TexasTom said:BRNout said:Who are you to determine what you think is enough? If FOX (News Corp.) is getting $2.37 per subscriber for Fox Sports (which is totally absurd, BTW), and the market supports that, then FNC is almost certainly being undervalued from their point of view. A 24-hour news channel is expensive to run, but likewise FNC has been a resounding success story for News Corporation. The average time spent watching is through the roof and they typically get more viewers than CNN and MSNBC combined. The people who watch that channel find it important and tend to be very loyal to it.
Comparing Fox News to the sports channels is not valid.
Regarding the cost of operation, running a 24-hour news channel might be expensive...but that's not what Fox News is doing; they're running a 24 hour talk station, which is relatively cheap by comparison. I would bet that ESPN spends more per year on Monday Night Football than Fox News spends for it's entire programming schedule over the course of a year. So higher affiliate fees certainly can't be justified based on cost of operation, because Fox News is cheap to run compared to a sports network.
Regarding viewer demand -- Fox News is in a strange position, because it has some fiercely loyal viewers...but not a large number of them. In a recent survey of the "must see" TV networks, Fox News is notable in its absence from the list. CBS tops that list at 35% of viewers naming them. The top cable network is ESPN, at 31%. CNN comes in at 8%. Neither Fox News or MSNBC is on the list at all...and the lowest scored network on the list (Showtime) comes in at 5%. So that means that Fox news (and MSNBC) was named by fewer than 5% of viewers as being a channel that they can't live without.
While I don't doubt that any service that dumps Fox News is going to lose subscribers, the number of subscribers that they would lose is likely far, far smaller than would be lost if ESPN was dropped. Probably much smaller than for FSN, even though FSN also fails to make the list. The difference is that FSN is really a bunch of regional networks instead of being a national network. But in areas where FSN is carrying the games of the local baseball or basketball teams, I'd bet that dropping FSN would upset a lot more viewers than would dropping Fox News. In general, there are a lot more viewers who care about live game coverage than who care about partisan talking heads.
Bottom line: while Fox News may be able to extract further rate increases from service providers, they are delusional if they really think that they're worth anywhere near as much as ESPN. And they're probably not even close to FSN in perceived value.
Comparing Fox Sports Networks (FSN) to ESPN invalidates your entire argument. And, to further invalidate it, if FNC were solely a talk network they wouldn't have reporters and camera people to pay for, which they most certainly do. By going with the stereotype, you again invalidated your argument.