The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: F1 Is at an Inflection Point
Episode Date: November 23, 2024As read by George Hahn. https://www.profgalloway.com/f1-is-at-an-inflection-point/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
Formula One may be the future of sports and media,
but it's not without some speed bumps.
F1 is at an inflection point, as read by George Hahn.
Just as my obsession with relevance and economic security
have often crowded out what's really important, relationships,
I've let my preoccupation with the election results crowd out the blessings in my life.
God, I'm so fucking sick of politics.
So, let's talk about cars. Fast cars.
I'm in Vegas for Formula One. Actually, the truth is, I'm in Vegas for Formula One.
Actually, the truth is I'm not here for the race.
It's more a desperate attempt to avoid the inevitable melt into irrelevance,
which I believe can be arrested by extending my adolescence.
Also, I love Vegas.
The last race I went to was the inaugural Miami Grand Prix in 2022.
It was a great time, despite F1 races being boring.
Here he comes, there he goes, and so on, and so on, and so on.
The real fun is found far from the track.
The vibe is money, tech, and glamour, a Super Bowl for the super rich.
If NASCAR is Android, F1 is iOS.
In Miami, I went to a dinner party on the beach hosted
by Carbone, a fabulous restaurant right in the middle
of a COVID flare-up, fab-u-luss.
Wyclef Jean played to 700 people crowded
into a hot tent with no ventilation.
I had two thoughts.
I'm getting COVID tonight and it's worth it.
I was right on both counts.
F1 has long had large and rabid fan bases in Europe and South America,
but that enthusiasm didn't land on US shores until 2017,
when Liberty Media bought a controlling interest in the league.
Under new boss, Greg Maffei, F1 took a big swing at America.
Targeting young people, Maffei and the F1 team built an iconic brand
in the most competitive market in less than a decade.
There were races with celebrities in attendance, Tom Cruise,
LeBron James, Rihanna, new sponsorships and
an aggressive social media presence.
However, Liberty's gangster move was the Netflix docu-series Drive to Survive.
Now in its sixth season, the show is rewriting the playbook regarding how
sports leagues market themselves.
It's a behind the scenes look at a lot of young, good looking guys,
as Maffei once told CNBC, hard charging billionaire team owners,
and high tech pit crews competing in a series of Uberlux international locations.
F1 wasn't the first to try this.
The NFL's Hard Knocks premiered on HBO back in 2001.
By focusing on individuals and harnessing the power of storytelling, Drive to Survive
used streaming to introduce US viewers to drivers who were superstars overseas.
Among them, Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen.
It gave newbie, read, American fans, a compelling point of entry and became a fount of bingeable video that was easily shared, particularly on Instagram.
There are accounts devoted to what Hamilton
wears as he walks on red carpets. Tribal rivalries, betrayal, greed, revenge, all the
stuff humans are hardwired to love in a lustrous package every week. Champions
muse about having a target on my back. Young guns talk about being hungry.
Everybody obsesses about forces beyond their control.
Shakespeare knew this turf pretty well.
Marcus Aurelius would have felt at home.
The song remains the same.
The actual game being played is unimportant.
The results?
Liberty paid $4.6 billion for F1.
It now has a market cap of about $22 billion.
In 2023, F1 generated about $3.2 billion in revenue,
up from 2.6 the year before.
Most of it from promotional deals with host cities, media rights, and team sponsorships.
TV viewership has doubled since Liberty took over, though the US audience pales besides
those of the NFL and other big-team sports, and it's only a third of NASCAR's.
In 2022, F1 signed a three-year deal with the SPN up for renewal next year worth 270 million dollars
American TV viewership of this year's Miami Grand Prix was 3.1 million the largest ever for a US race
meanwhile between 2017 and 2021 the average age of an F1 fan dropped from 36 to 32.
About 40% of fans are now female.
Earlier this year, Liberty announced it had bought a majority interest in MotoGP,
which is to motorcycle racing what F1 is to autos.
Owning a team, F1 has 10, used to be a money pit for a brand or a billionaire in the throes of a midlife crisis.
Now teams are a legitimate asset class.
Oracle is paying Red Bull $100 million to put its name on their car.
Mercedes paid $176 million for its team in 2010. It's now worth 1.5 billion dollars
The Phoenix Suns and Chelsea FC were recently purchased for 4 billion and 5.3 billion dollars respectively
so
media tech
increasing value and why clef Jean
Everybody's happy right? Media, tech, increasing value, and why Clef John?
Everybody's happy, right?
Sort of.
The mood in Vegas this year is subdued, a bit chastened even.
For starters, the business face of all this success, Maffei, is out.
His contract expires at the end of this year and Liberty announced he'll be leaving to be replaced
temporarily by Chairman John Malone
Malone is brighter than me, but that won't stop me from making the following assertion
He retired slash fired the wrong guy
Maffei has doubled Liberty's shareholder value in the past 12 months and
received comp averaging $25 million per year.
