DIRECTV Could Lose 33 Stations In Fee Fight
DIRECTV could lose 33 local stations in 28 markets this weekend due to a carriage dispute with their owner, Hearst Television.
The stations, which include the ABC affiliate in Boston, the NBC affiliate in New Orleans and the NBC station in Baltimore, among many others, have started posting notices at their web sites that DIRECTV viewers could lose their signals on January 1, 2017 if a new pact is not reached.
"While we believe that we and DIRECTV can conclude our negotiations before January 1, so as not to deprive any of our respective viewers and customers of our programming, we want to advise our viewers and customers that the possibility of non-renewal of our current agreement exists," the notice states.
DIRECTV has yet to issue a comment on the talks, or the possibility of a New Year's Day blackout. By federal law, a TV provider can not carry a channel without its consent.
http://www.wisn.com/article/directv...l-of-retransmission-consent-agreement/8536600
Update its Hearst Television and Directv that's in a contract negotiations.
Well this is something! Frontier will lose whatever business they have left in WA and OR thanks to KATU and KOMO ditching them. I'm glad it's not another Sinclair vs. Dish...or a worst case scenario, Sinclair vs. Charter.
Dear Southwest Florida viewer,
The carriage agreement between DirecTV and WXCW-TV is set to expire on December 31st, 2016. Unfortunately, we have reached an impasse and DirecTV has refused to enter into a new carriage agreement on terms consistent with those of other pay TV companies. DirecTV’s business is to license sports, entertainment and news programs in order to resell these channels as a pay TV bundle. WXCW will always remain free over-the-air directly via an antenna throughout Southwest Florida. However, WXCW does not allow any other business to capture its signal and resell its TV shows without an appropriate fee.
The link is broken. Perhaps an agreement was made with DirecTV vs. Cox? If not, DirecTV viewers would lose WHIO, KIRO, KTVU along with others.
The link is broken. Perhaps an agreement was made with DirecTV vs. Cox? If not, DirecTV viewers would lose WHIO, KIRO, KTVU along with others.
Cable One in Retrans Talks
Cable One said its customers are in danger of losing access to stations owned by Northwest Broadcasting and Hearst Television in its service territory on Dec. 31 if it cannot negotiate successful retransmission consent agreements.
NBCU, Charter Near End-of-Year Blackout
Comcast-owned NBCUniversal said it has reached an impasse in talks with Charter Communications to extend their retransmission and cable carriage deals.
"Charter Spectrum has been unyielding in its demand for terms superior to those agreed to by the rest of the industry, including larger distributors," NBCU said in a statement.
"Given this position, we feel the responsibility to inform viewers that Charter Spectrum may drop NBCUniversal's networks at the end of the year, including NBC, Telemundo, USA, Bravo and hit shows including the #1 show on TV-Sunday Night Football, WWE, the Golden Globes, This Is Us and more," NBCU said.
KSL in Salt Lake City has a dispute
with Dish. I've been seeing the ads
On their online news stream
Oh great, a dispute involving my cable system. I don't think NBC itself will go away, because it's a station owned by a Spokane company (Cowles Publishing, KNDO). It probably affects Charter subs in NBC O&O markets. But USA, Bravo, etc will. I don't mind Bravo going away! The channel is dead and has been for close to 15 years.
That Cable One dispute could affect all the networks in the Greenville-MS Delta region! Everything minus PBS/Mississippi Public Television would go bye bye.