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Newsy on Cable

I've just noticed yesterday that recently, Newsy has been added on Cox Cable. Here in Gainesville, I have it on Channel 276 (SD) and 1276 (HD).

I like it because it reminds me of Headline News, sorta. Does anyone else have Newsy on Cable?
 
http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/107018/newsy-spending-23m-to-get-into-cable

https://www.radiodiscussions.com/sh...Scripps-to-spend-23-Million-to-get-into-cable

Apparently Newsy was only spending $23 Million to enter cable initially due to the fact that it had to replace the Retirement Living Channel. This is E.W. Scripps (Owners of WXYZ-TV Detroit) plan to expand cable viewers by 2018 according to the press release. Interestingly you mentioned that Gainesville, FL DMA is first to get Newsy on cable though. But Gainesville has no local TV stations owned by E.W.Scripps though. I would have guess cities like Detroit, San Diego, Las Vegas and Denver to get Newsy first because E.W. Scripps have TV stations there and it would be easier for Newsy to gain viewers in those markets though.
 
http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/107018/newsy-spending-23m-to-get-into-cable

https://www.radiodiscussions.com/sh...Scripps-to-spend-23-Million-to-get-into-cable

Apparently Newsy was only spending $23 Million to enter cable initially due to the fact that it had to replace the Retirement Living Channel. This is E.W. Scripps (Owners of WXYZ-TV Detroit) plan to expand cable viewers by 2018 according to the press release. Interestingly you mentioned that Gainesville, FL DMA is first to get Newsy on cable though. But Gainesville has no local TV stations owned by E.W.Scripps though. I would have guess cities like Detroit, San Diego, Las Vegas and Denver to get Newsy first because E.W. Scripps have TV stations there and it would be easier for Newsy to gain viewers in those markets though.

Well actually, Gainesville's not the first. Cox nationwide now has it alongside Xfinity.
 
Surprised Scripps isn't putting it on as a diginet where they own stations. Or maybe they will as some of their existing diginet contracts expire. It's not on any WXYZ subchannel as of yet.
 
https://digiday.com/media/multi-platform-tv-company-why-newsy-has-gone-over-the-top/

Here is a Follow Up article on Newsy.

Newsy’s decision was driven in part by the consumption habits of its audience, which increasingly preferred to lean back and spend more time watching Newsy on connected TV screens. Today, the average session time on Newsy’s app for Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Roku TV is between 30 and 60 minutes, with Roku consumption falling on the top end of that spectrum, according to Sabatinelli. Newsy also programs its TV apps like linear TV channels, with the video stream autoplaying as soon as the app is fired up on these platforms.

“People are treating it like TV, so we’re treating it like TV,” Sabatinelli said.

Newsy still has its desktop and mobile products, and it distributes videos on Facebook and other social platforms. There, the approach is to distribute individual Newsy clips, with a focus on building awareness for the brand and getting users to come to Newsy’s owned-and-operated channels.

While Newsy was the first digital-first media company to launch channels on Sling TV and YouTube TV, the company is also interested in traditional cable and satellite distribution. In December, Newsy announced carriage deals with Comcast, AT&T and Spectrum, among other pay-TV providers. Because of these deals, Newsy is now available in 26 million U.S. homes. The plan is to be in about 40 million homes by the end of 2018, the company said.

For Newsy, distribution on pay-TV services also opens up the ability create a diversified revenue portfolio beyond advertising. While Sabatinelli didn’t disclose how much Newsy gets paid by distributors, he confirmed that Newsy has nabbed a carriage fee from some distributors.

This is different from some of Newsy’s competitors. Cheddar, for instance, does not command a carriage fee from Sling TV and YouTube TV (where it just launched), in exchange for the ability to sell more inventory on the channels. Other digital publishers eyeing distribution on these TV services are taking a similar approach: Get distribution now, and aim for a carriage fee once it’s proven that they’re getting viewership.

It helps that pay-TV distributors, both traditional and digital, are looking for younger viewers, and digital publishers are using that demand to nab distribution on these services, said Alan Wolk, lead analyst for consulting firm TVRev. “There’s no downside right now because [digital publishers] are fairly inexpensive and can potentially bring in younger viewers,” Wolk said.

Newsy pitches itself as a facts-focused news network targeting millennials, competing directly against the shout-a-thons on traditional cable news. When asked whether it makes sense, then, to chase linear TV distribution at a time when millennials seem to be cutting the cord, Sabatinelli pointed to the scoreboard.
 
https://www.fiercecable.com/video/newsy-ceo-sabatinelli-his-digital-first-company-s-foray-into-cable

Here is a follow up article on Newsy

Newsy is at an interesting crossroads.

The company, which was acquired by E.W. Scripps in 2014, started in 2008 as a digital news channel. Then in late 2017 it bought cable subscribers and suddenly found itself in much different world.

Newsy reaches more than 10 million U.S. cable households, primarily on Comcast and Cox. Newsy CEO Blake Sabatinelli said that number could go up soon. But as Newsy’s cable audience grows, so do the company’s challenges taking advertising technology and data approaches built for a digital environment and translate them to a more traditional ecosystem.

You can do true digital ad replacement in a seamless manner on a digital platform,” Sabatinelli said. But he said that in the more traditional space, there still isn’t a consensus on how to do that. There are a lot of companies that are starting to do cross-platform measurement and putting together different attribution models and real-time analytics solutions for linear TV. But no single company has enough scale to execute an industrywide strategy, he said.

“The big difference when you’re moving into the more traditional ecosystem is that you’re having to cobble together a solution much more intentionally than you would on digital where this stuff is tried and true and the technology works flawlessly,” Sabatinelli said.

FierceVideo sat down with Sabatinelli at the NAB Show in Las Vegas to talk about why addressable advertising is still a challenge on cable and how programming decisions evolve when you go to cable from digital.

