Welcome
Introducing USAF1Grid
By Marco Caliari — Editor & Founder, USAF1Grid
Formula 1 is having a moment in the United States — and not just on race weekends. The sport has become a year-round conversation: new fans, bigger crowds, more coverage, more opinions, more passion… and sometimes, more confusion.
USAF1Grid exists for one simple reason: to help U.S. fans navigate F1 with clarity.
Not as a hype machine. Not as a rumor mill. Not as a copy-and-paste news feed.
Just clean, direct coverage that respects your time.
What we cover
1. The U.S. F1 viewing experience
Where to watch, what's changing, what's officially confirmed, what's not — and what it means for regular fans trying to follow the sport without turning it into a research project.
2. The stuff fans actually deal with
Subscriptions, apps, access issues, device support, pricing changes, and the "why can't I watch this right now?" moments.
3. Editorial explainers, not noise
When a big change happens, we'll translate it into plain English:
- what was announced,
- what's implemented,
- what's still missing,
- and what you can realistically do.
4. The grid — and the culture around it
Race weekends, team dynamics, driver stories, tech headlines, and the occasional "let's talk about what everyone's thinking."
What we don't do
- ✕We won't present speculation as fact.
- ✕We won't bait you with fake outrage.
- ✕We won't hide behind vague language when the truth is simply "we don't know yet."
If something isn't confirmed, we'll label it that way.
Our standard: on the record when it matters
We will always aim to cite official sources (teams, F1, broadcasters, and partners) and, when necessary, request on-the-record clarifications — especially when changes directly affect U.S. fans.
That doesn't mean we'll always get answers. It means we'll ask, document what's known, and publish responsibly.
Why now
Because F1 is growing in the U.S., and growth comes with friction: new distribution, new partnerships, new platforms, and new expectations.
When things work, it's amazing.
When they don't, fans deserve straightforward information.
Start here
Our first feature covers the most immediate question many U.S. fans are asking right now: how the Apple TV / F1 viewing ecosystem is expected to work — and what's missing for users today.
If you've ever felt like you needed a flowchart just to watch F1, you're in the right place.
Welcome to the grid.
— Marco