mnradiofan said:And you don't honestly think that the NFL would choose to end Monday Night Football if it didn't get what it wanted for rights fees? Or that the distributors of said syndicated programming wouldn't just say "you know, thats not worth it to us"? How about original programming like Psych? How cheap can that be produced? And if you don't have wide distribution, ad rates suffer too.
Actually, no I don't think that would happen. The NFL was getting $500 million/year for Monday Night Football when it ran on ABC; that increased to a cool billion when it moved to ESPN. The NFL, understandably, went with the most profitable deal based on the current market place. But if the market changed, there's no reason to expect them to withdraw MNF because the rights fees go back down to $500 million. That's still profitable...just not as profitable as it currently is. Same thing with syndicated programs --selling rerun rights for CSI at $1 million/episode instead of $2 million/episode is still profitable...just not as profitable as what they're currently getting.
My point is that in an a la carte world, while some programs would almost certainly disappear, there's no reason to believe that the drop would be as catastrophic as a la carte opponents claim. But what would happen is that the profitability of content suppliers would drop substantially.
mnradiofan said:If Ala Carte was a good option for consumers, or a highly demanded one, cable companies would offer it. But it isn't, plain and simple. And if it benefited the consumers, you don't think some city council SOMEWHERE would have conditioned renewal of the contract for service on that?
Um, no. The contracts that cable and satellite companies sign with the programming networks preclude them from offering a la carte service. Consequently, it isn't offered, regardless of whether some cable companies (or city councils) might like to offer it as an option -- if it comes to a choice of offering your viewers a la carte but losing major networks like ESPN, TNT, and USA, what do you think the choice will be?
And that has nothing to do with market demands...and everything to do with the contractual arrangements forced on cable and satellite companies. Why those contracts are allowed is a mystery to me...it seems that they should be tossed out, just as "block booking" by movie studios was back in the fifites.