‘American Ninja Warrior’ is Esquire’s signature show.
Esquire Network’s future had been looking iffy after AT&T siblings DirecTV and U-verse decided to drop the low-rated men’s cable network last year.
On Wednesday, owner NBCUniversal made it official. It’s shutting down the cable channel, which had fallen to just 45 million subscribers, though it will continue to offer a digital version of Esquire Network.
And this probably won’t be the last niche cable network to shutter. At a time when cable carriage negotiations are becoming more barbed and cord cutting has led to an increase in skinny bundles, small cable channels face an uncertain future.
Esquire is a prime example. Launched in 2013 as a replacement for Style Network, it aimed to draw the same young male demographic reading Esquire magazine, whose owner, Hearst, partnered with NBCU on the channel.
But young men don’t watch much television. And despite airing “American Ninja Warrior,” Esquire never developed much of a following, averaging just 55,000 adults 18-49 in primetime last year, according to Nielsen, and ranking 72nd of 104 networks.
That made it a difficult sell for NBCU. Cable and satellite carriers pay a per-subscriber fee to carry networks, and it’s not worth picking up channels if people don’t want to watch them.
These carriers have become even pickier with the rise of cord cutting. They’re trying to keep people by offering so-called skinny bundles, which have just the small swatch of top networks that appeal to the most people, such as top channels like ESPN and TNT.
They argue no one will miss a network like Esquire, which is bumped to upper-tier packages that cost more money.
Of course, big companies like NBCU can use their leverage as owner of in-demand networks like USA and Bravo to insist on carriage for smaller ones like Esquire, but that strategy has long rubbed cable and satellite carriers the wrong way.
With viewing patterns changing so quickly, they’re no longer interested in offering the biggest channel selection. And that will be reflected as more niche cable networks shut down.
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In cable ratings for the week ended Jan. 15:
Top five networks in primetime (18-49s): ESPN, TBS, USA, FX, Discovery Channel.
Top five networks in primetime (total viewers): ESPN, Fox News Channel, HGTV, USA, TBS.
Top five total-day networks (total viewers): Fox News Channel, ESPN, Nickelodeon, HGTV, Disney Channel.
Top cable news networks in primetime (total viewers): Fox News Channel, CNN, MSNBC, HLN, CNBC, FBN.
Top cable news programs (total viewers): 1. Fox News Channel’s “The O’Reilly Factor” (Thursday, 8 p.m.); 2. Fox News Channel’s “The O’Reilly Factor” (Tuesday, 8 p.m.); 3. CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” (Tuesday, 9 p.m.); 4. CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” (Tuesday, 10 p.m.); 5. Fox News Channel’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” (Wednesday, 9 p.m.)
Top movie (total viewers): Hallmark Channel’s “A Royal Winter,” (Saturday, 9 p.m.) 2.69 million.
Top sporting event (total viewers): ESPN’s “CFP Championship” (Monday, 8:19 p.m.) 24.42 million.
Show on the rise: CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360,” Tuesday, 9 p.m. On the night of President Obama’s farewell address, the 9 p.m. hour of “AC360” averaged 3.75 million total viewers, more than five times the 710,000 it averaged in the same hour the previous week.
Show on the decline: OWN’s “The Haves and the Have Nots,” Tuesday, 9 p.m. The drama averaged 2.16 million total viewers, off 28 percent from the previous week’s 2.99 million.