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Tags: Advertising, F1

Formula1 ITV: That Advert Break

April 24th, 2005, by Rich.

Formula1 ITV: That Advert Break

I was introduced to F1 by my grandfather, when James Hunt was fighting to be the world #1 back in the 70’s. We always watched on the TV. In those days that meant the BBC with Murray Walker’s insanely eager commentary and every episode introduced by the ominous bass of Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain”. We watched the British drivers come and go; Brundle, Blundell, Coultard, Herbert, Hill and Nigel Mansell in his Red 5 Williams. We watched Senna and Prost collide as team mates; Senna and Mansell go wheel to wheel; the track invasion after Mansell’s home win in 92, and the shock of Senna’s death in ‘94. My grandfather incidentally was such an F1 nut that he had a scale model of the McLaren on his television, so as a four year old, Formula1 was something that was just a part of life: and a very exciting part of life too.

In contast, the last few seasons have been poor. Those of us with F1 in our veins have found this difficult to admit, but the dominance of Ferrari has made the spectacle less interesting for all but the most ardent follower. To become an F1 fan you must first be ensnared by the action, and drama, before learning of the technical complexity, the strategy, and the psychological deulling that are as important and absorbing as the on-track action.

I am therefore delighted to be able to say that the 2005 F1 season has, so far, been fantastic. A combination of changes to the rules has meant that the starting grid has been interestingly shaken up, and that has resulted in some scintillating racing. To paraphrase something Nigell Mansell once said, F1 is a Racing Drivers Championship, but what we want to watch is Racers, not Drivers.

Today’s race at San Marino gave us a race; and what a fantastic race it was. Schumacher had qualified badly and was in the middle of the field, whereas Alonso, the championship leader was in pole position. As the laps ticked away, and the cars peeled off for their pitstops, Schumacher, somehow, stayed out. He was carrying way more fuel than his peers, so as they re-joined the race, heavy with fuel, he had a light car and leapt forward from 12th to 3rd.

What followed was a 30 lap chase where Schumacher ate into Alonso’s lead by 1.5 seconds every lap. We commented that the last time we could remember a race with this potential for a granstand finish was “that time Nige’ was 18 seconds down and pulled back a second a lap on Piquet”. Several laps later, the ITV commentator James Allen recalled the same race. They knew what was in store too.

This is what great F1 is about. Knowing that every corner matters; every entry has to be good, every apex hit, every exit clean. Schumacher had it all to do, and he delivered lap after perfect lap.

The tension build for 20 laps and with around 12 laps to go Schumacher caught up with Alonso. What followed was a car chase that puts anything Hollywood can create to shame.

This was electric.
This as real.
This was live.
This was the championship leader against the 7 time world champion, in a race to the flag.

As the 10 laps ticked off, Schumacher’s Ferrari edged closer through the corners and the Alonso’s Renault clawed back breathing space on straights.

This, is the stuff that hooks people on F1. This is what makes it a global phenomenon.

This, with 3 laps to go, and the tension thicker than gravy; this, according to ITV, would be a perfect time to interrupt the coverage for a few quiet advertisements.

We sat there numb with shock. ITV returned in time to catch most of the last lap. The tension, the excitement, the anticipation, the enjoyment… had been destroyed.

Immediatly after the race had finished, only minutes later, the commentators handed back to the studio who cheerily suggested that we viewers should rejoin them after another ad break to see the last 3 laps of the race.

Somehow, somebody in ITV has failed to understand that watching the three climactic laps that we just missed, after the race has been won, and we know the result, is entirely pointless.

We switched off the TV so that ITV could not advertise to us, and turned it back on after two minutes later in order that we might see the driver interviews.

This got us to thinking….

The BBC used to provide us with uninterrupted coverage of F1. The only reason that ITV can afford to outbid the BBC is because they can sell advertising. ITV therefore need to come up with an alternative means of advertising that does not ruin the race, or they need to step back and leave it to someone who can.

Now, market forces are such that ITV are not going to stop their coverage, or change their way of working unless there is commercial pressure to do so - so we’re going to start that commercial pressure ourselves, by turning our television off for 30 seconds during every advert break for the rest of this F1 season.

Yes, as of today we’re going to boycott the adverts that ITV show during F1 and we invite others to do likewise.

Stick that in your post race analysis ITV.

45 Responses to “Formula1 ITV: That Advert Break”

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  1. 11
    Paul Says:

    I agree and ill support the boycott, anything to get uninterupted F1 back. The amateurs at ITV do not deserve to host it.

  2. 12
    MarkH Says:

    Why oh why did ITV insert an ad break with three laps to go? Would they go to adverts with three minutes remaining in a football match?

    ITV = a poor excuse for a British TV broadcaster.

  3. 13
    Phoenix Says:

    ITV painted themselves into a corner yesterday due to this years policy of showing a large block of ads closer to the climax of the race than in recent years.

    I would be happy enough with any action that would convince them to reverse this policy and declare the last 8-10 laps of all GP an ad free zone. Missed action before that can usually be made up with a replay as consolation. They could even delay the live action by two minutes as far as I am concerned. I’d rather turn off the live timing and 5 live in the assurance of not missing the action albeit slightly delayed.

    If someone was to come up with a method for persauding advertisers and sponsors of the wisdom of this I’d readily contribute.

  4. 14
    Ade Maritz Says:

    ITV are silly* in the head.

    I refuse to watch it after this debacle.

    * sanitized, for family viewing

  5. 15
    Adrian Says:

    Does anyone have a list of the adverts which appeared in the ad break 3 laps from the end?

    If we all write to them or their ad agencies noting our displeasure at having the end of races interrupted by their messages then maybe the advertisers will tell ITV that they do not want their adverts shown in the last 10 laps or so of a race.

  6. 16
    David Wilkes Says:

    I like many thousands of F1 aficionado’s were discombobulated at the ill timed commercial break during the race climax at San Marino.

    I fully support your boycott and will not be tuning to ITV’s coverage until they put their house in order.

    Overall i have to admit ITV’s coverage is pretty good. Martin Brundels insight and knowledge of F1 is commendable and give credit where credits due.

    Clearly, whoever decided to cut to commercials at that crucial point in the race should be dismissed on the grounds of ineptness. I personally have never witnessed such incompetence in the history of sports broadcasting.

  7. 17
    Heson Says:

    I sold my TV and went 100% internet pirate several years ago. So while I cant watch it live, when I watch it the ads are cut out, and any blunders like itv’s is edited. This costs me alot of money and work but at least I’M in contol.

  8. 18
    Billy Bonkers Says:

    If anyone wants to make a complaint they should contact OFCOM either by letter or via their website ww.ofcom.org.uk. OFCOM regulate all the commercial channels who have to abide by the OFCOM rules and regulations and they take all complaints seriously. ITV are in clear breach of the rule that defines a “natural break”.
    Any complaint to ITV will be totally ignored as they only listen to their paymasters, i.e. the advertisers, and hold viewers in contempt.

  9. 19
    Matt Says:

    Thanks for providing LG’s email address Andy, I have emailed them about it. We shouldn’t have to put up with this deplorable behaviour & they need to be told. If BBC did adverts im sure they wouldn’t do something as heinous as what ITV have done.

  10. 20
    Marc Says:

    Thanks for the Trackback to Full Throttle, it’s much appreciated. As a “Yank” living in the Philippines I didn’t have to suffer through the advert interruption but you certainly have my sympathy.

    As you can see by my entry on the subject the US has had similar problems in the past.

    By the way, nice WordPress theme… and where’s my “tea” as promised in the header image? :-)

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