easttxtv said:
justpassingthough said:I guess I'm also assuming that FXX gets moved to a basic tier when it debuts.
We get Speed and Fox Soccer, but not Fuel. However, Fox Soccer is located near the start of a block of sports channels in both SD and HD, so I'd imagine Fox gets Comcast to convert that channel spot to the rumored FS2, not FXX, placing FXX elsewhere in the lineup.mnradiofan said:easttxtv said:
Sounds like this is taking place of the Fox Soccer Channel. At least Comcast has that in the Digital Preferred Tier, so I'll actually have access to it when it debuts. Unless they can get Comcast to move Speed from the Sports and Entertainment package, the same can't be said for FS1. I won't be paying $5.99 extra per month for Fox Sports 1 (and 2).
Of course, if they move it to another tier, chances are that tier will go up another $5.99.
Going back to Nashville said:Have Fox, FX or any of these networks ever considered a Cozi or Me tv appoach of offering these as digital stations to over the air tv?
Fox is getting ready to launch a movie channel on Fox Owned digital sub channels. Why not offer a younger geared network available over the air?
It seems as though this current field is already crowded with me tv, this, antenna tv, my family and retro tv offerings. Does retro tv even have any shows of value left? They seem to run a lot of shows that no other station would even want. What they do have, that is known well like Higway To Heaven, The Beverly Hillbilies and Lassie are all available on the others.
Tuff tv seems like the only network like this that is meant for a younger crowd. The other stations would seem to be going after a small group of older people.
There does not seem to be enough old shows to go around to fill all these channels without running them to often and sometimes on multiple stations, this would add the factor of local stations running some of the same shows also.
Retro tv seems to only be on stations that could not get me tv or the others. I wonder how retro even stays afloat with theire slim pickings.
I'm sure Fox got all their ducks in a row before announcing this - they renegotiated all their contracts with Comcast recently. The channel is actually slated to be in WAY more homes than Fox Soccer, as well it should be, since cable companies would be crazy to actively cut a channel that will have the likes of Always Sunny and The League on it.tested said:I wouldn't count on the channel position getting moved too quickly. That will be up to the cable systems.
Also, don't count on being able to get this channel if you now get Fox Soccer Channel. Cable systems usually have a right in their contracts to remove a channel if it ceases to offer the type of programming the original contract called for. So while changing Speed to Fox Sports 1 will be okay since it's going from sports to sports... changing Fox Soccer to FXX might trigger this clause since it's going from sports to entertainment. That's why TWC dropped Current when it was sold.
That would make for a GREAT competitor for Playboy Channel (Which is THE ONLY channel I know of that doesn't have any direct competition). Problem is though, Comcast & other cable operators would likely relegate it to PPVJoseph_Gallant said:Imagine if Fox had FXXX.
That would be a network so racy and raunchy that it would be rated at least XXX, if not XXXXX!
;D
I would also count on Fox Soccer Channel (And it's Plus counterpart) dying off (In fact, I think Comcast just morphed the Plus channel in with the original). With the two new channels, Fox Soccer Channel will likely become Fox Sports 2 (Thus keeping it on Comcast Channel 401) while Fox Soccer Plus (Which I think was on via Fox Soccer Channel on Comcast) becomes FXXtested said:I wouldn't count on the channel position getting moved too quickly. That will be up to the cable systems.
On Comcast, Current TV is on 107 where it's basically in no-mans land (At least here in Denver anyways). It'll likely remain there once it becomes Al Jazeera America when its lineup position will be revisited & from all indications so far, the only thing that will change is the name. The format will likely remain the same as it is now (News & Documentaries)So while changing Speed to Fox Sports 1 will be okay since it's going from sports to sports... changing Fox Soccer to FXX might trigger this clause since it's going from sports to entertainment. That's why TWC dropped Current when it was sold.
JayR said:What becomes of Fox Soccer Plus?
thanks for your explanation. That makes much sense. I did not realize all the money and fees involved in this. So this is why there are so many disputes with cable and dish pulling channels offline when they don't want to pay up?mnradiofan said:Going back to Nashville said:Have Fox, FX or any of these networks ever considered a Cozi or Me tv appoach of offering these as digital stations to over the air tv?
Fox is getting ready to launch a movie channel on Fox Owned digital sub channels. Why not offer a younger geared network available over the air?
It seems as though this current field is already crowded with me tv, this, antenna tv, my family and retro tv offerings. Does retro tv even have any shows of value left? They seem to run a lot of shows that no other station would even want. What they do have, that is known well like Higway To Heaven, The Beverly Hillbilies and Lassie are all available on the others.
