The plan represents a complete reversal from cable operators' long-held opposition to what is known as "a la carte" programing. Over the last decade, the cable industry battled ferociously with regulators to protect the right to bundle programing, arguing it offered customers the best value.
But executives now say the change is a necessary response to shifting dynamics such as higher carriage costs and using the Web to watch programs, as well as a weak economic recovery that has forced many consumers to cancel cable television subscriptions.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/27/us-cable-idUSTRE78Q6EE20110927
Folks, it seems to be that the new ESPN MNF deal was the "feather" that is starting to bring the whole bundling house-of-cards down. Once this starts rolling it won't stop here. I think viewers who watch channels that depend on bundling to get on cable should start getting nervous as they would have to be prepared to pay even more for those channels.
Also, how would this be explained to the Disney shareholders, as they can't squeeze enough $$$$ from ESPN fast enough? It looks like they may have pushed too far in picking the pockets of consumers, while the cable companies get the angry calls. I hope George Bodenheimer can give a good explanation when they find out that ESPN was dropped on a few cable systems. It serves those greedy, cheap-arse bahstards right for killing the golden goose!
This would also start to affect the sports leagues down the road, which would force them to accelerate the movement towards directly offering their products to those interested in buying them.