Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 16
Fox Misses World Cup Restart With Late Ad as FIFA’s 22-Minute Hydration Break Opens New TV Window
Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 16

Fox Misses World Cup Restart With Late Ad as FIFA’s 22-Minute Hydration Break Opens New TV Window

3 articles · Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 16

Summary

  • Fox drew backlash after a full-screen commercial during the Mexico-South Africa match ran past the hydration break, leaving players stalling and viewers missing the restart.
  • The error stemmed from FIFA’s new break around the 22-minute mark of each half; a replay and confusion over when the three-minute pause began caused Fox to return late.
  • FIFA’s rules let broadcasters leave 20 seconds after the signal and return 30 seconds before play, creating an ad slot of up to 2 minutes 10 seconds; FIFA chose not to punish Fox.
  • Telemundo handled the same break with players and commentary still on screen plus a corner ad, winning praise from fans who said Fox’s approach felt over-commercialized.
  • The dispute has sharpened criticism of a player-safety rule FIFA introduced in December, while raising stakes for Fox as it uses the tournament to promote its $19.99-a-month Fox One service.

Insights

With record viewership, does a minor ad blunder matter in FIFA’s $13 billion commercial plan?
Will FIFA’s push for profit through ads and high ticket prices ultimately alienate its core fanbase?
As American-style ad breaks invade global football, is the game's traditional rhythm being lost forever?