The Super Bowl on Amazon Prime Video? Just a few years ago, it was unthinkable that a single NFL game would be exclusive to streaming, and now, the ecommerce and streaming giant has its sights set on the big game.
NFL rights are up for negotiation once again in 2032, and as Prime Video continues to level up as a sports streaming destination, Prime Video sports head Jay Marine publicly stated this week that he wants a Super Bowl.
In a story at the Washington Post detailing Prime Video’s plans to dominate the sports industry, Marine told reporter Ben Strauss “I believe we will be a major sports broadcaster in every major market around the globe” and refused to put a limit on how many properties Prime Video might bid for.
Marine also detailed Prime Video’s strategy to be a first mover with Thursday Night Football rights in the United States and U.S. Open rights in the United Kingdom.
“The NFL changed the way people looked at us,” Marine told WaPo.
The company wants premier broadcasts like the NBA and NFL and rights to leagues with growth potential, like its deals with the WNBA and NWSL, but “not the stuff in the middle,” Marine said.
To close the article, Strauss quotes Marine confirming Amazon Prime in fact would like to broadcast a Super Bowl as part of its next deal with the NFL.
“Would I like to broadcast the Super Bowl?” Marine said. “Yes.”
The article also features a comment from ESPN chair Jimmy Pitaro confirming on the record that he sees Prime Video as a major competitor to the worldwide leader, but that he still believes ESPN’s sports-first brand puts them ahead of Amazon.
Just a few years after arriving on the scene, Amazon is no longer just a disruptor. It is a major player.
About Brendon Kleen
Brendon is a Media Commentary staff writer at Awful Announcing. He has also covered basketball and sports business at Front Office Sports, SB Nation, Uproxx and more.
Recent Posts
Andre Ware says Tommy Castellanos, Diego Pavia could have long CFL careers
"I don't know what his aspirations are, in terms of the NFL, but he and Diego Pavia at Vanderbilt can play a long time up north."
Robert Griffin thinks Texas Tech’s Jacob Rodriguez should win the Heisman
"This man right here is the best player in the country."
Oregon’s Dan Lanning takes shot at weak scheduling of CFP contenders
"We didn't play Chattanooga State today like some other places."
Thom Brennaman sounds off on Lane Kiffin during Furman-Clemson broadcast
"His reputation would be tarnished, unfortunately, forever."
TV and streaming viewing picks for November 23, 2025: How to watch NFL Week 12
Another week of the NFL as the playoff push gets more intense. Fox has Philadelphia at Dallas at 4:25 p.m. ET while NBC carries Tampa Bay at the L.A. Rams in primetime. Some markets will see Cleveland at Las Vegas with Shedeur Sanders making his first NFL career start on CBS at 4:05 p.m.
Andrew Luck leaves live interview to celebrate Stanford TD
"Oh, ball!"