FierceVideo: In cable, you deal with different providers, different hardware and different managed networks. Is that why it’s hard to get a consensus?

Sabatinelli: It is, but it’s early days in this kind of technology. I think if you look from the MVPD perspective, they have access and the ability to do ad replacement and insertion pretty easily. But as a publisher you don’t necessarily get the opportunity to play in that ecosystem and that’s what is very different about digital versus a traditional media ecosystem. Google will let me play pretty much anywhere that I want to play but an MVPD might not because there may be proprietary information that they have and don’t necessarily want to give up. It makes it a much more challenging ecosystem but it also makes it fun because you have an opportunity to see if you can find a way to make all this work, and try to make it work before the market really gets there.

FierceVideo: Are you actively working with pay-TV providers to build up an addressable advertising platform?

Sabatinelli: We have discussions going with some of our pay TV partners. We also have a lot of discussions going with the people who have access to the set-top boxes or the TVs themselves. In some cases it’s the manufacturers or in some cases it’s a third party that can allow us to do digital ad replacement relatively easily. Then we can start to think about how we build a CPM-based model across the entirety of our business. As we try to scale up both sides of the business, our advertisers are coming to us and they’re not necessarily saying they want to buy on cable or buy on OTT; they just want to buy TV. And we’re a multiplatform TV business so ultimately we’re looking at the way we can best service our advertisers.
 
http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/114022/newsy-expands-live-original-news-offerings

Update for Newsy

Newsy, the Scripps-owned national cable/OTT news network targeted to millennials, has added to its slate of original news programming with The Day Ahead, which it describes as “a new take on the conventional weekday morning news show.” Instead of pundits and talking heads, the show sparks conversation about the day’s biggest headlines and stories that are underreported.

Produced live from Newsy’s Chicago newsroom, The Day Ahead covers the latest U.S. and world news, with host Devan Kaney conducting discussions with leaders across the country. Topics range from the connection between incarceration rates and behavioral illness to the anatomy of gangs and the #MeToo movement.

We know younger audiences are looking for alternatives to what they see on cable news today,” said Newsy VP of News and Programming Christina Hartman. “They’re looking for substantive information from people who are close to the story as well as close to their audiences. The Day Ahead is real: just-the-facts headlines and thoughtful conversations with real people impacted by the news and policy.”
 
NEWSY is and has been on SLING TV (streaming) since I’ve subscribed to SLING back in late January 2018; I believe it may be on other streaming services as well.
 
I see Newsy on Spectrum (formerly Time-Warner) on Channel 221. NY1 is 200, MSNBC is 201, Fox News 202 and CNN 203, with other news-oriented channels down the dial in the 200s.

I like that it runs 24/7, when MSNBC and CNN are in some non-news stuff, such as on weekends.

But if you've seen it, it is simply a series of one to two minute pieces. There is no anchor. It's all automated. Someone will do a piece on global climate change, someone will do a feature on Roseanne losing her show. Often there's little original reporting. I think they simply get a young reporter to rewrite what some other source has already written. There are no White House correspondents, no reporter in Rome or London.

What we see is a young reporter, never in a tie, only casual clothes, doing a piece with several desks behind him in the Newsy newsroom. Some B role will run, some video of traffic or water flowing along a river for a story about traffic fatalities or about clean water. Someone above says it reminds them of the old CNN Headline News. I guess that's true because it is continuous news stories, not commentary or shouting.

So is the glass half empty or half full? Should I be glad someone is trying to do a youthful news station, since news skews so old? Or be disappointed at its very limited budget and relatively uninspired content? I guess we should be glad it is really NEWS, not what MSNBC, Fox and CNN seem to do in the evening, which is to tell us two sentences about a story and have a panel of people then comment or argue about it. That's not really news either.
 
I see Newsy on Spectrum (formerly Time-Warner) on Channel 221. NY1 is 200, MSNBC is 201, Fox News 202 and CNN 203, with other news-oriented channels down the dial in the 200s.

I like that it runs 24/7, when MSNBC and CNN are in some non-news stuff, such as on weekends.

But if you've seen it, it is simply a series of one to two minute pieces. There is no anchor. It's all automated. Someone will do a piece on global climate change, someone will do a feature on Roseanne losing her show. Often there's little original reporting. I think they simply get a young reporter to rewrite what some other source has already written. There are no White House correspondents, no reporter in Rome or London.

What we see is a young reporter, never in a tie, only casual clothes, doing a piece with several desks behind him in the Newsy newsroom. Some B role will run, some video of traffic or water flowing along a river for a story about traffic fatalities or about clean water. Someone above says it reminds them of the old CNN Headline News. I guess that's true because it is continuous news stories, not commentary or shouting.

So is the glass half empty or half full? Should I be glad someone is trying to do a youthful news station, since news skews so old? Or be disappointed at its very limited budget and relatively uninspired content? I guess we should be glad it is really NEWS, not what MSNBC, Fox and CNN seem to do in the evening, which is to tell us two sentences about a story and have a panel of people then comment or argue about it. That's not really news either.

Its younger, it does have news and its more 24/7 news and no shouting. Newsy is different and to be honest, something that's needed in today's cable news climate, even if you disagree about how Newsy does its thing.
 
Its younger, it does have news and its more 24/7 news and no shouting. Newsy is different and to be honest, something that's needed in today's cable news climate, even if you disagree about how Newsy does its thing.

Not sure if its younger, but the news readers are younger and less experienced. It comes off as low budget. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
 
Not sure if its younger, but the news readers are younger and less experienced. It comes off as low budget. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

Well Newsy is like the internet TV version of NBC News Radio and AP radio news on I heart app though.

Or ABC News radio on Slacker radio app its automated.
 
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