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UFC to End Pay-Per-View Model in 2026 With $7.7 Billion Streaming Deal
The UFC is ending its pay-per-view model in 2026 and will instead opt to send all fights in the United States to the ...
The upshot: Pay-per-view has lost by knockout. Pay-per-month has won. Distributors would rather use UFC or WWE (or NFL or NBA ...
TKO Group Holdings announced on Monday morning that UFC and Paramount agreed to an exclusive rights deal valued at more than ...
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Man of Many on MSNWhat Paramount’s $7.7 Billion UFC Rights Deal Means Now the Pay-Per-View Model is Dead
TV and streamer deals are amongst the most lucrative rights purchases, but as pay-per-view content prices rose above USD$100 ...
New York-based tech entrepreneur and boxing aficionado Dan Herbatschek observes that the world of professional boxing is ...
The UFC's $7.7 billion deal with Paramount will largely bring an end to the pay-per-view model that has defined the sport and ...
UFC’s U.S. fans will no longer have to pay $80 per fight under a new $1.1 billion deal with Paramount+, but they’ll need a subscription to the streaming service.
Hence, starting from the 2026 Royal Rumble, every WWE PLE will be on ESPN. The Stamford-based promotion's current deal with the Peacock streaming platform is set to expire later this year, probably ...
There is a belief that the pay-per-view business, as we've known it, is dead. It turns out that it's not going anywhere, and it's here to stay.
Per ESPN’s Darren Rovell, the fight projects to bring in $475 million in pay-per-view sales. This figure would best the $455 million in pay-per-view sales from the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight from ...
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