great Debate: Attending a Game vs. Watching One on TV

wscanlan

Earning My Ears
Joined
Sep 26, 2009
Messages
13
Attending vs. Watching

A long time debate I've had amongst friends as to which is better. Going to a game, or watching one on TV. The article breaks it down for both sides. Which side do you come out on?
 
I only enjoy going to the game if we have great seats...otherwise, I'd just as soon watch it on TV. Ditto for concerts. If we don't have great seats, I'd rather buy the CDs. We also have been going to the west side of the state to the smaller venues to see the concerts we want to see. I'd much rather see a show with a couple thousand fans outdoors or in a small club venue less than 1000 people, than see these mega stadium tours. We are also seeing more performers on the way up than the big superstars. I guess we have just changed who we want to see based on the venues.
 
I think this question really can be applied to anything that consumer electronics provides an alternative to: sporting events, concerts, movies, etc. I think the better our home entertainment capabilities get, the less attraction there is in incurring the cost, both financial and otherwise, of traveling to the event, dealing with the crowding at the event, dealing with the inferior aspects of whatever seating we've been able to secure, etc.

I remember someone once relating to me the experience of traveling to Hempstead one night, just a few miles away from where he lived, sitting down in an audience with a few dozen other folks, comfortably, amiably, without hassle, and hearing Captain Jack performed live, by Billy Joel, for the first time. That's the kind of experience that I think a lot people really desire when they go out to see a live performance -- something unique, something intimate. However, it is so rare that to even hope for some opportunity like that is ridiculous, and other live experiences suffer from inadequacies by comparison, inadequacies that often balance out, or trump, the inadequacies of the home entertainment experience (lack of being part of a larger audience, being the most significant).

There is some value, of course, in being part of a huge bash. In cases like that, it isn't even the performer or the performance that matter, but rather in that case it is the audience that is really the star. I've found, though, that as time goes on, I find such experiences dramatically less appealing.
 
Depends on the game.:thumbsup2

I have been to 2 playoff games, one for the Superbowl, one for the World Series. That is something that is different.

2 yrs. ago I went to see my college team play in the CottonBowl. That experience was like none other. And that stadium is a BIG piece of crap, but the game was GREAT.

I went to Mizzou's home open this yr. and had a good time. Now if I want to watch ALL the games I have to PPV. I have not PPV yet. I might PPV with the Austin game. I would go to that game but they are sold out.;)

DH just sold off the Rams tickets (which was the home opener) with Green Bay this past weekend. They are losers and going to see a crappy team lose is something that is NOT worth seeing LIVE.
 

While I can enjoy a game at home, there's nothing like being in the stadium and being part of the whole experience. With text updates on my phone, I get all of the updates on player injuries, too, so the argument about being uninformed if you're at the game doesn't apply any more. If you've never experienced an NFL game live, get thee to at least one game. It's worth it!
 
It is like comparing apples to oranges.

If you go, you are attending an event. In fact you are part of the event! You make it happen.

when you are watching it, you often get more info and a better view overall.

When they had the formula one races at indianapolis, we attended the event then I watched it again when we got home.

Mikeeee
 
I'd rather go to see my favorite team play football than watch it on TV. I'd rather watch any other football game on TV. I'd also rather watch baseball in person than on TV. I get bored watching it on TV and the atmosphere of the stadium tends to keep that from happening in person.
 
I'd rather go to see my favorite team play football than watch it on TV. I'd rather watch any other football game on TV. I'd also rather watch baseball in person than on TV. I get bored watching it on TV and the atmosphere of the stadium tends to keep that from happening in person.

Good point. Baseball is certainly more entertaining in the stadium. Well unless your team is in the playoffs....:rolleyes1 Go CARDS!:lmao:
 
honestly for me it depends on the game and team, we are Gator season ticket holders and I can tell you, there is nothing at all like the environment inside the stadium, and actually outside it as well. It is just unbelievable. Home games, I definitely want to be there.....most college games I would rather be at the stadium than watching on tv....baseball...it's fun to go every now and then but I would rather watch it at home.
 
Good point. Baseball is certainly more entertaining in the stadium. Well unless your team is in the playoffs....:rolleyes1 Go CARDS!:lmao:
Well, I did watch on TV last year when the Rays were in the playoffs, but that's the only time I've actually watched an entire game on TV.
 
It's fun to watch on TV and at the game. Going to the game is fun if it is your team and you are in the mood for it. If you are feeling sick, you would probably prefer to watch it at home.

Either way, it's a win win. But I agree with most that going to the game is a better experience when you are up for it. Once again, I love it either way.
 
Watching. 1000% watching.

If I wanted to go to Soldier Field I would have to drive at least an hour in traffic each way, pay an exorbinant amount of money for a parking space a mile away, pay a gazillion dollars for my tickets which are still somewhere up in the stratosphere, and then endure some drunken, smelly stranger practically in my lap during the game. I would also have the privilige of waiting in line to pay $15 for a cup of ice (with a bit of soda splashed in) and some questionable pizza before fighting my way back to my seat. Then, when the soda caught up with me I could crawl over people to miss the game while waiting in line for an icky public restroom. No thanks.

At home I have my big high-def TV with DVR, my comfy couch, and control over the temperature, sound level, and who I want to watch with. I have a fridge full of snacks and drinks and a private washroom with no line. It's heaven!

