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Mike Tyson arrived for Netflix streamed fight with Jake Paul is displayed to cheers on big screen at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas Getty
Netflix‘s much hyped and much delayed live fight tonight between Mike Johnson and Jake Paul is taking some hits even before the former heavyweight champion and the YouTuber turned boxer have climbed in the ring.
From nearly the start of the undercard bouts from AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TXm the streamer has been freezing, losing sound and proving slow to reload. While not crashing as Netflix did when Luke Cage launched on the streamer in October 2016, the audio on the feed cut out over and over and the quality of the image was reduced to smeared pixels repeatedly.
Across the country, fight fans have taken to social media to air their grievances.
“This live stream from #Netflix is horrendous, wrote @Cali_Baba on X/Twitter early on in the multi-fight. “Buffering on and off, pixelated image, muffled sound,” he said in complaints that were common Friday. “They wanted the big event, and they are fumbling it. If I had purchased a subscription for this event, I would demand a refund first thing tomorrow.”
Tonight’s fights were the most ambitious live sports event the Ted Sarandos and Greg Peter’s run Netflix has ever undertaken, but the streamer had no comment on the technical difficulties. Still, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones kind of said it all for everyone when the NFL boss’s microphone died in the stadium as he was praising working with Netflix.
In the lead-up to 58-year-old Tyson and 27-year-old Paul putting up their dukes in the former’s first professional-ist fight in almost 20 years, Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano are battling it out for IBF, WBA, WBC, and WBO titles. While Paul is seen as the favorite against the man known as Iron Mike, Serrano is viewed as having the advantage over the Irish fighter in their rematch after that 2022 headliner at Madison Square Garden.
In that vein, digital stumbles and all notwithstanding, tonight’s fight certainly felt like the classic Tyson matches of the 1980s and 1990s — at least in terms of format.
Like HBO matches of years past, Netflix’s coverage of the match cut to locker room interviews with Paul and Tyson, including one lingering shot of the latter walking away with his rear on display in a jockstrap. We could have done without that butt shot there,” said Rosie Perez in her commentary.
For some that shot was frozen, on their screens and in their minds
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