Yeah, another shakedown by the Mouse, this time demanding more money from YTTV by the end of October or the channels go dark. We've seen this before, and it usually ends with an 11th-hour deal.
Apparently this also includes Sinclair owned ABC affiliates. YTTV just cut it off in the middle of the 10PM news.
Disney manages carriage agreements for local ABC affiliates on streaming services at a national level (same goes for the other major networks). This is different than cable carriage negotiations which vary by market and cable system. Streaming carriage is not governed by the same retrans consent/must carry construct that cable has.Since when do network carriage disputes take down local affiliates?
This is new to me.
Since when do network carriage disputes take down local affiliates?
This is new to me.
ESPN would rather you subscribe to their app. They make more money this way because you pay them more than your streaming/cable company does, keeping more of the ad revenue (and by collecting valuable data about you).You notice that they are not pushing the ESPN $30 a month app for a reason. They want those carriage fees from YouTube TV.
Disney wants both. They don’t want to lose the carriage fees and they also want the app fees.ESPN would rather you subscribe to their app. They make more money this way by keeping more of the ad revenue (and by collecting valuable data about you).
And this is the rub...ESPN (and others) constantly pimp their standalone streaming products. Streaming platforms and cable companies believe that these standalone products erode their subscriber numbers and want to pay less (and/or get a share of the revenue). The result is a carriage dispute like this.
Understood.Disney manages carriage agreements for local ABC affiliates on streaming services at a national level (same goes for the other major networks). This is different than cable carriage negotiations which vary by market and cable system. Streaming carriage is not governed by the same retrans consent/must carry construct that cable has.
This would make more sense if Disney was only able to blackout ABC programming while leaving local programming up on affiliates. Along the lines of Syndex blacking out programming on significantly viewed out of market stations on cable in the 1990s.