Did I win or did someone else? (In price is right rules.)
Looks like my prediction was closest with out going over.
I predicted $400 Million. Yet some called that outrageous.
In the end Dish Paid out $400 Million plus about $300 Million for the Wireless licenses that they wanted all along for a total of $700 Million.
Our Dish Court Reporter guy said to me
"Anyway, I challenge you to look at the facts. Earlier you predicted this case would cost Dish $400M. I find that figure to be outrageous considering Voom had already invested 300M in the 'service' "
Thanks for 4 1/2 years of lively discussion everyone! At least we all finally know happened in this case...exactly what Voom claimed in their amended complaint back May 2008.
One thing for sure is the $700 million is coming from somewhere, and it sure aint Charlie's pocket. Im sure we will start seeing the effects of this come Febuary 1st when their price freeze ends and they raise everyones rates.
Yeah and for that $700 million he got all of Cablevisions wireless spectrum. Not a bad deal for DISH.
Claude Greiner said:Wow, only took Dish 4 months and a lawsuit to solve this programming dispute.
One thing for sure is the $700 million is coming from somewhere, and it sure aint Charlie's pocket. Im sure we will start seeing the effects of this come Febuary 1st when their price freeze ends and they raise everyones rates.
Just talked to online Dish chat... they have "no information" about getting AMC on tonight.
As long as I get to keep HD NET movies they can put a 24 hour Sesame Street channel.Cablevision/AMC ends EchoStar litigation
http://advanced-television.com/2012/10/21/cablevisionamc-ends-echostar-litigation/
The litigation between Cablevision/VOOM and EchoStar/Dish has been settled out of court. EchoStar will pay $700 million in cash to Cablevision, and in addition will re-start transmissions of the AMC channels onto the Dish Network DTH system. This means AMC, IFC, Sundance and WEtv channels get reinstated as part of the “multi-year agreement”, effective October 21[SUP]st[/SUP].
Additionally, Dish has agreed to convey its 20 per cent interest in VOOM HD back to Rainbow (part of the Cablevision family of companies).
The agreement sees an end to the increasingly bitter litigation between the two parties, and where Cablevision was arguing for $2.4 billion in compensation, and the court case was looking increasingly challenging for EchoStar.