I went to the truck race last night. It was a mighty fine race. One of the best I've seen in years. With a "last lap" pass for a win. No phantom "debris" yellows. Just apleasurableevent. Then I came home.
Turned on the TV to catch the news, but the TV was already on Speed Channel and the race I'd been attending was being replayed. Of course, we started watching.
Now, this isn't a discussion on the personalities in the booth, or on pit road. Those topics are for other discussions by lovers / haters of the personalities the networks provide us. This discussion is about the TV technology that brings the race to us. On the replay I saw numerous things that I did not see during the actual eye witnessing of the event. Camera angles and long lenses give the TV viewer amazing close-ups of the action. Slow motion replays give the viewer multiple perspectives of happenings on the track, and so on.
The thought came to mind that sitting on my couch watching the replay was better than actually being there at the track, in as much as seeing the stuff on TV was allowing me to view things that I'd not seen during the actual race. Then again, sitting on the couch did not provide adequate sights, sounds and smells that only personally attending a race can provide. Plus, the inordinate amount of commercials the networks run give the viewer only about eighteen minutes of action for every hour of viewing. But - the discussion that progressed as we watched the replay turned toward the possibility that a big reason for the decline in race attendance might have something to do with the excellent views and close-up replays that today's TV technology can provide.
The question is, has the coverage gotten so good that it is cutting in to attendance ? Do people stay home and watch because they see more on the tube than they could hope to see by being there in person ?
What are everyone's thoughts about this ?
updated by @steve-struve: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM