You could actually have guessed who would win when 27-year-old Mucki influencer Jake Paul took on 58-year-old former champion Mike Tyson, who hadn’t seen a professional boxing match in around 20 years. Still wanted around 108 million households attended the live event Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson – but that didn’t end well for all subscribers.
Many only saw a still image of Tyson’s butt during the live broadcast Netflix server apparently overwhelmed were. This now has legal consequences.
Class action lawsuit against Netflix: Boxing fans won’t accept the dirty live stream
Over the course of the evening last weekend, countless Netflix customers reported problems with the live stream of the sporting event. One of them, a certain Ronald Denton, went one step further, according to the Hollywood Reporter filed a class action lawsuit in Florida state court. It is not yet known how many co-plaintiffs have already joined and how much money we are talking about as compensation.
The lawsuit against Netflix states: “Instead of providing the programming that its viewers pay for every month, Netflix was completely unprepared and unable to fix the problems.” In addition, failure to fulfill the subscription contract at the same time Billing for services not provided chalked up.
Netflix officially (and on the stock market) declared Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson a success, even though sports reviews gave the event a rather poor report. In addition, the program immediately crashed into the streaming charts and is described by some as fictitious. Even Josh Brolin (on the Joe Rogan podcast) and Rocky actor Silvester Stallone (via World Boxing News) are involved in the rumor.
If you still haven’t canceled your Netflix subscription despite the problems with Netflix and want to watch fake fights with announcements, you can, for example, watch the new French MMA series The cage view. It’s currently in second place in the service’s streaming charts and even has real athletes in the cast.