I will, however, thank everyone who is willing to put up with going to the stadium so the game is not blacked out and I can watch from the comfort of my own home. :thumbsup2
 
I love going to ANY sports game (except for hockey, I'm always afraid of the puck unless I'm lower than the glass) so I would much rather go to one than watch it on TV (although after being at a Bengals/Steelers game in Cincy, in pouring rain and 40 degrees with people throwing stuff at us [my fiance at the time was a huge Steelers fan and we were 1 of about a dozen Steelers fans there] that game I would've rather have watched on TV :) ). It's something about the energy from the crowd. I love it. Now concerts I would MUCH MUCH rather watch a concert on TV than to go to one. I love small little venues like eating out on a patio and someone being out there with a guitar but paying $50-$60 to see someone, fighting traffic, fighting crowds, the nastiest port-a-potty's, people screaming and talking all around so you can't even hear the performance AT ALL, and taking an hour to go to the bathroom and get back to your seat, all to see someone far away on a stage...No thanks.
 
If we're talking hockey, I'd rather sit in the nosebleed seats behind a pole with a screaming child kicking the back of my seat as long as I could be at the game. I love live hockey games. I watch games on TV but it's just not the same.
 
It just really depends. I've been to a World Series game...it was an incredible experience, I've sat in the front row at a couple concerts...loved it. I just went to an Ohio State game a couple weeks ago, I have to say it was really awesome to be there. Our seats weren't the best, but they weren't bad and there was alot to see that you just don't see on TV. I loved the half time show, they did four script Ohio's on the field...at home I would have missed it. The atmosphere and being with so many fans was just cool. My dad has a huge 52" high-def tv that is GREAT to watch games on, but it still isn't the same as being there. Being there is a true experience, I can't imagine no matter how great your technology is that it could ever really compare.

That being said, I don't think I'd want to go in person every week, it's way far to park, the food is really expensive (more than at Disney!) the bathrooms weren't great, the bench seats are hard, ect... so I'd be good with going one or two games a season.
 
While I can enjoy a game at home, there's nothing like being in the stadium and being part of the whole experience. With text updates on my phone, I get all of the updates on player injuries, too, so the argument about being uninformed if you're at the game doesn't apply any more. If you've never experienced an NFL game live, get thee to at least one game. It's worth it!

Particularly a Monday Night game. It seems more lively for some reason..... But it probably was a big diff when your team's opponent (this was last year) was the Detroit Lions vs the Monday Night game's opponent, The Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

But this season, my team sucketh. And fully proved it last nite on Monday Night for all the populace to see.... :headache:
 
I LOVE going to Philadelphia Phillies and Dallas Cowboys games...when I cant go to the games, i love watching them on tv, but theres just something about being in the stadium!
 
Not to brag, but I have one of the nicest home theater set-ups you can get on a consumer level. We have youth from our church over to watch movies and games when we want. Everyone wants to be there. It is a really cool room. That being said, I never miss a home game for UGA in Athens. It helps that Athens is consistently rated as one of the best college town in the country, the tradition is great, the teams are always good (sometimes great), and the coeds are unsurpassed:dance3:. Even in a down year for us (this is one), the stadium is always sold-out, the fans arrive early and tailgate for hours, and the atmosphere simply can't be beat.
 
To repeat what others have said, it depends.

Even with the best home theater setup, you don't get the experience, the sense of being part of the community. Getting closer to the stadium, the tension builds, the hopes are high when you see others wearing the team colors, converging on the stadium. A little bit of tailgating and kibbitzing will really get you in the mood.

In the stadium, waiting for the game to begin, you can swap stories with the people sitting around (who you've never met before, and probably never will again, but who are your buddies because you all are obviously rooting for the only team worth rooting for!) about games past.

With the roar of the crowd at every twist in the game, you get totally wrapped up in what's happening on the field. (At home, the telephone may ring, someone may be at the door, and during one of those oh-all-too-often commercial breaks, you just might happen to notice some chore that has to be done, getting you off your focus.)

Along the way, you can keep second-guessing with your new buddies every change in the line-up, every call by the quarterback, every mishandled ball.

And after the game, if it's a win you can congratulate yourself for having been there, because obviously it was your support which turned the tide against the opponents. (Really, the manager should have come out and thanked you personally.) The good mood in the crowd as they stream out of the stadium will stay with you all the way home.

And if it's a loss, well, a few beers in a bar on the way home with your buddies (or just in the company of the barkeeper) will straighten things out. You can shake your head at the boneheaded decisions, any one of which may have cost the game.

Next morning, you can read through the pages of analysis in the local paper, knowing that you were part of that experience, and reliving the high points.


As for the alternative?

Staying home and watching it on the big screen makes a lot of sense if:
- the weather doesn't look that favorable (my dirty secret: I've shocked my Chicago hosts by saying no to seeing a Bears game in the pre-2003 Soldiers Field - they couldn't accept my argument that having a bad cold was an acceptable excuse for not going, especially since it was a balmy twenty degrees)
- you get a party together,
- or, quite the opposite, you're on your own and just want to take it easy,

or - and of course with the Yankees and the NY Giants this is only a theoretical possibility

- watching your team stumble in the standings is something you just don't want to see in person.
 












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