The video correctly identifies that modern stadium design is no longer about hosting fans, but about engineering social stratification through artificial scarcity. It’s a cynical yet accurate look at how professional sports have fully transitioned from a community ritual into a high-yield corporate asset.
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Barring an absolute disaster at the NFL owners meetings tomorrow, the city of Nashville will beインデックス作成:
Barring an absolute disaster at the NFL owners meetings tomorrow, the city of Nashville will be hosting Super Bowl 64 in their brand new $2.6 billion dollar stadium But the new Nissan Stadium is now the smallest venue in the entire NFL, which means these ticket prices are going to be INSANITY
The city of Nashville is officially getting the Super Bowl in 2030. But because of one massive design flaw, this Super Bowl is going to be a disaster for everyday sports fans. [music] So, the NFL just locked in the Titans' new $2.4 billion stadium for Super Bowl 64. And yeah, obviously, this brand new multi-billion dollar stadium is sick.
It's [music] got a translucent roof, has climate control, all the bells and whistles. But there's one major problem that's going to make this Super Bowl a nightmare. And it's the fact that this stadium only [music] holds 60,000 people, which means that this stadium is the smallest stadium [music] in the entire NFL. And also, if you want the actual truth about business in sports without the crazy PR spin, make sure you follow. But if you remember what tickets were like for this past year's Super Bowl at Levi's Stadium, which has almost 10,000 more seats, >> [music] >> multiply that by 50 for Super Bowl 64.
Because this whole situation just solidifies what we've already been saying for so long.
>> [music] >> The Super Bowl is not really a football game anymore. It's pretty much exclusively an elite [music] corporate networking event now. And on top of all of this, let's just think about the city of Nashville as as a whole. Like, when Nashville hosted the NFL draft, over 600,000 people came to town and flooded [music] the streets. And now, you're taking that same exact rabid market, adding probably double that, and trying to cram them all into a 60,000 seat stadium for the biggest game of the year. And basic economics with supply and demand pretty much tells us that these ticket prices >> [music] >> are going to be the most disgusting, horrendous prices we have ever seen in the history of sports. Now, in reality, sitting on your couch and watching the Super Bowl on a 70-in TV is arguably a better experience than going to [music] the game itself. But it's wild to accept the fact that going to the Super Bowl as like a bucket list item is kind of a dead dream for the average person now.
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