CABLEFAX CABLEFAX MAGAZINE CABLEFAX DAILY COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY
   
SMART VIEW: VIDEO | VOICE | DATA | WIRELESS | MOST READ
SEARCH: Advanced Search

March 9, 2010

Retransylvania

The latest retrans tiff between Cablevision and Disney’s ABC affiliate in the NYC area was even more dysfunctional than producer Elinor Burkett’s Kanye moment during the Academy Awards (Thank heavens NYC area Cablevision subs were able to see that!). But when you think about it, the Cablevision-Disney dispute was kind of boring: Two behemoths fighting over a few cents, with consumers caught in the middle and policymakers jeering from the sidelines. Been there, done that. What’s different today is that price elasticity for cable is reaching its apex, and an industrywide breaking point now seems visible on the horizon. That’s scary. Very scary. Let’s just call this blood-curdling place Retransylvania because, well… I made that up and think it’s pretty darned clever. Cope with it.
 
Here’s the basic situation driving the resurgence of these retrans battles: The broadcasters are getting killed by cable networks and the Internet, both of which have siphoned off billions in ad revenue. The financial meltdown gave us a horrific recession, which has turned a bad ad market into a desperate situation for broadcasters. They need new revenue streams. So why not turn to retrans? This is the free market that cable operators so often reference when resisting government regulation. Some broadcasters’ retrans behavior may be obnoxious, standoff-ish and entirely dismissive of legitimate concerns about higher TV bills, but hey… can you really blame them for using every ounce of negotiating leverage provided to them by current law?
 
The larger moral question, of course, is whether the law must change. But that’s tricky. Let’s remember that millions of people in this country can’t afford even basic pay TV services, much less a computer. They depend on a financially healthy broadcast industry. Nonetheless, the vast majority of the U.S. population doesn’t use over-the-air broadcasting at all. So why should pay TV subscribers have to subsidize content using spectrum that taxpayers donated to for-profit entities on the very condition that it be freely available? Of course, the government could simply cap retrans fees at some reasonable level, assuming such a move could withstand inevitable court challenges. But that’s a slippery slope. Why not price regulation for all programming license fees? Or better yet, let’s just regulate cable rates again! See where this all goes? Remember the 1990s? None of this ends well for anyone.
 
New rate regulation is pretty unlikely at this point, but the FCC and Congress are watching. And you have to wonder whether pay TV bills have become high enough, the economy has become bad enough and the public has lost enough patience with these battles to force some kind of serious action. As Sanford Bernstein’s Craig Moffett so eloquently suggested in a recent note to clients, retrans fights also give comfort to a-la-carte proponents who would like nothing more than to alter the entire business model that nourishes cable operators and their programmer partners. The retrans brinkmanship increasingly used by both sides to ratchet up pressure on the other just strengthens these forces. And that’s a scary prospect for the continued health of an industry responsible for so many jobs and creative content that is, by the way, still one of our nation’s best international exports. This frightening drive through Retransylvania will end one of two ways: Either the industry comes out the other side wiser or it runs out of gas before learning its lesson. The ensuing hike through the wilderness could bring out all sorts of scary ghosts. Paging Kevin Martin.
 
(Michael Grebb is executive editor of CableFAX).






MORE FEATURES




Read about the winners of CableFAX: The Magazine's 2009 CableFAXIES Awards, and find out who's working at the top of their game in cable PR and marketing. SERVICES






Reprint Inquires for CableFAX: The Magazine, please contact Lyndsay Bahn lyndsay.bahn@theYGSgroup.com 717-666-3052.

For extra copies of CableFAX: The Magazine, please contact clientservices@accessintel.com or 800-777-5006.







       


Add a Comment

Name:
Email:
Comments:

Please enter the letters or numbers you see in the image.
 
   Your message will be reviewed before it is posted

 



  E-LETTERS
Sign-Up Today!

CableFAX Daily
What the industry reads first!

The Skinny from CableFAX
Cable news in a quick-read format


CT Reports
Developments in voice, video, & data 



  MAGAZINES
Subscribe Today!

Communications Technology

CableFAX Magazine


  WEB SITES

CableFAX.com

Communications Technology

Cable360.net
INSIDE
CABLE360.NET:
Business
Programming
Technology
Competition
Calendar
Resources

AWARDS, E-NEWSLETTERS, EVENTS & SPECIAL ISSUES
Award Programs
E-Newaletter & Subscriptions
Events
Webinar From CableFAX
Webinars From Communications Technology
CableFAX: The Magazine
Special Issues from Communications Technology

INDUSTRY JOBS & OPENINGS:

Construction Project Manager AC & DC Power - Northeastern Region
Alpha Technologies Services

Pre-Sales Engineer
S3 Group

Business Analyst SAP FICO and COPA
United Copper Industries, Inc.

Plant Engineer
The Siemon Company

Resident Director
The Evergreen State College

 

PUBLICATIONS AND RESOURCES
CableFAX Daily

CableFAX.com

Communications Technology

CableFAX: The Magazine
  Home | Business | Programming | Technology | Competition | Minisites | Webinars | Calendar | Jobs | Resources
Subscribe | Contact | About Us | Privacy & Terms | Advertising | Site Map
CABLE360 © 2012 Access Intelligence LLC. All Rights Reserved.