I checked out the stream last night and found it on point in terms of the technology. Twitter relied on Bam Tech (formerly MLBAM) for a stream that was high quality and didn't drop, although it was anywhere from 30 seconds to a minute or so behind the TV broadcast. I had trouble starting the Twitter app on Xbox One, but on Apple TV it worked reliably, and displayed the Tweets next to the broadcast, mostly filtering out any trollish or unrelated #TNF conversation.

Twitter proved itself as a capable platform for distributing this type of media, however at least from my view, it didn't do enough to make the conversation a part of the experience. The tweets didn't bring much more to the game than watching with my phone or laptop, and most people weren't really replying to or reading one another. It did help make viewing at home seem more lively, and the company has nine more games this season to figure out what works and what doesn't.

it doesn't seem like anyone's actually reading or interacting with the Twitter stream. Although, it makes viewing more "live." — Richard Lawler (@rjcc) September 16, 2016

We've seen plenty of smart TVs try to build in Twitter integration and fail, as well as apps that tried to bring social aspects to TV. Since Twitter already has the audience, it's a natural fit for hosting broadcasts, but it still has to prove that people will come to Twitter to watch and engage at a higher level than they would on other platforms. Facebook apparently turned down the streaming package, while trying a different approach to pump up sports talk on the platform. Real-time conversation around TV broadcasts is coming, but it's still hard to see exactly what that will look like.