NFL, Week 15
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Football fans are not happy with NFL RedZone this season. The central selling point for the NFL Media product used to be that it was “Seven hours of commercial-free football.” However, since the switch to ESPN, the Sunday viewing plug has been bombarding viewers with ads.
NFL fans were left furious on Sunday as NFL RedZone’s audio broadcast was lost in around 10 minutes of ear-splitting static. Host Scott Hanson continued to report on the games, and some
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Football fans were furious when RedZone removed the “commercial-free football” aspect from the program this year. ESPN acquired RedZone and NFL Network in a blockbuster deal over the summer. Sure enough, that meant drastic changes to Redzone none of the fans wanted.
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If there's one thing NFL fans can all agree on, it's don't mess with NFL RedZone. But on Sunday, Dec. 7, something went horribly wrong.
For over a decade, NFL RedZone has been the holy grail for football fans, delivering on a singular, legendary promise: "Seven hours of commercial-free football." However, that phrase was officially retired at the start of the 2025 NFL season when ESPN agreed to acquire NFL Network and the rights to
NFL RedZone might want to take a look at its audio issues after Week 14. Fans looking to tune into the "seven hours of RedZone football" are likely doing so with their device muted. While host Scott Hanson went to dip into some live action, the audio feeds were filled with static.
Fans who tuned into NFL RedZone spent more than 15 years devouring "seven hours of commercial-free football" when Sundays rolled around. However, we were
For years, the NFL convinced fans to buy the RedZone Channel with the catchphrase, "Seven hours of commercial-free football."