Cable users can expect to see another rate increase brought on by ESPN. The network says it will raise the monthly fee by 43% to $9.99:
At what point do providers say no and not carry ESPN.
Never. If cable dies, it will die with ESPN as part of its final channel lineup. Of course, by then, all but a few relative Luddites will have migrated to streaming of some sort.At what point do providers say no and not carry ESPN.
Cable companies are losing subscribers thanks to the cost of ESPN. Something will have to give.Seems to me they've tried to in the past, and the result is they lose all Disney related channels including local stations.
Cable companies are losing subscribers thanks to the cost of ESPN. Something will have to give.
Things are different now. Cable companies are losing customers at an alarming rate. ESPN is losing money because of it. Raising their fee will just accelerate the problem for them. What breaks first? Either way ESPN will lose money.You can search "Disney Comcast Dispute" for the history on this.
So, as Disney loses sports properties to entities with no ties to cable -- Apple and Amazon, for example -- will the rates be lowered?ESPN raises its rates because the NFL, NBA, NHL, MLB, and NCAA/individual conferences all raise theirs with each new contract.
ESPN is locked in long term with the NHL and NFL and NCAA.So, as Disney loses sports properties to entities with no ties to cable -- Apple and Amazon, for example -- will the rates be lowered?
So, as Disney loses sports properties to entities with no ties to cable -- Apple and Amazon, for example -- will the rates be lowered?
True, but it's already lost IPL cricket (a big deal overseas, where ESPN also operates), soccer's World Cup, and MLS after the current season. I don't know how much longer its deals with Wimbledon and the US Open have to run, but those look like prime targets for non-cable cherry pickers in the future. It also looks like the NFL will not be sending Sunday Ticket to Disney when it's pulled from Dish, again preferring not to sell a valuable package to a company so tied to death-spiraling cable television.ESPN is locked in long term with the NHL and NFL and NCAA.
The article you linked to isn't about a rate increase for the ESPN cable channel(s), it's about a price increase for their standalone ESPN+ streaming service (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESPN+).Cable users can expect to see another rate increase brought on by ESPN. The network says it will raise the monthly fee by 43% to $9.99:
ESPN+ will go up to $9.99/mo standalone, but will not go up if it's part of the Disney Bundle. For now.The article you linked to isn't about a rate increase for the ESPN cable channel(s), it's about a price increase for their standalone ESPN+ streaming service (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESPN+).
That's why I switched from DirecTV to YouTube TV, at $70/mo. Because I only watch the sports channels, I stopped it until mid-August because there is nothing on ESPN, Fox Sports, or the Turner channels that I need until then. I already pay for MLB.TV, and won't be doing NFL Sunday Ticket this year (way too expensive, considering how bad the Bears are supposed to be).All I know is I am paying $250 a month for cable with 999 channels of which I watch 10, a Phone line I never use, and 500 down 20 up internet connection. Something has to give