Even if they put it on channel 53,429 my daughters will STILL findWill be much harder to find Phineas & Ferb way up there.
Phineas & Ferb!
LOL
Even if they put it on channel 53,429 my daughters will STILL findWill be much harder to find Phineas & Ferb way up there.
I really hope Charlie holds out and does not cave in.
Carriage agreement rates are out of control.
We should have choices and should not be controlled by the programmers.
I've been able to glean a bit more information about the case.whatchel1 said:As with many of the threads you've started recently (Goaliebob) you have no clue what E* is doing. So give it a rest w/ your speculation. I don't know you don't only a very few insiders know for sure what is going on. And none of those people are saying anything especially to you or on the forums.
I've been able to glean a bit more information about the case. I'll agree with goaliebob that this just doesn't look like it will be settled quickly, as Disney is holding most of the cards in this negotiation.
This is actually reversed...whatchel1 said:They gave E* the right to turn on the channels by supplying them. Then Disney seems to have decided in the NY court that that wasn't enough that they needed more $$ for these chs.
Well, that also happened to be addressed in the suit. From how I read it, DirecTV wasn't getting a much better price. It was that they were going to carry the four channels in HD, and because Dish Network wasn't going to receive them Dish Network felt Disney violated the most-favored nation clause.whatchel1 said:Personally I hope that Disney gets it's butt in a sling for playing fast & loose w/ charging different amounts to different companies. D* was getting a much better price than E* so that's when the S*** started hitting the fan.
This is actually reversed...
Dish Network sued Disney in January 2008 because Disney was not going to provide these channels to Dish Network. Those channels finally launched in May 2008.
Dish Network's complaint was dismissed. It means that Disney did not have to provide those channels to Dish Network. That was Disney's contention from the moment the suit was filed.
The question in my mind is how did Dish Network provide those channels to customers? I do agree with mike123abc that the disputed channels were probably allowed by Disney in case Disney was held liable, but under what type of an agreement?Well, that also happened to be addressed in the suit. From how I read it, DirecTV wasn't getting a much better price. It was that they were going to carry the four channels in HD, and because Dish Network wasn't going to receive them Dish Network felt Disney violated the most-favored nation clause.
The courts ruled that Disney didn't violate the most-favored nation clause.
OK I'm confused now. E* has the contractural rights to retrans the SD channels but Disney wasn't going to allow E* to retrans the HD channels, but was going to allow D* the HDs. What purpose would be served by Disney not granting E* permission to broadcast the HD equivalents? Is that even within the law to favor one DBS company over the other? If that is the case, the providers could put either DBS company out of business by simply not allowing any retrans contracts. I would think that might bump up against antitrust provisions by reducing competition. If you offer to sell to one, don't you also have to sell to the other.
The whole thing seems a mess. I just don't see any advantage to Disney withholding channels from E* unless of course E* doesn't want to pay. That assumes others - D*, Comcast, etc. - also are paying separately for HD equivalents from Disney.
Maybe you guys can help me out.
I'm currently a TurboHD Bronze DISH subscriber. I have another 6 months of contract with DishHD. However, I signed up for DISH because they had the DisneyHD channel available in this package. However, now they won't even offer it to me on SD without me having to pay more to move to another package.
That doesn't seem right to me.
What course can I take at this point? Shouldn't they do right by their consumer and try to accommodate me in some bracket that provides me with that channel at least until my contract is up? They can then try to charge me more, I won't care because at that point I can cancel.
Can someone opt out of the contract under these circumstances?
Thanks I appreciate it.
This is the paragraph from the decision issued 23 March 2010:
According to EchoStar, other distributors, in the same territory as EchoStar, announced that defendants would be providing the following "simulcast" feeds of the following Networks: "Disney Channel HD," "Toon Disney HD," "ABC Family HD," and "ESPNews HD" (collectively, the "Disputed HD Programs"), but defendants indicated to EchoStar that they will not be providing the Disputed HD Programs to EchoStar.This is the following paragraph:
In bringing this action, EchoStar contends that the defendants breached the three license agreements by failing to provide it with the same high definition feeds of defendants' network programming that they provide to other cable, satellite, residential wireless or wireline distributors in the USA and its territories.So obviously, it was Dish Network's contention the four channels are covered by the three existing agreements, and it was Disney's contention they weren't.
So if Dish Network wants to negotiate for them, I can only assume it would be fine with Disney. Disney even said so in their press release.
Well, I don't necessarily understand...Laddyboy said:This still doesn't get to the issue as to whether Disney is providing the HD feeds for no additional costs to these other competitors. If they are charging them for the HD feeds, it's one thing; if not, it's another.
They contend that the Most Favored Nation provision relates only to rates and packaging obligations, and cannot be read to encompass all terms and conditions, i.e., an agreement with another distributor that includes the Disputed HD Programming, see Affadavit of David C. Preschlak, ¶ 10.