No cameras. No production crew. No experience required. Here's how track directors and race organizers are going live in under a minute.
Every BMX race has the same problem. The riders are there. The families want to watch. And half those families are stuck at home.
Parents who couldn't take the day off. Grandparents who live across the country. Coaches who are at another event. They want to see it. They just can't be there.
The traditional answer to that problem is expensive: cameras, a livestream encoder, someone who knows how to run it, software that costs money, and a setup that takes most of the morning. Most tracks never bother. So the families miss it.
There's a simpler answer. Here's how it works.
One phone. That's it to start.
Open Switcher Now, tap Start Streaming, and share the watch link with your audience. The whole thing takes about 60 seconds. There's nothing to configure, no account setup required before the event, and no equipment to carry to the track.
If you want multiple camera angles — a start-line shot, a berm shot, an infield view — any volunteer at the event can scan a QR code with their phone and they become a camera operator. Viewers choose which angle they want to watch. You don't have to coordinate anything. Everyone is already holding a phone.
Here's what a typical race morning looks like when a track director uses Switcher Now for the first time:
After the first event, it stops feeling like a technology decision and starts feeling like a normal part of running a race.
Do I need WiFi at the track? No. Switcher Now works on cellular. If your volunteers have cell service, you're streaming.
What happens if someone's phone drops signal? The stream continues from any other connected device. One phone losing signal doesn't take down the whole broadcast.
Who controls which angle viewers see? Nobody has to. Viewers pick their own angle from the watch link. There's no switching board, no production decisions, no one calling shots.
Does it work for timed events or bracket racing? Yes. The app streams whatever is happening. You're not editing or producing — just sharing a live view of the event.
Track operators who start streaming their events consistently report something that isn't obvious at first: the community gets bigger.
Families who watched from home come to the next event in person. Riders who moved away can still follow the track they grew up on. Parents who were on the fence about whether their kid should race see the event come to life and sign up.
Streaming a race isn't just convenience for the people who can't make it. It's marketing for every future event you run.
And it costs nothing to try.
Switcher Now is free to test. Open the app before your next race, tap Start Streaming, and see what 60 seconds looks like. switchernow.com