Losing ESPN at this time of year on DIRECTV would be a killer for their subscribers.
Absolutely, but how much more are those subscribers willing to pay for ESPN? Because ultimately that's what this dispute is about.
Losing ESPN at this time of year on DIRECTV would be a killer for their subscribers.
Absolutely, but how much more are those subscribers willing to pay for ESPN? Because ultimately that's what this dispute is about.
Fortunately, my cable provider has the option of selecting buckets of channels.
Sinclair Broadcast Group is warning that millions of subscribers to AT&T’s pay-TV services could be blacked out on Sept. 27 unless a new carriage agreement is reached.
Sinclair said its agreement with AT&T was set to expire in August and that it gave AT&T a five-week extension. A blackout would affect 136 TV stations and Sinclair’s Tennis Channel and subscribers to AT&Ts’ DirecTV, U-verse and AT&T TV Now.
AT&T has recently faced blackouts with CBS and with Nexstar Media stations and Sinclair said the way those negotiations played out should concern subscribers.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
In the past few months AT&T has been involved in carriage disputes with CBS and Nexstar Media Group that have resulted in lengthy blackouts. The company’s CFO said that the blackouts--along with some price increases--contributed to the loss of between 300,000 and 350,000 subscribers in the quarter.
On Friday, another large station owner, Sinclair Broadcast Group, said it was operating under a temporary extension with AT&T and that its stations could go dark on Sept. 28.
Disney began warning AT&T subscribers of a potential blackout on Sept. 10.
Yikes! That will put a dent into college football this season if this lasts for a long while.
And Sinclair continues to threaten viewers that DIRECTV will dump KIMA-TV + CW9 (channel 20). They are the worst for blackouts.
KNDO IS STILL OFF DIRECTV TO THIS DAY...AND KFFX TOO! That would leave lone ABC as the only commercial broadcast network left on DIRECTV.
As a blackout looms with the current retransmission consent impasse between Sinclair and AT&T--Sinclair is warning DirecTV and U-Verse customers the stations (136 stations in 86 markets) could be off those AT&T-owned MVPDs by Sept. 27--AT&T is framing the impasse for legislators concerned about their constituent/viewers as a still-ongoing negotiation with AT&T, not surprisingly, "on the side of the customer."
AT&T logo
That is according to a letter AT&T sent to members of Congress Thursday (Sept. 26), according to a copy obtained by Multichannel News. AT&T also took the opportunity to put in a pitch for the comprehensive retrans-regime ending bill introduced by Reps. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Steve Scalise (R-La.).
The FOX O&Os + FS1, BTN, and FS2 have all been dropped from Dish Network and Sling.
Dish is also in a dispute with Sunbeam, affecting the Fox affiliate in Miami (WSVN), as well as WHDH (Independent) and WLVI (CW) stations in Boston:
https://wsvn.com/news/local/important-information-for-dish-customers/
The streamer alleges that ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC are engaged in sham copyright litigation and are colluding to deny consumers over-the-air signals they once committed to make freely available.
As alleged in court papers filed on Friday morning, the major broadcasters including ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox are purposely broadcasting weak over-the-air signals to the public as part of a conspiracy to limit consumer access to popular programming including local news and live sports and force Americans to pay for cable or satellite service.
The claim comes from the owner of Locast, a much-hyped digital app that streams over-the-air television stations. In July, the broadcasters hit Locast with a copyright lawsuit. The legal fight could impact cord-cutting and promises to be a sequel to the Supreme Court's 2014 Aereo decision, which held a streamer of over-the-air stations was illicitly performing copyrighted works.
Of course, the lawsuit over Locast is unique in its own right. Denying any affiliation with Dish and maintaining that it is operating in the red despite a donation from AT&T and some of its users, Locast owner David Goodfriend tells a judge that the company "fits squarely" into a "Congressionally-designated exception to infringement," namely § 111(a)(5) of the Copyright Act, which allows a nonprofit organization to operate a secondary transmission service.
Goodfriend, besides responding to copyright claims, also goes on the counterattack.
Damn Dish is in three disputes at the same time Fox, Sunbeam and News Press-Gazette.