Apple's Eddy Cue: Once unknown Toto Wolff now treated like a 'movie star' in NYC

At the Autosport Business Exchange in New York, the longtime Apple executive talked about the celebrity status now enjoyed by those in the F1 paddock ... and not just drivers

Motorsport photo

Eddy Cue, the the Vice President of Services for Apple, was speaking at the Autosport Business Exchange (ABX) in New York City on Wednesday, focusing the growing interest in Formula 1 stateside.

"The athletes, they're incredible athletes," remarked Cue. "What they can do, very few other athletes can do ... you have those incredible brands and I love Cadillac coming on board. So you have all these brands, and cars that are involved in it.

"It's much more than just driving now. There's a whole social component, culture component, with the athletes themselves. Even the team principals have become movie stars or TV stars now.

"We [Cue and Mercedes F1 team principal Toto Wolff] were having dinner last night in SoHo and he gets stopped all the time for photos. Everybody's like go way back, like five years ago, nobody would know who Toto was as he was walking down SoHo. Not everyone, but tons of people do know. So I think there's a huge potential for the sport in the US, specifically."

A lot more room for growth

Fans on the circuit for the podium ceremony

Fans on the circuit for the podium ceremony

Apple is considering purchasing the broadcast rights to F1 in the United States for upwards of $150 million dollars. Just over a decade ago, NBC bought those same rights for just $4 million per year. Cue also noted that there is so much room for growth. While F1 has seen a notable increase in US viewership, it's still only about one million people on ESPN.

"I think in the US everyone talks about how big Formula 1 is," said Cue. "And the reality is, is because it was nowhere. And so if you're nowhere, it's gotten huge. But the truth is it's not huge. It's only about a million people or so watch a given race. And so when you compare it from a sports point of view, that's pretty tiny. So there's a huge potential for the sport, and when you look at it, it's a sport that's global, it's, the only sport in the world that I can recall it where the actual events take place everywhere in the world -- not in a single place."

Read Also: WATCH: Alex Palou talks F1 dream, perfecting his craft in exclusive interview

To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.

Category: General Sports