Tuff tv seems like the only network like this that is meant for a younger crowd. The other stations would seem to be going after a small group of older people.
There does not seem to be enough old shows to go around to fill all these channels without running them to often and sometimes on multiple stations, this would add the factor of local stations running some of the same shows also.
Retro tv seems to only be on stations that could not get me tv or the others. I wonder how retro even stays afloat with theire slim pickings.
Easy. there isn't as much money in .2 channels, as there is in cable. This is also true of any broadcast TV channel. It is more lucrative to launch a cable channel, where you can not only get advertising revenue, but also get carriage fees. 75 million homes, even at, say, 25 cents per home is almost 19 million dollars per month before the first ad ever plays over the channel, which can be enough money for a lot more expensive content than playing "Happy Days".
The reason all these diginets air old content is because old content is CHEAP. They charge stations carriage fees, but they are most likely pennies on the dollar for a service that has yet to prove that it adds to the bottom line. At the end of the day, TV is a business, just like anything else, and business comes down to profit. If programming doesn't add to the bottom line, it's gone. And in a world with shrinking ad revenues, it's no wonder cable channels are getting better and better programming. After all, they get to go to the cash register twice.
Now, of course, you do see this happening with broadcast stations too these days, but running a broadcast network is more expensive, with more points for expense. FX doesn't have to pay for local sales staff, news departments, engineers, transmission costs, building costs, etc. they only have to do that on a national scale.
Going back to Nashville said:thanks for your explanation. That makes much sense. I did not realize all the money and fees involved in this. So this is why there are so many disputes with cable and dish pulling channels offline when they don't want to pay up?mnradiofan said:Going back to Nashville said:Have Fox, FX or any of these networks ever considered a Cozi or Me tv appoach of offering these as digital stations to over the air tv?
Fox is getting ready to launch a movie channel on Fox Owned digital sub channels. Why not offer a younger geared network available over the air?
It seems as though this current field is already crowded with me tv, this, antenna tv, my family and retro tv offerings. Does retro tv even have any shows of value left? They seem to run a lot of shows that no other station would even want. What they do have, that is known well like Higway To Heaven, The Beverly Hillbilies and Lassie are all available on the others.
Tuff tv seems like the only network like this that is meant for a younger crowd. The other stations would seem to be going after a small group of older people.
There does not seem to be enough old shows to go around to fill all these channels without running them to often and sometimes on multiple stations, this would add the factor of local stations running some of the same shows also.
Retro tv seems to only be on stations that could not get me tv or the others. I wonder how retro even stays afloat with theire slim pickings.
Easy. there isn't as much money in .2 channels, as there is in cable. This is also true of any broadcast TV channel. It is more lucrative to launch a cable channel, where you can not only get advertising revenue, but also get carriage fees. 75 million homes, even at, say, 25 cents per home is almost 19 million dollars per month before the first ad ever plays over the channel, which can be enough money for a lot more expensive content than playing "Happy Days".
The reason all these diginets air old content is because old content is CHEAP. They charge stations carriage fees, but they are most likely pennies on the dollar for a service that has yet to prove that it adds to the bottom line. At the end of the day, TV is a business, just like anything else, and business comes down to profit. If programming doesn't add to the bottom line, it's gone. And in a world with shrinking ad revenues, it's no wonder cable channels are getting better and better programming. After all, they get to go to the cash register twice.
Now, of course, you do see this happening with broadcast stations too these days, but running a broadcast network is more expensive, with more points for expense. FX doesn't have to pay for local sales staff, news departments, engineers, transmission costs, building costs, etc. they only have to do that on a national scale.
With this buisness model it is out of line to think that over the air tv might someday go away because the profit is so low?
Morgan Wick said:The only reason cable channels have the advantages they do is because the system is rigged in their favor. There's nothing to stop it from being de-rigged. There's always the threat of the FCC instituting a la carte or something.
I certainly hope broadcast TV doesn't die just because the FCC lets cable's unfair advantages come to their logical conclusion. What might more likely (and acceptably) kill broadcast is widespread Internet viewing, but even that may more favor certain types of programming.
I had another thread talking about the vast wasteland that is digital multicast, but I'm not going to start whining about why Fox won't start a digital network instead of a cable one until NBCUniversal stops keeping shows on USA that outrate the main NBC network (let alone a digital channel), TimeWarner moves the original shows on TBS and TNT to a broadcast network, and the highest rated non-NFL non-Olympic sporting event of the year isn't on ESPN.
Another drawback to running a digital network compared to cable is that the space currently allocated to a broadcast channel can't even handle two HD feeds very well without degradation, meaning you can't put the sort of programming people would want to watch in HD there, and that probably includes any remotely popular original scripted programming.