man... wouldnt that be nice?something like $3.99 a channel per month...I could get by with ESPNESPN 2A&ETLCHistoryNat GeoBioBBC Americafor $32.00 a month
12/21/2010 8:42:08 PM
applegoogle is working on it.I assume Apple will get it first since they own a network (ABC->ESPN) and hollywood loves Apple.
12/21/2010 11:02:26 PM
I thought it was based more on individual episodes, not channels
12/21/2010 11:06:45 PM
won't happen in our lifetimes. which sucks
12/21/2010 11:27:53 PM
say goodbye to all but the very most popular channels if it does happenit's like the long tail gets chopped off
12/21/2010 11:34:00 PM
Bundling allows for per-channel price differentiation. Hypothetically, if only two channels exist, ESPN and TLC, and there are only two customers, you and me, you may love ESPN and are willing to pay $12 for it and only $3 for TLC, while I love TLC and am willing to pay $11 for it and only $4 for ESPN, then a la cart means you only get ESPN and I only get TLC at whatever a la cart price they set, say $10 per channel. We each get one channel, pay a total of $20 for consumer benefit of $23, with a consumer surplus of $3. Well, if they bundle instead, charging $14 for both TLC and ESPN, then both you and I will sign up, paying a total of $28 for consumer benefit of $30 with a consumer surplus of $2. As theory suggests, the ability to effectively price differentiate should always reduce the consumer surplus while potentially dramatically improving both sales revenue for the business and total consumer benefit, by getting people to pay more for more than they otherwise would buy. As such, a la cart should always be a non-starter for video channel distributors, even if that distributor is Google streaming channels straight to GoogleTV users.To me, this actually seems like a good thing. While my immediate personal consumer surplus for existing content falls, the ability of content producers to get everyone to pay more means there will be more content produced in the future. The present future value of this content that would not have otherwise been produced is not something I can include in my immediate personal consumer surplus calculations, as I only know what is going to be on this exact month and whether it was worth the bundled price. What this means is, my actual consumer surplus is larger with bundling than without because bundling gives me the option to buy more content in the future than I otherwise could, and to someone like me that consumers a lot of content, this is a good thing. [Edited on December 22, 2010 at 12:11 AM. Reason : .,.]
12/21/2010 11:57:30 PM
12/22/2010 12:06:38 AM
^^ I'm not sure how enabling the content producers to produce more content is more beneficial to the consumer than the consumer just paying for the content they want. Maybe that was what you were explaining in everything after that, but I didn't really follow it.You're saying by additionally charging me for content I don't want via a bundle, I'm going to be able and willing to possibly by newer content that I do want whenever it becomes available? I haven't had a land line phone in over 8 years. Are you saying if I would have paid more for a cable/phone bundle over that entire time period that the cable producers would be producing faster internets now and I'd pay for it? And not that this extra revenue wouldn't have gone to exec bonuses and shareholder dividends?
12/22/2010 7:15:22 AM
12/22/2010 7:45:33 AM
i would want:tlcdiscoveryamcsciencenat geofoodg4historymaybe a&e, bravo
12/22/2010 9:31:14 AM
Unfortunately the Disney channels (espns, mainly) are the largest part of your bill. If things were broken down correctly you could get a lot of 2nd tier channels for 5-25 cents per but the big ones would be 5-10 bucks per. Prices per channel would be higher because they would want the same overall money but little old lady wouldn't be willing to pay for ESPN or FSN.Using that my bill would be 16.97 (plus service charges and line fees more than likely). [Edited on December 22, 2010 at 9:45 AM. Reason : adf]
12/22/2010 9:40:29 AM
Right, I understand the most expensive ones and the ones that people want are generally one in the same, but shedding dozens of the cheap channels adds up.Even right now (I know it's not possible due to the way companies bundle their crappy channels up with the cable companies, just talking theoretically here), I'd GLADLY buy a $20-25 package from the cable company that consisted of me picking any ~5+ cable channels in HD as opposed to paying for the $50 package we have now with scores of channels I never even consider watching.It also sucks that you have to go through some other cable or satellite company to purchase HBO or Showtime. Right now my wife and I are not regularly watching any cable channel. With football almost over, I will have almost 0 reason to watch any cable channels (save maybe AMC) very soon (bowls and the NFL playoffs I'll watch out with friends). I would gladly get rid of the tv portion of our bill...except that I have a show coming on HBO this spring that I really want to watch. The only way to get HBO in HD is to pay for a TV service and pick up channels I don't care about just to give me the opportunity to pay for HBO. [Edited on December 22, 2010 at 10:18 AM. Reason : .]
