good dolphin wrote:
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
Johnny Morris on bears games in my youth was great. For you kids out there, the nfc was on CBS and the non national games were broadcast by the same people for the entire season. It was like a local broadcast every week
When there weren’t blackouts and Venture had to buy 3500 tickets.
I remember my dad watching a Bob Newhart episode centered around them going away to Milwaukee or somewhere out of market so that they could watch the game. I was confused. Now that I'm older, I'm even more confused. Why not just buy tickets?
It used to be that all the home games were blacked out whether the game sold out or not. The famous example is Giants fans having to pick up the home games off the Hartford-New Haven CBS affiliate. The NFL didn't realize this was stupid until the early '70s.
good dolphin wrote:
Didn't Soldier Field also have a capacity of around 80K back then as well, with that last 20K far away with bad sight lines?
I think the endzone stands that cut off the end of the seating bowl came in from Wrigley, so it always would have been around 65-66k for the Bears. Maybe more for the Chicago Cardinals.
EDIT: upon looking it up, the last year of universal home-game blackouts was 1972. That's a long time.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.