Reading the ALMS website, there appears to be a marvellous amount of believing their own bulls*t going on about viewing figures, success, blah etc. Google reveals plenty of useful opinions on various forums, including the RLM forum (which showed that they had got funding in place but have not been allowed to cover it, presumably as a result of an exclusivity deal).
I for one have always enjoyed the coverage of the ALMS rounds on Motors TV or Eurosport, because I can't get across the pond to see it in the flesh and it is an amiable way to pass a significant chunk of a UK weekend with beer, my favourite motorsport fed live, an RLM commentary, and a feeling of connection to our cousins across the pond, whether watching Sebring and building up to Le Mans, or whichever round afterwards remembering it. I imagine there are plenty of petrolheads in the US who do the same and who will equally rue the passing of Speed TV coverage.
Internet streaming may be the way ahead of the future, but reading the blurb and checking the ALMS and ESPN3 websites (the latter on which I can only find reference to indigenous American sports at present) it seems the only way I would be able to do that in the future is a separate subscription to something on top of my broadband and Sky package. althougb it is not clear if that is the case for those watching via the ALMS website. ..... I suspect I will, sadly, be forgoing that pleasure from now on.
"For the fans" appears, sadly, to have an increasingly hollow ring to it, as sponsorship is based on marketing and viewing figures, but then I suppose also that public broadcasting and "free to air" have never been a great hit in the US. I just hope that the ELMS and Le Mans proper do not suffer the same fate.
MG Mark