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Media Companies Are Ready to Sell. Does Anyone Want to Buy?

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Maybe. Just as Spotify can replace local radio. But people like choice. Not everyone doing the same thing.
And, for the lower 25% to 30% of American households that can't afford any kind of paid service, plain old OTA TV is very important.
You don't need another box. I'm streaming all of my TV now through an Amazon Fire.
As someone who used to build radio transmitters and boards and the like from scratch, I find all the alternatives totally confusing, particularly when they change names or branding or modify the technology.
 
Huh, looks like a full 180 has occurred
In addition to the heavy debt load, Zaslav is particularly worried about the high costs of renewing sports rights, such as NFL games, these people say. One Zaslav associate called some of Paramount’s programs, properties such as MTV, a "melting ice cube" because of significantly declining audience share in the face of cord cutting, or consumers eschewing so-called linear or traditional programming viewed through cable, which is a major source of revenue for media companies.

In the era of cord cutting, cable providers pay lower distribution fees to programmers. Another concern: cable advertising remains depressed.
 
Huh, looks like a full 180 has occurred

As I predicted in post 521. A bad deal at a bad time.

WBD stock lost a full point in value in one day due to a meeting between Bakish and Zaslav. Nothing more than a meeting. CEOs meet all the time. The story says they met to talk merger, but you don't meet with Bakish if you want to merge. You met with Redstone. She's the one who wants to sell. If something is going to happen here, it won't be soon. Redstone has better options. Options with deeper pockets.
 
And, for the lower 25% to 30% of American households that can't afford any kind of paid service, plain old OTA TV is very important.
Not just for those too poor to afford other services -- I use a combination of OTA TV with a DVR and streaming video on demand services for my own television service, and that's driven by choice not financial necessity. And while we're not a large group, I know that I am not alone in this regard.

For me the OTA/DVR combo has the benefit of not just providing access to free programming, but also doing so in a manner that allows me to skip over commercial commercials as I choose. I note that when streaming video includes advertising, it usually is not possible to skip the ads.
 

Seems to me that all that's needed to add to this FAST way of delivering TV is a way to offer a free streaming (for most/all services listed in this article) box/STB, perhaps the actual cost of the STB can be a portion of the ad budget of the major ad supported streaming program providers, resulting in the STB being free (1 per family).


Kirk Bayne
 

Seems to me that all that's needed to add to this FAST way of delivering TV is a way to offer a free streaming (for most/all services listed in this article) box/STB, perhaps the actual cost of the STB can be a portion of the ad budget of the major ad supported streaming program providers, resulting in the STB being free (1 per family).
Roku and Amazon Firestick are way ahead of you Kirk.
 
Except it's not an actual box. It's an app.

Everybody has an app, and the apps are all free.
No it's a physical box. I am looking straight at mine right now. It's the black thing in the lower left corner of this photo. You can link to dozens of free and premium apps through it.
 

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It's also a very very expensive rights deal.

Also it's factually wrong to say "Fox was nothing before the NFL" as they had a growing viewer base and one hit show out of the box (The Simpsons) and another hit show that was entirely unexpected (X-Files).
The NFL gave Fox credibility. Married with Children was Fox’s first big hit. They were still the number 4 network before the NFL.
 
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