A core narrative of Season 1 is the high-stakes partnership between the "Big Five" clubs and media mogul . The documentary details the £304 million gamble Sky Sports took on the new league, fundamentally changing how football was consumed. This partnership didn't just broadcast games; it introduced the "showbiz" element—cheerleaders, fireworks, and half-time entertainment—that signaled football's transformation into a multi-billion-pound business. 3. Icons and the Cult of Personality
The series opens by grounding the viewer in the grim reality of the 1980s. Football was famously described by the Sunday Times as a "slum sport played in slum stadiums and increasingly attracting slum people". Highlighting disasters like and the rampant hooliganism of the era, the documentary justifies the radical breakaway of 1992 as a necessary, if purely financial, intervention to save the game from oblivion. 2. The Murdoch Gamble and the Sky Revolution
: The series uses Cantona as a central figure, charting his move to Manchester United and his infamous "kung-fu kick" as turning points that define the league's high drama.