That's what EVERY cable provider and satellite provider says. 'We're looking out for you' my a$$. Then blames the station itself. Spectrum never gave us a credit for the FOUR MONTHS we lost Fox 41 KCYU earlier this year. Not one cent!
In a sense, the cable company is looking out for "you".
Station and cable network carriage fees directly impact the monthly costs passed on to subscriber. Sure, they are looking out for their own bottom line, but they do have to keep the fees they pay to every program source in line or every subscriber's bill will increase.
but when it comes to locals all cable companies do is jack up their "broadcast fee". I noticed this month Mediacom quietly added 61 cents to their broadcast fee. Now its 12.40
January 2018 it was 11.18
March they raised it to 11.79
Now this month they raised it AGAIN to 12.40
God knows what they'll raise it to in January (if they dont raise it beforehand)
Fox Warns Altice’s Optimum And Suddenlink Subscribers About Impasse
Fox has started spreading the word that its distribution deal with Altice USA is set to expire in the coming days, warning that a blackout could leave millions of Optimum and Suddenlink subscribers without access to key fall programming.
The carriage deal with Altice, the French telecom giant which bought Cablevision in 2016 for about $10 billion, is set to expire at the end of September, according to sources familiar with the terms. The pact covers the Fox broadcast network, FX, FS1, Nat Geo and other networks, so the dispute threatens big draws like NFL and college football and the upcoming Major League Baseball playoffs.
The New York City suburbs would be hit hardest by an outage, given that the bulk of Optimum subscribers live in the Tri-State area. Altice has 4.9 million subscribers in 21 states under both the Optimum and Suddenlink brands. New York City has very minimal Optimum, with its cable footprint dominated by Charter’s Spectrum service (formerly Time Warner Cable). Most Suddenlink subscribers are in the Midwest.
A license agreement has expired, but Dish still tells its subscribers they can get Univision, according to new counterclaims filed.
When programmers and distributors reach the end of a licensing contract for television content and it comes time to negotiate a renewal, there tends to be a lot of public posturing, a healthy dose of brinksmanship and even, sometimes, litigation. Then, there's usually peace. But the standoff between Univision and Dish Network shows no signs of any breakthrough. It's been more than three months since the Spanish channel went dark on Dish's satellite and streaming services, and the legal claims are multiplying.
The latest is a cross-complaint filed on Friday by Univision alleging that Dish still owes millions of dollars in license fees under the old deal plus is falsely advertising the availability of Univision on the satcaster's services.
Dish has been on offense until now.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/t...se-advertising-trademark-infringement-1152479
Now Univision Sues Dish Network
Over the Contract Dispute.
DISH Network subscribers are at risk of losing Univision Deportes Network, says Univision.
Currently, the Univision Deportes Network is the only Univision-related channel available to DISH Network subscribers after a carriage dispute since June 30 resulted in channels being removed from DISH that included Univision, UniMas and Galavision.
While DISH Network subscribers have enjoyed watching Univision Deportes Network despite the carriage dispute, the availability of Univision Deportes Network on DISH is about to end unless an agreement is reached soon.
That means no more Liga MX, Copa MX, UEFA Champions League, Europa League, Mexican national team games, MLS or Bundesliga for DISH Network subscribers via Univision Deportes Network.
It’s possible that the decision may be a permanent one. If so, it’ll force many DISH Network subscribers into a difficult decision whether to leave DISH Network or move to a different service such as DIRECTV or fuboTV.
AT&T’s HBO and Cinemax premium channels have been blacked out to Dish Network and Sling TV subscribers in a dispute over an carriage agreement.
Dish said it is the first time HBO has ever blacked out a distributor.
Dish said that HBO made “untenable demands” designed specifically to harm customers, particularly those in rural areas, as well as damage competing pay-TV providers.
AT&T, which acquired HBO’s parent company Time Warner earlier this year, also owns DirecTV and DirecTV Now.
“Plain and simple, the merger created for AT&T immense power over consumers,” said Andy LeCuyer, Dish senior VP of Programming. “It seems AT&T is implementing a new strategy to shut off its recently acquired content from other distributors. This may be the first of many HBO blackouts for consumers across the country. AT&T no longer has incentive to come to an agreement on behalf of consumer choice; instead, it’s been given the power to grab more money or steal away customers.”
Given Dish’s track record I’m more inclined to side with HBO/AT&T.https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/hbo-blacked-out-to-dish-network-subscribers
Update HBO and Cinemax in a contract dispute with Dish
(Reuters) - AT&T Inc’s WarnerMedia has accused the U.S. Department of Justice of “collaborating” with Dish Network Corp in a high profile dispute over carrying HBO and Cinemax.
FILE PHOTO: A Dish Network satellite dish is shown on a residential home in Encinitas, California, U.S., November 8, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
For the first time in its 40-year history, Warner Media’s HBO, known for its award winning TV series “Game of Thrones” and “The Sopranos,” went dark on Dish’s satellite television service on Thursday after a disagreement over a new distribution deal.
About 2.5 million of Dish’s 13 million customers subscribe to HBO or Cinemax, according to one person familiar with the matter. AT&T also owns DirecTV, a satellite TV rival to Dish.
WarnerMedia said it had offered to extend the contract to continue discussing a new deal but Dish executives declined to negotiate further.
“Dish’s proposals and actions made it clear they never intended to seriously negotiate an agreement,” said Simon Sutton, HBO President and Chief Revenue Officer.
The dispute could be a public relations blow to AT&T, which is heading back into court in December when oral arguments begin in the DOJ’s appeal of the antitrust decision approving the No. 2 U.S. wireless carrier’s $85 billion deal to buy Time Warner.
“This behavior, unfortunately, is consistent with what the Department of Justice predicted would result from the merger,” a DOJ representative said. “We are hopeful the Court of Appeals will correct the errors of the District Court.”
The Justice Department’s statement was amplified by Fox Business Network journalist Charlie Gasparino’s tweet on the matter.
AT&T fired back: “The Department of Justice collaborated closely with Dish in its unsuccessful lawsuit to block our merger,” a WarnerMedia spokesman said in a statement. “That collaboration continues to this day with Dish’s tactical decision to drop HBO – not the other way around. DOJ failed to prove its claims about HBO at trial and then abandoned them on appeal.”
Dish declined comment on the accusation.
A federal appeals court has denied attempts by Comcast and Charter to dismiss lawsuits filed by Byron Allen’s Entertainment Studios claiming violations of the Civil Rights Act.
The plaintiffs—Entertainment Studios and the National Association of African-American Owned Media (NAAAOM)—filed the lawsuits after claiming that both Comcast and Charter for years refused to carry any of the Entertainment Studios’ networks, which include Pets.tv, Comedy.tv, Recipe.tv, Cars.tv, Es.tv, Mydestination.tv and Justicecentral.tv.
The $20 billion case against Comcast and the $10 billion case against Charter are now cleared to head to court for the trial and discovery process.