12/22/2010 10:14:25 AM
exactly
12/22/2010 12:56:57 PM
^^ Those of us that do like watching TV are thankful that you have decided to pay for our content.
12/22/2010 2:48:34 PM
^ Hey now: I love watching TV...when it is TV that is worth watching.Unless you are one of those people who will sit on the couch watching re-runs, reality shows, and terribly written sitcoms all night after work or you simply channel surf because you have nothing productive to do you shouldn't be happy about paying for all the content you never use either.
12/22/2010 3:18:57 PM
Keep in mind, one man's garbage is another man's treasure. Also, you are mis-representing the way programming is paid for. Disney gets paid for its channels only because customers want to watch it. If no one wanted to watch, then the cable company would refuse to pay and cut the channel until Disney lowered its demands. Some channels must pay the cable company to get put into the lineup because no one wants to watch it. In order for a channel provider to get paid, they must first get people to want the channel enough to be upset when it is cut off. Also, the defense of bundling for customers is very similar to the defense of bundling of channel X and channel Y. If the cable company would pay to not have to carry channel Y, then it will negotiate a lower fee for Channel X as compensation. To say it again, you are not paying for crap. You are paying for the bundle. If the only channel you care about is ESPN, then bite me, you are paying $65 a month for ESPN, the rest of the "crap" as you call it, you are getting for free. I personally care nothing for ESPN, so I am getting it for free. As you do not care for CrapTV, you can rest assured that you are in no way putting money into their coffers, because if the cable company cut off CrapTV, you would not care and the cable company knows this and uses this information to negotiate a lower or even negative subscriber fee for CrapTV. It is possible for the cable company to mis-judge the consumer desire for a channel and over-pay, but all that does is lose them money. If people don't actually care for the channel, then the cable company could cut their price by the amount of the subscriber fee and ultimately wind up with even more customers. That they do not, implies that the channels they are paying for are relatively well priced.[Edited on December 22, 2010 at 5:45 PM. Reason : .,.]
12/22/2010 5:40:05 PM
There are legal ways you could get content from Showtime and HBO without having a cable television subscription.
12/22/2010 10:51:41 PM
12/22/2010 11:16:58 PM
^actually you are dead wrong.ESPN is absolutely mandatory for a cable provider to be profitable. There were a few attempts back in the late 90's by smaller cable and satellite providers to drop the Disney networks (specifically ESPN) because they wouldn't play ball with the insane premiums that ESPN charges.And they all went under. We live in a sports dominate culture and ESPN is one of the most heavily demanded and watched properties on television. ESPN360 is yet another example where they have fucked the distributors into paying for their demands because of customer demand for the content. TWC fought ESPN for almost two years on paying the premiums for ESPN360 (now espn3.com) and finally caved in this year after pretty much every other big player fell into line.You have a very, very skewed and incorrect view of where the money is made in television. I'm not saying it's right (ESPN is actually a pretty damn good channel though, but not nearly worth the money we all pay into it), but it is the reality.
