While tape delays have often worked very poorly for live sports, wrestling has found more success with that approach. And a U.S. tape delay of a special episode of WWE Smackdown Friday may have worked out quite well for the promotion and Netflix. WWE and the streamer hit major technical issues at their live event in Saudi Arabia Friday (ahead of Saturday’s Night of Champions PPV). That event was being broadcast live in many international markets, but the U.S. broadcast at 8 p.m. ET should go forward without that. Here’s some of what went on during that stall:
As Sean Reuter wrote at SB Nation’s Cageside Seats (warning: that post has spoilers for those not wishing to learn the outcomes of matches until they air in the U.S.), the outage lasted around 30 minutes:
“We’ll be right back” messages have been looping in multiple languages for the past ten minutes…
We’re at about 25 minutes and counting. A rumor online is that a “camel munched a cord”. Clips posted from inside the arena make it seem like there are power or production issues in the building as well.
Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp noted that this was a power issue:
Those outages certainly happen at times across sports. Sometimes, they even happen in the Super Bowl. But this one is particularly interesting for the tape delay actually creating a smoother broadcast for the U.S. audience than happened with the live broadcast for international viewers. Somewhere, the architects of NBC’s much-hated past Olympics tape delay approach are raising a toast…
About Andrew Bucholtz
Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.
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