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    You are at:Home»Business»Apple wants to change how sports broadcasts are done, Eddy Cue says
    Business

    Apple wants to change how sports broadcasts are done, Eddy Cue says

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondOctober 16, 2025003 Mins Read
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    Apple wants to change how sports broadcasts are done, Eddy Cue says
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    Eddy Cue, senior vice president of internet software and services at Apple Inc., arrives for a morning session of the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, U.S., on Wednesday, July 11, 2018.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Apple services chief Eddy Cue said the iPhone maker would like to buy more sports rights, but the company would need to be able to do something “unique and special” with the broadcast.

    “We don’t have to do sports the way that they are. There’s plenty of people doing that,” Cue told CNBC’s Alex Sherman at the Autosport Business Exchange NYC.

    Apple TV, the company’s streaming service, currently airs Major League Baseball games on Friday nights and has a package for Major League Soccer that allows subscribers to watch all MLS matches.

    But Apple hasn’t secured rights to major American sports such as the National Football League, which sold its NFL Sunday Ticket package to Google’s YouTube, or the National Basketball Association, which has some games appear on Amazon Prime.

    Apple Studios produced the movie “F1” this summer, which made over $629 million at the box office. Cue declined to say if Apple had acquired broadcast rights to the F1 racing league.

    Cue, who is the senior vice president of services at Apple, said that there were a lot of things about sports broadcasts that he would like to fix, including blackouts, the need to subscribe to multiple services and issues with viewers accessing streams while traveling.

    He said that the way that Apple TV broadcasts MLS, in which viewers aren’t blacked out and can stream games around the world, “fixed” some of those issues.

    “If we want people to watch games, and we want all of sports to grow, some of these things need to be fixed,” Cue said, suggesting that leagues could demand all of its broadcast partners work together to enable features like picture-in-picture when multiple games are playing at the same time but on different streaming services.

    When Apple broadcasts sports, the company is looking to create a “level of differentiation” from most broadcasts, said Cue, noting some of the things that Apple TV does with its MLB broadcasts.

    He said that Apple TV has better video quality than other broadcasters because it doesn’t compress its video. He also cited a recent MLB broadcast in which Apple placed an iPhone on a foul pole for an unusual camera angle during the game.

    Ultimately, Apple would like to do deals with leagues to broadcast their games across international markets, rather than secure packages for individual games, as the company does now with MLB. Cue said that Friday Night Baseball, which debuted in 2022, was a “test” for Apple to figure out what it was getting into.

    “You had to start somewhere to learn a little bit about what it takes to broadcast before you decide to take on a whole league and broadcast worldwide,” Cue said.

    WATCH: Apple’s China shipments grow 0.6%

    Apple's China shipments grow 0.6%

    CORRECTION: This story has been updated to reflect that Apple Studios produced the “F1” movie. An earlier version misstated the nature of the company’s involvement with the film.

    Apple Broadcasts Change Cue Eddy Sports
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