The NFL is officially headed to YouTube in Week 1.
The league and Google announced on Tuesday that the Los Angeles Chargers’ game scheduled for the Friday of Week 1 in São Paulo, Brazil will stream on YouTube for free. It’s the first time YouTube will ever broadcast an exclusive NFL game. Of course, the mega-streamer has held the NFL Sunday Ticket package since 2023.
But as a first-time broadcaster, YouTube doesn’t have the infrastructure to produce its own broadcast like Fox or Amazon or ESPN would. Instead, similar to how Netflix conducted its Christmas Day broadcasts last season, YouTube will need to bring in the professionals.
Enter: NBC.
According to Andrew Marchand and Jenna West of The Athletic, NBC will produce YouTube’s one-off game. It’s unclear if YouTube will use NBC’s on-air talent as well. Last year, when Netflix aired its Christmas games, the streamer used a hodgepodge of talent from different networks to fill its cast.
NBC has experience producing games for other entities already. The network has a long-term partnership with Prime Video and its behind-the-scenes crew helped kick-start Thursday Night Football for Amazon’s streaming service a few years back.
The NFL’s full schedule is revealed on Wednesday, and it is widely anticipated that the Kansas City Chiefs will be the Chargers’ opponent down in Brazil.
About Drew Lerner
Drew Lerner is a staff writer for Awful Announcing and an aspiring cable subscriber. He previously covered sports media for Sports Media Watch. Future beat writer for the Oasis reunion tour.
Recent Posts
It’s been a big week for calling people ‘hoes’ in football
"He's a hoe, and I want that known."
Adam Amin shines during bonkers Panthers-Rams game
Adam Amin had himself a game Sunday calling the Panthers' wild 31-28 upset of the Rams.
Auburn touts Alex Golesh as quarterback guru with amazing graphic
"Development that translates beyond Saturdays."
Sports media torches Lane Kiffin’s statement announcing LSU move
Kiffin tried to play the victim on his way to a $90 million payday at LSU.
Gene Wojciechowski pushes back on ‘lazy narrative’ that ESPN protects Jimmy Sexton’s clients
"I worked at ESPN for 26 years, mostly covering CFB in some form—and Sexton clients. Not once did ESPN try to influence my opinions or mention agency client lists."
Fox scores huge Thanksgiving college basketball audience with NFL lead-in
5.49 million viewers tuned in for Michigan State-North Carolina.