Subscribe to a Full Season of NFL Films Highlights For Your Favorite NFL Team
New at the iTunes Store NFL Network All 2006 NFL Film Highlights. You can subscribe to a full season of highlights for your favorite team at $24.99 for the season - Buy Per Game for $1.99 or using the Season Pass for your team highlights are automatically downloaded the day after each game.
From Apple Press Release:
The National Football League (NFL) and Apple® today announced that they will bring 2006 NFL regular season action to the iTunes® Store (www.itunes.com), offering video downloads of highlights from individual NFL games the day after they are played. For the first time ever, football fans will be able to download highlights of each NFL regular season game for $1.99 per game. Fans may purchase a “Follow Your Team†Season Pass for $24.99 and have game clips from their favorite teams delivered automatically as they become available for viewing on a computer or iPod®.
NFL fans will also be able to download NFL Network’s NFL GameDay, hosted by Rich Eisen with Steve Mariucci and Deion Sanders. This all-inclusive Sunday night wrap-up show offers the most comprehensive NFL coverage on television, with highlights from every NFL game plus post-game reaction and expert analysis, all for $1.99 per show or $19.99 for a full season.
“We are dedicated to bringing the best of NFL action to NFL fans wherever they are,†said Brian Rolapp, NFL vice president of media strategy. “We’re convinced offering NFL highlights produced by Emmy Award-winning NFL Films and NFL Network’s GameDay on iTunes is a great way for fans to not only follow their team but also experience the NFL as they never have before.â€
“We’re thrilled to bring all the top action from the 2006 NFL season to football fans via iTunes,†said Eddy Cue, Apple’s vice president of iTunes. “With approximately ten minutes of game highlights from every NFL game, NFL fans will be able to download exclusive highlights that give a unique perspective of each game.â€
Beginning September 18 and on each Monday thereafter during the regular season, fans will be able to download extensive action from Sunday games on iTunes for $1.99 per game, with Monday night games available on Tuesday. The $24.99 “Follow Your Team†Season Pass allows fans to select any of the 32 NFL teams and have game highlights from each of their 16 games automatically downloaded when they become available the following day. All Week 1 NFL game downloads become available on iTunes on September 18.
October 25th, 2006 at 7:19 am
Hi!.
Ah, the fall film season. It’s the time when studios release movies that are supposed to live up to the promise of the greatest art form ever invented.
Compared, anyway, to the junk that they pump out the rest of the year.
The 2006 serious season definitely looks promising, though, with Martin Scorsese returning to contemporary crime drama (”The Departed”), Pedro Almodovar returning to Penelope Cruz (”Volver”), Clint Eastwood deconstructing World War II’s Iwo Jima flag-raising (”Flags of Our Fathers”), Sofia Coppola partying like it’s 1789 (”Marie Antoinette”) and the adaptation of the acclaimed novel “Children of Men” by Alfonso Cuaron (”Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” and “Y tu mama tambien”).
Even the new James Bond entry, “Casino Royale,” looks more realistic than, oh, the last 20 or so. And everybody who thinks they can pull off a “Crash” will be trying to convince us that their precious little drama is award-worthy.
Of course, whether any of the fall movies will live up to their pretensions remains to be seen. Personally, we’re betting on the comedy “Borat,” from Sacha Baron Cohen (aka Ali G.), who plays Kazakhstani TV personality Borat, sent to the United States to
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report on the greatest country in the world, only to find a lot of disturbing things.
Following is a list of all the movies we know about that are scheduled to open in L.A. from now through Thanksgiving weekend, plus a selection of highlights to look forward to in December. All release dates are subject to change.
thanks
December 4th, 2006 at 4:02 pm
Hi everyone.
I have seen many different commercials for the NFL that showed a single player in action with a glow aroound him. I would like to do something similar to
this but I dont know if they mask frame by frame or if they use some other method to mask the player. The initial backgrounds were multicolored and complex
in most of the footage used so I they could not use a simple green key. Anyone know of how they do these effects?Thanks.