This was posted on our local board,
HDTV Columbus, Ohio Forum Home. It was sent to local TWC customers.
Dear Time Warner Cable Customer,
Ohio State will soon kick off its football season, and we know many of you will be looking for the opening games. The first two OSU games are scheduled to be carried by the Big Ten Network, a new cable channel that isn’t available on Time Warner Cable yet.
We wanted to let you know that we are negotiating with the Big Ten Network and we have reserved a channel for it in our line-up. We want to reach an agreement that is fair to both you and the Big Ten Network.
The Big Ten Network will be carrying football and basketball games previously made available to local broadcasters, along with NCAA-sponsored sports, and 660 hours of non-sports programming from the 11 Big Ten schools.
Here’s where we stand on bringing you this programming:
* Time Warner Cable would like to make Big Ten Network programming available to our customers who want it. We know that some of the games are important to a segment of our customers.
* Because this programming is so highly priced, we want to make it available as part of a separate sports package to those who want it – without increasing the cost for everyone. The Big Ten Network will not allow us to deliver the network on these terms because it insists that all customers – including those uninterested in its programming – must pay.
* The Big Ten Network has said publicly that it wants $1.10 per customer per month for cable companies to bring you Big Ten Network programming in Ohio. At this rate, the Big Ten Network stands to make $237 million each year from cable customers in the Big Ten states alone. Outside the eight-state Big Ten region, Big Ten fans are being asked to pay far less for the same programming – only 10 cents per month per customer. That means an avid Ohio State fan who happens to live in West Virginia pays only $.10 per month while those of us living in Ohio are being asked to pay $1.10 per month. It’s just not fair.
* Only one major video provider has reached an agreement with Big Ten Network, a company that also owns 49% of the Big Ten Network.
* At this point, Big Ten Network has announced about half of the football games that they will air in the upcoming season. Of those games, not one involves a Big Ten Conference match-up involving Ohio State. In addition, at most, fans of one university will miss a few football games that ABC and ESPN do not consider key match-ups.
* These games used to be available on broadcast or other more widely distributed networks, but the Big Ten withdrew them in order to try to make more money not only from its fans – but from cable customers who are not fans or even interested in sports. These games were available last year locally without the Big Ten seeking an additional fee from viewers. This year, the Big Ten Conference wants fans to pay not only for access to these local games, but other games that hold little or no local interest.
We sincerely hope this situation can be resolved quickly so that our customers who want to see Ohio State games will be able to view them. In the meantime, you’ll still be able to see the majority of Ohio State’s games on channels you already receive such as ABC, ESPN and ESPN2.
For more information, and updates on the negotiations, please check our Web site:
Time Warner Cable.
Sincerely,
Rhonda Fraas
President
Time Warner Cable Mid-Ohio Division