don't think any cord cutters are missing the Raven-Browns game tonight
If I were King of Programming at ABC/Disney, I'd seriously consider moving MNF back to ABC from ESPN. Albeit less than years past (what isn't?), the numbers on MNF on ABC were still monsters in that time slot and it gave O&O's and affiliate stations a HUGE lead-in to their 11:00 newscasts. Seems like the viewer number push to ESPN with MNF, never did translate.
If I were King of Programming at ABC/Disney, I'd seriously consider moving MNF back to ABC from ESPN. Albeit less than years past (what isn't?), the numbers on MNF on ABC were still monsters in that time slot and it gave O&O's and affiliate stations a HUGE lead-in to their 11:00 newscasts. Seems like the viewer number push to ESPN with MNF, never did translate.
That would be up to the NFL, not The Mickey Mouse Outfit. The rights fees were set based on cable ratings, not OTA. If MNF were to return to broadcast television, the league would probably want at least twice the money they're getting from Disney now.
I was in senior management of a large market ABC affiliate during the transition of MNF to ESPN. Disney negotiates the rights with the NFL, but it isn't up to the NFL as to which part of Disney airs the game.
ABC and their affiliates were not happy with giving up MNF, but Disney wanted to drive viewership to cable-only in the hope that they could justify charging higher sub-fees with cable companies. My guess is ultimately the loss of advertising from carrying MNF on ABC Network, was never made up by increased sub fees from carrying it on ESPN. As BigA mentioned; NFL game viewer numbers and subsequent advertising revenue are substantially higher when carried on the major networks. Another reason why the Super Bowl is not carried on a cable-only channel.
I take it that would (should?) also be the case for the other major sports? And if so, why are so many of them dumping broadcast television in favor of cable?
For example, CBS cleaned up for years with the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. Now, 3/4 of it is farmed out to Turner. MLB has almost no OTA presence anymore, save for a shrinking number of local broadcasts, plus a few Saturday games and the World Series on Fox. Same goes for Hockey, and even the Stanley Cup Finals are split between NBC and NBCSN.
I take it that would (should?) also be the case for the other major sports? And if so, why are so many of them dumping broadcast television in favor of cable? For example, CBS cleaned up for years with the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. Now, 3/4 of it is farmed out to Turner. MLB has almost no OTA presence anymore, save for a shrinking number of local broadcasts, plus a few Saturday games and the World Series on Fox. Same goes for Hockey, and even the Stanley Cup Finals are split between NBC and NBCSN.
And remember that CBS doesn't have a broad assortment of cable properties anymore since CBS Corp. and Viacom split.
In the specific case of the NCAA tournament on CBS: The NCAA decided that games should be aired in their entirety, rather than piecewise on CBS. So CBS had to either find a cable partner, or lose the tournament to ESPN. And remember that CBS doesn't have a broad assortment of cable properties anymore since CBS Corp. and Viacom split.
The Sports TV Bubble is About to Pop
Don’t buy ESPN’s PR talk that its 7 million-household dip in subscribers is just a blip. It’s for real, and the end of its empire will have widespread consequences for the way you watch sports and pay for TV.
Wow! That is a lot more bad news, some of which is supposition and opinion granted, than the sterile accounting information posted previously.
The issue is that the Beast puts the loss at ESPN's feet, when it is really a cable "cord cutting" problem that affects all cable channels alike.
ITV Digital was placed into administration on 27 March 2002, after the Football League refused to accept a £130m pay cut in its £315m deal with the ITV Sport Channel. Most subscription channels ceased broadcasting on ITV Digital on 1 May 2002. The collapse on 30 June 2002 caused financial difficulties for lower-division football clubs who had budgeted for large incomes from the television contract. The Football League sued ITV Digital's parent companies, Carlton and Granada, claiming that the firms had breached their contract in failing to deliver the guaranteed income. And so, by the end of June 2002, the service ceased. The League lost the case, with the judge ruling that it had "failed to extract sufficient written guarantees". The League then filed a negligence claim against its lawyers for failing to press for a written guarantee at the time of the deal with ITV Digital. This time it was awarded a paltry £4 in damages of the £150m it was seeking.
That said, how many cord cutters do you think cemented their decision when they found out how much money they were paying ESPN and didn't watch?
Will these means the ESPN empire is slowly collapsing
That said, how many cord cutters do you think cemented their decision when they found out how much money they were paying ESPN and didn't watch?