David Zaslov has been paid an average of $115 million for
the last three years to destroy two-thirds of Warner Brothers Discovery's
shareholder value.
Maffei says he's ready for something new.
Liberty thanked him and said 2024 made a fitting capstone to his brilliant tenure.
Who knows what really happened?
Liberty is also restructuring assets with spinoffs to tell a cleaner story.
Maybe Maffei didn't want to drive a smaller car or didn't want to deal with the Department
of Justice's antitrust investigation. It's looking into F1's rejection of a proposed new team from retired driver
Michael Andretti. Maybe a sale of F1 is looming. Liberty says it's not. Or none or
all of the above. Whatever the reason, Maffei leaves a sport that, while still
thriving, is at an inflection point.
Last year's much-hyped Vegas Grand Prix was something of a shit show.
Race fans complained that prices were crazy and getting around the event was difficult.
Drivers complained about the track.
Casinos, bars, and restaurants complained about disruption.
U.S. Grand Prix sites, with a few exceptions,
don't have the infrastructure that European and South
American sites do.
Courses, grandstands, and other structures
tend to be ad hoc affairs.
Fans watching at home have complained
about glitchy streams on ESPN Plus and other services.
Meanwhile, F1 still hasn't completely shaken the funk of last season's uncompetitive
races which wafted into 2024.
Max Verstappen won so many, seven of the first ten this year, that a lot of bored fans tapped
out and TV viewership and social media engagement have sagged.
It all feels very 1990 when Pete Sampras was so dominant and boring that people felt he'd
ruined tennis.
Seasoned race fans point out that periods of dominance by a hot driver have always been
part of the sport.
Think Michael Schumacher.
And it was just a matter of time until the other teams figured out how to take him on,
which seems to have happened recently.
While Verstappen is a lock-to-win driver of the year for a fourth time,
competition for the team championship has gotten much livelier.
The downturn, though, highlights two weaknesses.
While F1's marketing has been brilliant,
it has had trouble providing, one,
a consistently great product like high excitement,
competitive races, and two, a consistently great experience
at an affordable price for fans who aren't wealthy.
F1 must balance its luxe aspirational vibe with a simple fact, most auto racing fans are not rich.
A fan on a budget would have to spend at least $2,200 for
a bare bones Vegas Grand Prix weekend.
Given last year's fiasco,
it's not surprising that hotel prices are way off this year.
The hardest things in business are pricing and compensation.
F1 blew the pricing. Wimbledon's center court has a capacity of 15,000 and seats there average $200.
and seats there averaged $200. The seating capacity at F1 Vegas last year was 100,000,
and grandstand tickets were $2,500.
It may have set a record for the worst demand-slash-elasticity forecasting
of any event its size in history.
I am not, as I said, into racing so I don't know what kind of rule
or organizational changes F1 needs to make it harder for another Verstappen
to dominate and kill viewership. A secret to the NFL success is a draft system
that helps keep all teams somewhat competitive. In the last five years, 94% of NFL teams have appeared in
the playoffs. Similarly, in an attempt to maintain some level of parity, F1 has
implemented spending caps. Also, F1 would be well served to do more to foster
young US talent and produce a homegrown superstar.
At this year's Brazil Grand Prix, half of Argentina showed up to watch
Argentine driver Franco Colapinto.
American fans need someone they can get that excited about.
Netflix could keep applying the drive to survive formula to new sports,
going to teams and saying,
pay us $100 million and we'll do two seasons of what it means to play for
the Boston Red Sox.
Or take a league in a second or third tier pro sport, say pickleball or
lacrosse, to the next level at a lower price point.
Magazine publishers do this.
Their most profitable businesses are custom jobs
Like that Four Seasons magazine in your hotel room
What is definitely going to happen though is that sports teams are going to keep increasing in value?
Even though they're shitty businesses in terms of cash flow
Most of them will lose money every year. Then, in a few years, they'll sell at extraordinary multiples to the next
generation of men in their 60s still trying to impress their dads.
However well or badly F1 handles the bumps it's hitting now,
what it has done with Netflix may become the default sports media model.
You're going to start to see media businesses, celebrities, and streaming companies come
together to build sports entertainment enterprises.
Imagine Tom Cruise and Disney not buying the Anaheim Ducks, but an entire league.
There's something more here.
One in seven men can't name a single friend and one in four can't name a best friend.
The Premier League, the NFL, and F1 give men license to bond and express emotions in a safe place.
One, give men license to bond and express emotions in a safe place.
In addition, these events happen in the most wonderful venues ever constructed.
Not on a fucking screen.
We are a social and emotional species, and being part of a collective watching people with speed,
strength, and alien-like instincts compete puts us in the moment.
I'll be at F1 this weekend, and for a few moments, I'll be in that moment.
Pardoned from the past where my anger and depression won't let me forgive myself,
and distracted from the future where I'm focused on garnering more relevance and money.
I'll be there, watching the collision of men, machines, technology and culture.
But more than anything, I'll just be there.
Life is so rich.
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