- “Rural” can, of course, mean lots of different things, depending on the context. Anything from “not in the city limits” to “30 miles from the nearest neighbor” and 1000 things in between. The fact is that, in this context, there are MILLIONS of people who cannot get good internet and NEVER will, short of huge government subsidy. These people are also the people who, before the BUD, were often at the mercy of the cable bandits. And upon whom all the financial math of DBS was first predicated. Which is one reason why DBS will continue for many decades to come.
- The idea that streaming only is going to be universal in “eight years” or EVER is voodoo economics. Everyone who wants streaming only (cheap people, non-sports fans, etc) have moved over. They are not “early adopter”, they are THE adopters. No one is sitting around looking at their TV and saying “well, in 3.5 years, I’m going to go streaming only”. Those that want that, have it.
- And, of course, the elephant in the room. Streaming really cannot make any MONEY. Why? Leaving out ESPN+, because they are all the same. A handful of melodramas upon which they spend way too much to produce and which, when you look at the ratings, such as they are, really don’t capture a mainstream audience. And page after page after page of reruns. Reruns, reruns, reruns. A huge consolidation is coming, but before that comes they will continue to spend and spend and spend. Including tossing sports into the mix. Don’t like MLS (and the ratings show 99% don’t), too bad you get to pay for it if you have Apple next year. Random Friday night baseball games? You pay. TNF? You pay. Euro soccer? You pay. On and on. Just like the old days of the cable bundle. The only difference being that because no one streaming service is close to the near universal status that was linear TV in the past, you pay a lot more, as the costs are spread out among a lot less people. This of course goes right against the natural customer base of streaming only. The cheap and those wishing to avoid the high cost of sports they don’t watch.
- Apparently Amazon is just adding a million or million and a half to the universally accepted Nielsen numbers. No science based explanation given and, since Amazon is the one that paid Nielsen to include TNF as if it were on a real channel, very questionable. If they didn’t want the ratings to be known, they could have just released their numbers and be done with it in the first place. The crash and burn of TNF is getting really interesting. The one thing you don’t do in this industry is question Nielsen.
- The idea that streaming only is going to be universal in “eight years” or EVER is voodoo economics. Everyone who wants streaming only (cheap people, non-sports fans, etc) have moved over. They are not “early adopter”, they are THE adopters. No one is sitting around looking at their TV and saying “well, in 3.5 years, I’m going to go streaming only”. Those that want that, have it.
- And, of course, the elephant in the room. Streaming really cannot make any MONEY. Why? Leaving out ESPN+, because they are all the same. A handful of melodramas upon which they spend way too much to produce and which, when you look at the ratings, such as they are, really don’t capture a mainstream audience. And page after page after page of reruns. Reruns, reruns, reruns. A huge consolidation is coming, but before that comes they will continue to spend and spend and spend. Including tossing sports into the mix. Don’t like MLS (and the ratings show 99% don’t), too bad you get to pay for it if you have Apple next year. Random Friday night baseball games? You pay. TNF? You pay. Euro soccer? You pay. On and on. Just like the old days of the cable bundle. The only difference being that because no one streaming service is close to the near universal status that was linear TV in the past, you pay a lot more, as the costs are spread out among a lot less people. This of course goes right against the natural customer base of streaming only. The cheap and those wishing to avoid the high cost of sports they don’t watch.
- Apparently Amazon is just adding a million or million and a half to the universally accepted Nielsen numbers. No science based explanation given and, since Amazon is the one that paid Nielsen to include TNF as if it were on a real channel, very questionable. If they didn’t want the ratings to be known, they could have just released their numbers and be done with it in the first place. The crash and burn of TNF is getting really interesting. The one thing you don’t do in this industry is question Nielsen.