12/22/2010 11:26:11 PM
the point is that there is a significant minority that doesn't give a shit about sports programming
12/23/2010 12:12:59 AM
I am the "worst" tv viewer ever. I pretty much only watch sports. I have DVR but hardly ever use it (literally maybe 6 times in 3 years), and when I use it I dont use it correctly (I never fast forward through commercials, they just dont bother me that much to use the remote to skip by them every 10 minutes). I dont have any must see shows, I am not loyal to any show (aside from sports). I hate sitcoms, I hate shows that just try to outdo each other with being "wild and cutting edge" (Lost, The Wire, etc.), I hate reality shows. I pretty much turn on the tv and if there is a show on the channel that comes up then I hardly ever change the channel. I could get by with sports, local news and Hitler documentaries and be totally happy
12/23/2010 12:50:22 AM
12/23/2010 7:39:38 AM
I haven't had cable or satellite since October of last year. I don't miss it at all.I don't care much for sports. I'm happy enough to watch the highlights on the news or go to a bar or restaurant for a big game.There are very few channels I would watch regularly (HBO and Showtime mostly) and you need to buy into a whole lot of other crap to get what you want. I have no interest in subsidizing all the other networks to get what I want.I don't think I will ever go back to paid tv until the business model changes. I'd be happy enough if they just had a monthly fee for a "point" system. $X for Y points and each channel has a point value assigned to it. Say you pay $40 for 25 points and just use the subscriber fees from the above chart as the point values.
12/23/2010 3:08:46 PM
12/27/2010 8:20:07 AM
12/27/2010 6:16:38 PM
From what I understand, the networks have the upper hand in this right now. They sell all their channels as a package to the cable company based on the number of households they service. If the cable company chose to offer a la carte channel selection it would not change their contract with the network, so they would simply lose money on the deal. I don't think the cable companies will ever get the networks to voluntarily give up their current situation.
12/27/2010 6:28:07 PM
12/27/2010 9:24:22 PM
12/27/2010 9:49:54 PM
12/28/2010 1:45:03 AM
Why would this ever survive? If there is a market for ala carte media (and I'd argue it's already alive and well), then won't someone eventually come in and offer it? Are we not seeing the Hulus of the world thriving yet because the content producers are trying to push the bundle here as well?ESPN is the king in the sports world right now, but I can imagine eventually some upstart (likely Mark Cuban owned) will come in and start competing and force a change in practice.I'm shocked that you think this won't change with technology. It's already happened to some extent with radio. Your pointing out that SiriusXM is bundled ignores that people are more than happy to pay to not put up with commercials, and as the price is so low already they aren't bothered with needing ala carte. Could it be that people wouldn't actually mind bundles if the price was more reasonable? Just eyeballing that list above it looks like the bill would be in the $20 month range for the top 15 channels with the others being virtually free, tack on $10 for fees/taxes, and you're talking about a huge discount to the current pricing structure and the talk of ala carte would disappear.
12/28/2010 7:44:02 AM
The problem with your argument there is that both music and movies are available a la carte in addition to bundled options. If people want to pay for XM radio, that's cool, but you also have the option of only buying what you like as soon as it is available. Same for movies out on DVD. Besides the fact that Netflix is awesomely priced, people do also have the option of buying or renting only the movies they pay for (but in the case of Netflix, their pricepoint makes their service worth it).Also, "premium" channels like HBO and Showtime have basically said they would rather NOT be part of cable but the only reason they can't break away and just have people pay for their service separately is because of the current cable structure. It pretty much handcuffs them into playing ball with the cable companies even though they have hinted that they think they would have MORE subscribers over time if they were sold individually instead of on top of other cable packages.I do understand though that the way cable is currently distributed a la carte probably will not happen for a long time if ever and I do understand that for someone who actually watches 20+ channels regularly or something that it might even be more expensive. I just disagree with the way cable companies operate as a whole which I guess skews the way I feel about paying for their services. I mean these are the same people who will tell you that you can't get a true stable internet connection unless you rent their own modem and wireless router instead of using their own and also make you pay for an HD upgrade on network stations...even when those are broadcast free OTA already...I mean they have no shame in trying to scam their own customers out of a buck. They are not a very transparent business.Planning to switch to dish or direct soon anyway since my cable company can't come close to competing with the pricing there. I'll still be paying for channels I don't want but will be getting a nicer package overall for cheaper.
12/28/2010 8:09:25 AM
Glad it all worked out. I'm sure you will be happier with Dish's bundle than you were with cable's bundle. No legislation needed. Different providers allow price differentiation between bundles, content creators profit even more. [Edited on December 28, 2010 at 6:33 PM. Reason : .,.]
12/28/2010 6:32:42 PM
12/28/2010 7:42:39 PM