imhomerjay said:Whether or not the current broadcast networks shift to all cable with no local presence or simply replicate their current sturcture without using OTA transmitters at all is a long way from being known (and it's nothing near term in any event). But whether the content happens to be zapped over the air in addition to being sent via fiber or satellite to the cable/satellite provider is a meaningless distinction to the viewers. How Fox gets Family Guy to DirecTV means nothing to most subscribers. There's still a lot of money to be made in the current system, even as it inevitably evolves, just as it has since day one.
I agree. These predictions are often off base, or the timing is wrong, in any case. My analogy: In the early 90s, I worked in management for Blockbuster. About 1993, their stock price started to go down because the future-pundits were predicting the total irrelevance of video stores within 5 years because the 500+ channel world was coming, bringing with it literally thousands of available on-demand movies.
As we all know now, Blockbuster and other video chains are now either bankrupt or suffering - but it took 15 years - not 5, and its not because of 500+ channel cable and satellite, but primarily due to low price DVDs and NetFlix. When that huge on-demand movie library finally comes, it will be on the internet - through NetFlix (and competitors), not primarily through cable. The future predictors were not entirely wrong, but they weren't "right" either.
Cost is also a factor. There is extreme resistance from consumers in regard to paying for content they're used to getting for free - or not pay-per view, in any case. Comcast used to charge 99 cents for On-demand shows from CBS, NBC, and ABC. They stopped because most people weren't willing to pay additional fees to see network shows on demand. So how will the new internet-content networks make their money? Advertising, similar to current OTA and cable network commercials? That remains to be seen.
An affluent friend of mine has Apple TV. At this point, it's too expensive for me. I'd be paying hundreds of dollars per month instead of the $130 per month I now pay to Comcast for OTA channels, basic and premium HD cable, and HBO.
Yes - the death of traditional OTA networks is a good bet, but I'd predict it's at least a decade away, maybe longer.