From Yahoo/LA Times:
“ESPN, ABC and other Disney channels dropped from DirecTV in contract
dispute”
Disney's
eight ABC stations, including KABC-TV Channel 7 in Los Angeles, are no longer
available on DirecTV. Above, DirecTV satellite dishes in Culver City. (Allen J.
Schaben / Los Angeles Times) Walt Disney Co.-owned channels, including ESPN and
ABC stations, were knocked off DirecTV platforms Sunday after talks to reach a
new distribution deal collapsed.
The
blackout — which affects DirecTV's nearly 11 million customer homes — hit
before the kickoff of Sunday's highly anticipated University of Southern
California-Louisiana State University college football game and in the middle
of ESPN's coverage of the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York. The impasse
came at the deadline for a new distribution deal after weeks of haggling
between the two companies over contract terms and fees that Disney charges to
carry its programming. Without an agreement, DirecTV and its U-Verse service
lost the rights to carry Disney channels. “They want to continue to chase
maximum profits and dominant control at the expense of consumers — making it
harder for them to select the shows and sports they want at a reasonable
price,” Rob Thun, chief content officer at DirecTV, said in a statement shortly
after the channels went dark at 4 p.m. PST. Sports fans will quickly feel the
pinch. In addition to college football on ESPN and ABC, the new NFL season
begins later this week. ESPN is set to start its season with a "Monday
Night Football" game Sept. 9 between the San Francisco 49ers and New York
Jets, in which Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers is expected to return after
suffering an injury a year ago.
Disney's
eight ABC stations, including KABC-TV Channel 7 in Los Angeles, are no longer
available on DirecTV. That means viewers of local news and
"Jeopardy," "Wheel of Fortune," "Good Morning
America" and "Jimmy Kimmel Live" will be without some of their
favorite shows. Customers in Fresno, San Francisco, Chicago and New York also
lost access to their local ABC station. Other Disney-owned channels, including
Freeform, FX and National Geographic, are included in the outage. “While we’re
open to offering DirecTV flexibility and terms which we’ve extended to other
distributors, we will not enter into an agreement that undervalues our
portfolio of television channels and programs,” read a statement from Disney
Entertainment heads Dana Walden, Alan Bergman and ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro.
"We urge DirecTV to do what’s in the best interest of their customers and
finalize a deal that would immediately restore our programming.” It's not clear
how long the blackout will last. A year ago, a similar tussle between Disney
and Charter Communications, which operates the Spectrum TV service, resulted in
a 12-day blackout of Disney channels.
The
Labor Day Weekend clash reflects the television industry's economic strain. The
shift to streaming and resulting cord-cutting has devastated pay-TV companies.
DirecTV has lost more than half of its subscribers in the last decade. The El
Segundo company now has about 11 million subscribers, according to industry
estimates. This year marked the worse-ever industry drop in pay-TV subscribers,
according to the MoffettNathanson financial research firm. During the first
quarter, the industry lost nearly 2.4 million pay-TV homes in the U.S. — a 12%
year-over-year decline, the firm said in a recent report.
Subscriber
declines have squeezed Disney. The Burbank entertainment company has long
relied on billions of dollars in programming fees that it receives annually
from DirecTV and other providers. The fees are calculated, in part, by the
number of subscribers that receive the channels. In addition, Disney's ESPN has
historically been the most expensive basic cable channel, costing distributors
nearly $10 per month per subscriber home. Disney has sought to maintain those
premiums to help pay for its pricey sports rights contracts, including
long-term NFL and NBA deals. The challenges set the stage for contentious
contract talks at DirecTV's El Segundo headquarters. The environment has
changed dramatically since the last time the two companies hammered out an
accord. That was in 2019 when DirecTV was wholly owned by AT&T. Since then,
the phone giant has spun its television distribution group into a separate entity
and taken on a private equity partner, TPG, to manage the business. For the
past year, DirecTV executives have been working on plans to increase its
offerings to consumers.
DirecTV
wants to offer genre-themed packages — think sports or general entertainment —
to provide cheaper plans for customers who refuse to pay $100 or more each
month for a traditional bundle with more than 100 television channels.
Executives want to appeal to customers who have long pined for a way to sign up
for only the channels they actually watch. But, according to DirecTV, existing
contracts with programmers prevent it from widely offering customers curated
packages. "Instead of allowing distributors like DirecTV to also develop
smaller, more tailored packages at prices that reflect the value they get from
the content, programmers have continued to impose and enforce strict bundling
requirements," DirecTV said in a position paper in late August.
The
expiration of the 2019 distribution deal with Disney has given DirecTV an
opening to try to change contract terms. The satellite TV company said it has
asked Disney to ease a key distribution requirement — minimum penetration
rates. For example, Disney's deals require that DirecTV and other distributors
provide ESPN to a minimum of nearly 80% of its customer base. DirecTV maintains
that such "antiquated" penetration rates "force pay TV customers
to subscribe to many channels they may not watch," and the contracts limit
DirecTV's ability to offer smaller and less-expensive packages. During the negotiations,
Disney said it offered DirecTV with more flexibility to tailor
"skinny" genre-themed packages that it wanted for its customers. The
Burbank company also agreed to work with DirecTV on the minimum penetration
rates, Thun said. "But not enough to really change the game for us,"
Thun said in an interview. "We moved much further than they have [during
the negotiations], and what they put on the table in terms of skinny bundles
was not the total amount that we had asked for." Making a wholesale switch
could reduce revenue flowing to Disney at a critical time. Disney's stock has
been under pressure amid softness at its theme parks and resorts and shares
have been trading near five-year lows. On Friday, Disney closed up nearly 1% to
$90.38.
Last
year's outage of ESPN and other Disney channels on Charter's Spectrum ended
with an agreement that saw several smaller Disney channels, including Freeform
and Disney Jr., dropped from Spectrum's lineup. In the end, both companies said
they came away with a win. Charter didn't force the issue of penetration rates.
Instead, Disney and Charter agreed to widen the reach of the Burbank company's
streaming services, including Disney+ into Spectrum homes. Disney executives
had been hoping last year's Charter agreement can provide a template for a pact
with DirecTV. In the end, the weekend talks broke down over economics,
executives said. "We continue to invest in really high-quality content —
scripted entertainment, ABC News and sports rights," Justin Connolly,
Disney’s president of platform distribution, said in an interview last
week." All of those things continue to increase in cost for us and ... the
rates that we are asking for are in-line with what we have with other providers
in the marketplace."
^
As usual two big companies (Disney and DirecTv) are putting themselves over
their Customers. ^
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/espn-abc-other-disney-channels-231023183.html
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