Saturday, April 23, 2016
Formula 1 Team Owner’s Misery hr567
As an avid fan of Formula One racing, I spend every winter longing for a
season opener. My long wait was finally coming to an end with ten days
to go until the first race. That was when the bad news arrived instead
of the race. A Japanese TV network station that had been broadcasting
Formula One for decades announced a termination to a free broadcast of
the sport. They would no longer broadcast it, starting this season. My
dream is to live in Monaco as a team owner of Formula One and I thought I
had striven to get closer to the dream little by little. On the
contrary, I was left far from it now that even watching Formula One on
TV got taken away from me. I scoured on the Internet but didn’t find any
website for free streaming of the race. The only way to watch it in
Japan was through cable TV that cost about $25 a month. Paying money for
a broadcast that I was accustomed to watching free all the time is
quite undesirable. But when I looked into the cable station further, I
found out that would broadcast live all three free practices, adding to
the qualifying and the race. While I had been resigned to watching
taped, delayed, edited and cut versions of only the qualifying and the
race through free broadcasting for years, the cable station would let me
watch all sessions of every venue live. It meant a significant upgrade
for my Formula One life, and I decided to subscribe it. Watching live
broadcasting for all sessions of all Formula One races around the world
would be absolutely fascinating. On TV, I sometimes see VIPs watching
the race on a TV screen in an elegant paddock lounge while having
champagne and appetizers although they were at the circuit and could get
a direct viewing of the real cars. If VIPs at the race venue watch it
on a TV screen, it would be similar when I watch it live on my TV
screen, except for my small apartment, cheap wine and junk food. It
would be gorgeous enough for me to feel like I had become a team owner
who attends all the venues. I thought $25 was inexpensive for an
imaginary taste of dream-come-true. But once I got down to sign up for a
subscription, I encountered an annoying process. Despite this high-tech
age, I needed to ask for contract papers, fill them out, send them
back, receive a tuner and set it up to my TV set. The season opener that
is regarded as a celebration among the people concerned was ten days
away and it was impossible to be all set by then. What a misery it is
that a fake team owner would miss the festive first race of the season. I
learned what $25-a-month could do at best…
Labels:
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F1,
Formula One,
Japan,
junk food,
live,
Monaco,
network,
paddock,
race,
racing,
season opener,
streaming,
team owner,
tuner,
TV screen,
VIP