stationless listener said:I'm going with the year 2027 when all this happens. This is what we may see as the broadcast lineup in that year:
Univision
A 2nd Spanish-language network (buying Telemundo from the remains of NBC)
A 3rd Spanish-language network (with stations from the ruins of FOX, ABC, NBC)
A major Asian network (stations from the ruins of Ion, MyNetworkTV)
A 2nd Asian network (stations from the ruins of FOX, ABC, NBC)
Replacement for The CW - there still will be a network for teens and young adults, funny enough, but it'll look more like LATV than The WB
CBS (owned by Univision)
I don't see much of this as happening.
For one thing, I think that the Spanish-language networks are pretty much built out right now. You're assuming that the growth trends will just continue at the same angle as they have been over the past 20 years and that never happens. The relative growth of the Spanish speaking audience will peak with 2nd and third generation Latinos speaking more English. With UNI, TEL and the smaller ones like Azteca - that audience is pretty much spoken for. Go 15 years into the future and much of the younger Latino audience will be totally bilingual and some of the channels as they exist now may be forced to look at altering their programming too - or catering to an increasingly aging audience of first-generation immigrants. What we have now should be able to serve that audience and it may even be too much.
Not to mention that Latinos and Asians will have an increasing tendency over the coming decades to subscribe to cable and satellite programming that fits their needs more than a local Univision or fictional Asian network station would.
As for which network will go down first, I'll tell you who it won't be and that's FOX. They are probably the healthiest of the big 4. As for the other 3, they'll stubbornly hold on to the present model until well after technology makes it obsolete. But, they will all branch out even more than now and that diversity of platforms will determine their relative chances of success. If NBC's presently very corporate-style handling of multiple platforms is any guide, they'll be the first ones down.